Thomas Hunter (actor) | |
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Born |
Savannah, Georgia |
December 19, 1932
Occupation | Actor |
Thomas Hunter (born December 19, 1932) is an American actor known for work in Spaghetti Westerns and as a Hollywood screenwriter. He is also the founder of the New England Repertory Company.
Born in the Georgia city of Savannah, Hunter served in the United States Marine Corps and graduated from the University of Virginia. He studied acting with Sanford Meisner and Uta Hagen.
He entered film in a small role in Blake Edwards' What Did You Do in the War, Daddy? (1966). After completing the film, a chance meeting with Dino De Laurentiis led him be invited to star as the lead in The Hills Run Red leading him to a career in European cinema with guest appearances in American television series. His disassatifaction with European cinema led him to found the New England Repertory Company.
Hunter has published two books: "Softly Walks the Beast," an end-of-the-world story that takes place in the not-too-distant future and centers on a dwindling community of smart and resourceful people on a college campus, struggling against the horrible and seemingly unstoppable after-effects of a nuclear war. "Softly Walks the Beast" was first published in 1982 and a second edition was published in 2014. In 2015, Hunter published "Memoirs of a Spaghetti Cowboy: Tales of Oddball Luck and Derring-Do," which chronicles his life and details his adventures starring in numerous "spaghetti westerns" and other foreign productions while living in Rome, Italy.