DeForest Kelley AKA Jackson DeForest Kelley Born: 20-Jan-1920 Birthplace: Atlanta, GA Died: 11-Jun-1999 Location of death: Los Angeles, CA Cause of death: Cancer - Stomach Remains: Cremated (ashes scattered in the Pacific Ocean)
Gender: Male Religion: Baptist Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Actor Nationality: United States Executive summary: Dr. McCoy on Star Trek Military service: US Army Air Corps, 1943-46 (WWII) DeForest Kelley wanted to be a doctor when he was a boy, but during the Depression of the 1930s medical school was beyond his means, and instead he became an amateur singer and later a professional actor. Kelley made his film debut with a featured role in a low-budget thriller, Fear in the Night. Based on a short story by Cornell Woolrich, he played a man who dreams a bloody crime and finds his dreams come true. Kelley had an accomplished Hollywood résumé before Star Trek, but he had been typecast as a bad guy, in films like Raintree County, Warlock, and Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.
Kelley said that his portrayal of Dr. Leonard "Bones" McCoy on Star Trek was inspired by his own family's crotchety doctor, and he played McCoy as a plain old fashioned country MD who just happened to work in outer space. In the voyages of the Star Ship Enterprise, McCoy chased Alice in Wonderland, healed a horta, OD'd on cordrazine, delivered Julie Newmar's baby, and devised cures for several diseases no man had ever had before. During Star Trek's run, Kelley became the first actor to be profiled in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
After Star Trek, Kelley took guest roles in episodic TV, but he stopped accepting such offers after the early 1980s -- except for one brief appearance as 137-year-old Admiral McCoy in the premier episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation in 1987. He also, of course, played McCoy in Star Trek cartoons, Star Trek video games, and six Star Trek movies, and made hundreds of appearances at Star Trek conventions. His last film was Trekkies, the 1997 documentary about Star Trek fans.
Long before he was successful, Kelley fell in love with a struggling actress, Carolyn Dowling, when they co-starred in a 1942 stage production of The Innocent Young Man. They dated for three years, and were married for 53. Father: Ernest D. Kelley (Baptist minister) Mother: Clara Casey Kelley Wife: Carolyn Dowling Kelley (m. 7-Sep-1945, d. 12-Oct-2004)
High School: Decatur Boys' High School, Decatur, GA (1937)
Hollywood Walk of Fame 7021 Hollywood Blvd. Risk Factors: Smoking
TELEVISION Star Trek Dr. McCoy (1966-69)
FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars (19-May-1998) [VOICE] Trekkies (18-Oct-1997) · Himself Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (6-Dec-1991) · McCoy Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (9-Jun-1989) · McCoy Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (26-Nov-1986) · McCoy Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1-Jun-1984) · McCoy Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (4-Jun-1982) · McCoy Star Trek: The Motion Picture (7-Dec-1979) Night of the Lepus (4-Oct-1972) Waco (25-Jun-1966) Apache Uprising (1-Jan-1966) · Toby Jack Saunders Marriage on the Rocks (16-Sep-1965) · Mr. Turner Town Tamer (7-Jul-1965) Black Spurs (28-May-1965) Where Love Has Gone (2-Nov-1964) · Sam Corwin Gunfight at Comanche Creek (6-Nov-1963) · Amos Troop Warlock (1-Apr-1959) The Law and Jake Wade (6-Jun-1958) · Wexler Raintree County (4-Oct-1957) · Southern Official Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (30-May-1957) Tension at Table Rock (3-Oct-1956) · Jim Breck Illegal (28-Oct-1955) · Edward Clary Canon City (30-Jun-1948) · Smalley Variety Girl (29-Aug-1947) Fear in the Night (18-Apr-1947)
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