Known for Acting

Sterling Walter Hayden (born Sterling Relyea Walter; March 26, 1916 – May 23, 1986) was an American actor and author. He dropped out of high school at the age of 16 and hired on as mate on a schooner. He was a ship's captain at 22, and in need of cash to buy his own boat, established himself as a model in New York, discovered by Paramount Studios talent scouts and offered a contract. Sterling Hayden, the handsome tall blond actor who played wholesome leading-man movie roles in the 1940's and 1950's and later weathered into a rough-hewn solid character actor in films such as "Dr. Strangelove", "The Godfather," "Nine to Five" and "King of the Gypsies". He appeared in 71 feature films and tv-productions from the debut in "Virginia" 1941 to the tv mini-series "The Blue and the Gray" in 1982. He wrote of his obsessive fascination with the sea in a 1963 autobiography, "Wanderer," and in 1970 his 700-page epic novel of the sea, "Voyage," was a main selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club. Sterling Hayden appeared in the German documentary, "Pharos of Chaos," (1983) filmed aboard his barge in Europe, and seemed to be in an alcoholic stupor much of the time, supplementing his wine intake with hashish. On camera he said: "What confuses me is I ain't all that unhappy. So why do I drink, I don't know."
1972
as Captain McCluskey
1964
as Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper
1980
as Russell Tinsworthy
1956
as Johnny Clay
1976
as Leo Dalcò
1973
as Roger Wade
1954
as Johnny 'Guitar' Logan
2016
as Capt. Mark McCluskey
1954
as Joe E. Conroy
2020
as Self (archive footage)
1957
as John Garth
1952
as Commander Dan Collier
1950
as Dix Handley
1981
as Howard Anderson
1981
as Duke Stuyvesant
1978
as King Zharko Stepanowicz
1979
as Z.K. Dawson
1964
as Daniel Grudge
1953
as Det. Lt. Sims
1947
as Sterling Hayden