Joan Reynolds (1957–2004) (his death) (2 children)
Children
One daughter, one son
William Boyett (January 3, 1927 – December 29, 2004)[1] was an American actor best known for his roles in law enforcement dramas on television from the 1950s through the 1990s.
Early years
Boyett was born in Akron, Ohio, the son of Harry Lee and Margaret D. Boyett. Harry Lee's parents were Dorsey H. and Carrie Evelyn Flowers, who married in McLennan County, Texas, on July 9, 1899. Dorsey and Carrie lived in Waco, Fort. Worth and San Antonio, Texas. Boyett often played roles of characters in uniform. His paternal grandfather, Dorsey, participated in the Spanish American War as a corporal in Company F, 2nd Texas Infantry and was also stationed in Laredo, Texas, in 1917, in charge of all non-commissioned officers in Company M, 37th Infantry, while the United States was in conflict with Mexico.
Carrie remarried and in the 1930 U.S. Census, Harry William is enumerated as "Harry" with Carrie, William Cason, and his older brother, Wallace, at 2103 Proctor Avenue in Waco, Texas. Harry William, who was then known as Harry, attended Waco High School, where he was active in theater, the Rostra Literary Society, the Junior Classical League, Boys Chorus, and as a junior was a Texas Interscholastic League contestant in Declamation. While at Dorsey High School in Los Angeles, he won a Shakespeare competition, which led to acting jobs in radio.[2] The 1940 U.S. Census shows that although he was living in Los Angeles on April 1, 1935, he had returned to Waco, and he was again living with his grandmother, Carrie, and his step-grandfather, William Cason. He later permanently moved with his family to Los Angeles, California. [3]
His father, Harry Lee Boyett, served in World War I in the U.S. Navy. Harry Lee married Margaret on September 4, 1925, in St. Clair County, Michigan, while working as a rubber worker. On a ship's registry sailing from Havana to New Orleans, in October of 1932, he listed his address as Paramount in Hollywood, California. It also reports his birth date is February 15, 1899, and he was born in Waco. He died at age 36 after having emergency surgery. He and his mother, Carrie, are buried in Rosemound Cemetery, in Waco.
Military service
Boyett served in the Navy during World War II and afterward performed on the stage in both New York City and Los Angeles.
Jack Webb, the executive producer of Adam-12, selected Boyett for the role of LAPD Sergeant. "Mac" MacDonald after several performances (such as playing Sgt. Sam Hunter) in both iterations of Webb's Dragnet.[5] (Boyett can also be seen uncredited as a bailiff in the 1954 movie version.)[4] Boyett appeared as MacDonald on Adam-12 for its entire 1968–1975 run.
He also made eight guest appearances on CBS's Perry Mason throughout the series' nine-year run, mostly in law-enforcement roles. In 1962, he played slain police officer Otto Norden in "The Case of the Hateful Hero". The defendant was his rookie partner James Anderson played by Richard Davalos, cousin of series regular Lt. Anderson played by Wesley Lau. He also played a corporate executive, Buck Osborn, in the 1961 episode "The Case of the Renegade Refugee". In the 1961 My Three Sons episode "Fire Watch", he was a forest ranger.
Boyett also acted in several motion pictures, such as The Hidden (1987) and The Rocketeer (1991).[3] Boyett earned much praise for his highly unusual role in The Hidden as a hospital patient named Jonathan P. Miller, possessed by an alien being with a taste for red Ferraris and rock and roll music. He also appeared in a well-known short public safety film entitled Last Clear Chance (1959) as Patrolman Hal Jackson. Interest in the film was renewed by its appearance in a 1993 episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000. Boyett's other small roles as a police officer include the crime dramas Vice Squad (1953) with Edward G. Robinson and Shield For Murder (1954) with Edmond O'Brien.
^McLellan, Dennis (Jan 1, 2005). "W. Boyett, 77; Veteran Stage, Television Actor". Los Angeles Times. Born in Akron, Ohio, in 1927 and raised in Waco, Texas, Boyed moved to Los Angeles with his family in the early 1940s. While at Dorsey High School, he won the Southern California Shakespeare competition, which led to acting jobs on radio.