Memory Alpha
Memory Alpha
(→‎Other ''Trek'' connections: moved Equalizer info from list into article)
m (birthdate)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{realworld}}
 
{{realworld}}
'''Russ Mayberry''' is a former television director whose credits include the ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' episode {{e|Code of Honor}}. This episode is his only work on the ''[[Star Trek]]'' franchise.
+
'''Russell B. "Russ" Mayberry''' {{born|22|December|1925}} is a former television director whose credits include the ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' episode {{e|Code of Honor}}. This episode is his only work on the ''[[Star Trek]]'' franchise.
   
 
Mayberry directed many episodes of such shows as ''That Girl'', ''The Brady Bunch'', ''Ironside'', ''Kojak'', ''The Rockford Files'', ''The Equalizer'', and ''In the Heat of the Night''. He frequently worked with writer-producer [[Wikipedia:Glen A. Larson|Glen A. Larson]], for whom he directed many episodes of ''The Six Million Dollar Man'', ''McCloud'', ''The Fall Guy'', and ''Magnum, P.I.'', as well as a 1971 episode of ''Alias Smith and Jones'' (which guest-starred [[Paul Fix]]), two episodes of ''Manimal'' (including the pilot, which guest-starring [[Ed Lauter]]), and the 1982 TV movie ''Rooster'' (also featuring Ed Lauter). He has also directed for ''I Dream of Jeannie'', ''Dallas'', and ''Miami Vice'', among many others.
 
Mayberry directed many episodes of such shows as ''That Girl'', ''The Brady Bunch'', ''Ironside'', ''Kojak'', ''The Rockford Files'', ''The Equalizer'', and ''In the Heat of the Night''. He frequently worked with writer-producer [[Wikipedia:Glen A. Larson|Glen A. Larson]], for whom he directed many episodes of ''The Six Million Dollar Man'', ''McCloud'', ''The Fall Guy'', and ''Magnum, P.I.'', as well as a 1971 episode of ''Alias Smith and Jones'' (which guest-starred [[Paul Fix]]), two episodes of ''Manimal'' (including the pilot, which guest-starring [[Ed Lauter]]), and the 1982 TV movie ''Rooster'' (also featuring Ed Lauter). He has also directed for ''I Dream of Jeannie'', ''Dallas'', and ''Miami Vice'', among many others.

Revision as of 03:41, 10 July 2007

Template:Realworld Russell B. "Russ" Mayberry (born 22 December 1925; age 98) is a former television director whose credits include the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "Code of Honor". This episode is his only work on the Star Trek franchise.

Mayberry directed many episodes of such shows as That Girl, The Brady Bunch, Ironside, Kojak, The Rockford Files, The Equalizer, and In the Heat of the Night. He frequently worked with writer-producer Glen A. Larson, for whom he directed many episodes of The Six Million Dollar Man, McCloud, The Fall Guy, and Magnum, P.I., as well as a 1971 episode of Alias Smith and Jones (which guest-starred Paul Fix), two episodes of Manimal (including the pilot, which guest-starring Ed Lauter), and the 1982 TV movie Rooster (also featuring Ed Lauter). He has also directed for I Dream of Jeannie, Dallas, and Miami Vice, among many others.

In addition to his work on episodic television, Mayberry has also directed a number of made-for-TV movies, including two for Walt Disney and NBC in 1978 – The Young Runaways (with cinematography by Charles F. Wheeler) and The Million Dollar Dixie Delivery (starring Brock Peters) – and many for CBS. He even has a few feature films to his credit: The Jesus Trip (1971) and Walt Disney's The Spaceman and King Arthur (aka Unidentified Flying Oddball) (1979).

Other Trek connections

In his long career, spanning over 70 different television series and made-for-TV movies across three decades, Mayberry has worked with many Star Trek alumni. For example, before working with Alan Oppenheimer on three episodes of The Six Million Dollar Man (on which Oppenheimer was a regular), Mayberry directed him in two episodes of That Girl ("Sue Me, Sue Me, What Can You Do Me?" in 1969 and "Gone-A-Courtin'" in 1970) and a 1971 episode of McCloud entitled "Encounter with Aries", which was written by Peter Allan Fields and also guest-starred Elisha Cook, Jr.

As the director of 13 episodes of The Equalizer, Mayberry worked many times with Trek guest actors Robert Lansing and Keith Szarabajka. He also directed the likes of Lori Petty, Saul Rubinek, and Christian Slater on this series; three of the episodes he directed were co-written by Maurice Hurley and one (1986's "Joyride", the episode featuring Slater) was written by Jim Trombetta. Outside of TNG, however, Mayberry has worked with only one actor who would become a regular castmember on a Star Trek series: Robert Beltran, who played Chakotay on Star Trek: Voyager. Mayberry directed Beltran, as well as Trek guest actor Sherman Howard, in a two-part Miami Vice episode called "Freefall", which aired in May 1989.

Among the other projects which teamed him with fellow Trek alumni are:

  • The Monkees episode "The Monkees at the Movies" (1967) guest-starring Hamilton Camp
  • The Monkees episode "The Monkees in Manhattan" (1967) guest-starring Susan Howard
  • The Second Hundred Years episode "Lucky Luke" (1968) guest-starring Monte Markham
  • McCloud episode "Manhattan Manhunt, Part 2: The Stage Is All the World" (1970) starring Diana Muldaur
  • McCloud episode "Encounter with Aries" (1971) guest-starring Elisha Cook, Jr. and Alan Oppenheimer; written by Peter Allan Fields
  • McCloud episode "Fifth Man in a String Quartet" (1972) guest-starring Alex Henteloff and Dick Miller
  • A Very Missing Person (1972 TV movie) featuring Robert Easton, James Gregory, and Julie Newmar
  • Ironside episode "Camera...Action...Murder!" (1972) guest-starring Anthony Caruso
  • Search episode "The Gold Machine" (1972) guest-starring Mark Lenard
  • Search episode "A Honeymoon to Kill" (1973) guest-starring Antoinette Bower and Meg Wyllie
  • Search episode "The 24 Carat Hit" (1973) guest-starring George Murdock and Nehemiah Persoff
  • Ironside episode "All About Andrea" (1973) guest-starring John McLiam
  • Ironside episode "All Honorable Men" (1973) guest-starring Arthur Batanides and Sandra Smith
  • Search episode "Suffer My Child" (1973) guest-starring Byron Morrow
  • Ironside episodes "In the Forests of the Night" and "The Armageddon Gang" (both 1973) guest-starring Gene Lyons
  • The Six Million Dollar Man episode "Wine, Women and War" (1973) starring Alan Oppenheimer and guest-starring Lee Bergere
  • The Six Million Dollar Man episode "The Solid Gold Kidnapping" (1973) starring Alan Oppenheimer and guest-starring James B. Sikking
  • Barnaby Jones episode "Friends 'till Death" (1974) starring Lee Meriwether and guest-starring Susan Oliver, Gail Strickland, Peter Brocco and Walker Edmiston
  • Ironside episode "A Death in Academe" (1974) guest-starring Malachi Throne
  • The Rockford Files episode "The Countess" (1974) guest-starring James Cromwell
  • Kojak episode "Slay Ride" (1974) guest-starring Stephen McHattie
  • Fer-de-Lance (1974 CBS TV movie) featuring Bill Catching, Jason Evers and Robert Ito
  • McCloud episode "Lady on the Run" (1975) starring Ken Lynch and guest-starring Mariette Hartley
  • The Rockford Files episode "Charlie Harris at Large" (1975) guest-starring Diana Muldaur
  • Kojak episode "Two-Four-Six for Two Hundred" (1975) guest-starring Roger Aaron Brown
  • The Six Million Dollar Man episode "Steve Austin, Fugitive" (1975) starring Alan Oppenheimer and guest-starring Gary Lockwood
  • Kojak episode "My Brother, My Enemy" (1975) guest-starring Charles Napier
  • Kojak episode "Be Careful What You Pray For" (1975) guest-starring Meg Wyllie
  • Harry O episode "Group Terror" (1975) starring Anthony Zerbe and guest-starring Jay Robinson
  • The Rockford Files episode "Resurrection in Black & White" (1975) guest-starring Sandra Smith
  • Petrocelli episode "Falling Star" (1976) starring Michael Bell, Susan Howard, and David Huddleston
  • Baa Baa Black Sheep episode "Flying Misfits" (1976) starring James Whitmore, Jr. and John Larroquette and guest-starring Byron Morrow, Charles Napier and Lance LeGault
  • Harry O episode "Death Certificate" (1976) starring Anthony Zerbe and written by John Meredyth Lucas
  • The Rockford Files episode "Feeding Frenzy" (1976) guest-starring Susan Howard
  • The Rockford Files episode "Coulter City Wildcat" (1976) guest-starring Noble Willingham
  • Kojak episode "The Godson" (1977) guest-starring F. Murray Abraham
  • The 3,000 Mile Chase (1977 NBC TV movie) starring Cliff De Young and featuring Marc Alaimo, Roger Aaron Brown, and Jerry Hardin
  • The Rockford Files episode "Hotel of Fear" (1977) guest-starring Barry Atwater
  • Kojak episode "Chain of Custody" (1978) guest-starring Paul Sorenson
  • The Rebels (1979 TV movie) featuring Kim Cattrall, Paul Fix, Nehemiah Persoff, Warren Stevens, and Kevin Tighe
  • Marriage Is Alive and Well (1980 TV movie) featuring David Clennon
  • Reunion (1980 CBS TV movie) starring Joanna Cassidy
  • The Fall Guy pilot episode (1981) guest-starring Percy Rodriguez
  • A Matter of Life and Death (1981 CBS TV movie) starring Salome Jens
  • The Fall Guy episode "License to Kill, Part 1" (1982) guest-starring Monte Markham
  • Manimal episode "Night of the Beast" (1983) guest-starring Jeff Corey
  • The Scarecrow and Mrs. King episode "The Mole" (1984) guest-starring Byron Morrow
  • Challenge of a Lifetime (1985 TV movie) featuring Keone Young
  • Magnum, P.I. episode "Rapture" (1985) guest-starring Henry Darrow
  • Magnum, P.I. episode "A.A.P.I." (1986) guest-starring Elisha Cook, Jr.
  • Magnum, P.I. episode "Unfinished Business" (1988) guest-starring Lance LeGault; co-written by Jeri Taylor
  • Paradise episode "Home Again" (1989) starring Michael Ensign and guest-starring Richard Lineback and Warren Munson
  • Matlock episode "The D.A." (1990) guest-starring Gregg Henry and Steve Vinovich
  • In the Heat of the Night episode "Ruda's Awakening" (1991) guest-starring Fran Bennett
  • Matlock episode "The Last Laugh" (1993) guest-starring Daniel Roebuck and Gwynyth Walsh
  • Matlock episodes "The Coach" and "Matlock's Bad, Bad, Bad Dream" (1993) guest-starring Daniel Roebuck
  • In the Heat of the Night episode "Give Me Your Life" (1994) guest-starring Gwynyth Walsh

External link