Detroit
native Richard Dawson Kiel, the 7-foot-2 steel-toothed cable-chomping villain in two Roger Moore James Bond
movies, died at age 74 in Fresno, California.
Kiel
broke his leg a week ago.
Kiel's height and features were a result of a hormonal condition known as acromegaly.
He suffered from acrophobia (fear of heights) and, during the cable car stunt scenes in
“Moonraker,” a double was used because Kiel refused to be filmed on the top of a cable car at more than 2,000 feet high.
In 1992, Kiel suffered a severe head injury in a car accident, which affected his balance. He had to walk with a cane.
Current
PD and former BJ TV/movie critic Mark Dawidziak wrote:
“Met him when we were both guests at a horror
convention about 12 years ago. He actually played two monsters on ‘Kolchak,’
but was unrecognizable as the swamp creature in the better of the two, ‘The
Spanish Moss Murders.’ “
Kiel
was Jaws in 1977's "The Spy Who Loved Me" and 1979's
"Moonraker." The producers spotted Kiel in the William Shatner western TV series “Barbary Coast.”
Kiel
also was the bullying golf spectator Mr. Larson in "Happy Gilmore,"
lethal Dr. Loveless's assistant Voltaire in "The Wild, Wild West" and
extraterrestrial Kanamit in "The Twilight Zone."
He also reprised the
character of Jaws for several James Bond video games.
He made his acting début in a 1960 “Laramie” TV series episode. His first movie was “The Phantom Pilot (1961). From 1963 to 1965 Kiel worked as a night school math instructor in Burbank, California.
He co-authored "Kentucky Lion," a biography of abolotionist Cassius Marcellus Clay.
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