CHUCK CONNORS - AUTOGRAPH - HFSID 345934
Sale Price $108.00
Reg. $120.00
CHUCK CONNORS
The star of The Rifleman who briefly played professional baseball and
basketball signed this page that features a baseball ticket stub
Signature: “Chuck Connors” on a 7x2½ piece of paper. The page is clipped from a
publication of some sort, with the large header reading “Kansas City /
Happenings”. A 1½x1½ ticket stub from the July 29, 1973 baseball game
between the Kansas City Royals. In this game, The Baltimore Orioles defeated
the Kansas City Royals 6-4 in a game that saw future Hall of Famers George
Brett and Eddie Murray take the field. Chuck Connors (1921-1992) was an
American actor and professional athlete. He played in both Major League
Baseball (MLB) and in the Basketball Association of America, the predecessor to
the NBA. Only 12 people have competed in both leagues. Following his career
in sports, he grew into an even more famous celebrity as an actor. His
portrayal of single father Lucas McCain in The Rifleman is easily his most
recognizable role; the show ran for 168 episodes over five seasons and follows
the rancher and his son Mark McCain (portrayed by Johnny Crawford) as they
settle in at a new home in North Fork, New Mexico Territory. The show aired
from 1958-1963. He earned his first screen credit in Pat and Mike in 1952,
where he portrayed a police captain. After earning various television and film
credits throughout the 1950s, Connors beat out dozens of other actors for the
role of Lucas McCain. After The Rifleman ended, he picked up starring roles in
television shows Arrest and Trial (1963-1964), Branded (1965-1966), and
Cowboy in Africa (1967-1968). When none of these shows achieved the level
of success that The Rifleman did, Connors began to focus on the big screen,
with roles in Soylent Green (1973) and Airplane II: The Sequel (1982). In a
return to television, he had a memorable role in the mini-series Roots (1977) as a
plantation owner, one of the many antagonists of the series. The popular actor
was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1984. Folding crease.
Uneven cut. Otherwise, fine condition.
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