
Bing Russell
Actor
Born: May 5, 1926 (76 years old)
Died: April 8, 2003
Place of birth: Brattleboro, Vermont, USA
Biography
Neil Oliver "Bing" Russell (May 5, 1926 – April 8, 2003) was an American actor and Class A minor-league baseball club owner. He was the father of Hollywood actor Kurt Russell. Although best known as the deputy on Bonanza (1959) and Robert in The Magnificent Seven (1960), Russell's was also well known on a national level as the owner of the Portland Mavericks Baseball Club. Helming the only independent team in the class A Northwest League, Russell was an innovator. Before Bull Durham (1988), there were the Mavericks. Russell kept a 30 man roster because he believed that some of the players deserved to have one last season. His motto was simply one three lettered word - not WIN - although the Mavericks did just that - no, the word was FUN. He created a park that kept all corporate sponsorship outside the gates, hired the first female general manager in professional baseball, and the following year hired the first Asian American GM/Manager. That same season his team set a record for the highest attendance in Minor league history, and went on to win the pennant. Ex-major leaguers and never-weres who couldn't stop playing the game flocked to his June tryouts, which were always open to anyone that showed up. From as far away as Capetown, and France, players would head to Portland for a chance with Russell's Mavericks.
Filmography (82)
- Rio Bravo (1959, ★ 7.8)
- Elvis (1979, ★ 6.8)
- Last Train from Gun Hill (1959, ★ 7.1)
- Cheyenne Autumn (1964, ★ 6.7)
- The Horse Soldiers (1959, ★ 7)
- How the West Was Won (1962, ★ 7)
- Attack (1956, ★ 6.8)
- The Magnificent Seven (1960, ★ 7.5)
- Overboard (1987, ★ 6.8)
- Blackbeard's Ghost (1968, ★ 6.7)
- The Loneliest Runner (1976, ★ 6.9)
- The Battered Bastards of Baseball (2014, ★ 7.5)
- Big Leaguer (1953, ★ 6.8)
- The Great Impostor (1960, ★ 6.9)
- Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957, ★ 7)
- The Andy Griffith Show (1960, ★ 7.6)
- I Dream of Jeannie (1965, ★ 7.8)
- The Munsters (1964, ★ 7.9)
- The Twilight Zone (1959, ★ 8.5)
- The Apple Dumpling Gang (1975, ★ 6.6)
- Maverick (1957, ★ 6.9)
- The Streets of San Francisco (1972, ★ 7)
- Alias Smith and Jones (1971, ★ 7)
- Emergency! (1972, ★ 7.9)
- The Wonderful World of Disney (1954, ★ 7.8)
- Tango & Cash (1989, ★ 6.5)
- Mannix (1967, ★ 6.7)
- Gunsmoke (1955, ★ 6.7)
- The Fugitive (1963, ★ 7.2)
- Ironside (1967, ★ 6.8)