Tony-Winning Actor Richard Kiley Dies - The Washington Post

Richard Kiley, 76, who was Broadway's original "Man of La Mancha" and had countless other roles on television, in movies and on the stage, died March 5 at his home in Warwick, N.Y. He had a blood disorder.

Mr. Kiley was a strong-voiced baritone who became of one of Broadway's stalwart leading men in musicals and dramas of the 1950s and '60s.

It was in "La Mancha" that Mr. Kiley, singing "The Impossible Dream," had his biggest success. He won a Tony Award for his role as Don Quixote in the musical, which opened in 1965 and ran for more than five years. He returned to Broadway in revivals of the show in 1972 and 1977.

The actor also won a Tony for his performance in "Redhead," a Victorian murder-mystery musical that starred Gwen Verdon and was directed by Bob Fosse.

On television, Mr. Kiley appeared in "The Thorn Birds," one of the most successful miniseries of all time, and won an Emmy Award for his role as an Australian sheep farmer.

He also won Emmys for the TV series "A Year in the Life," which lasted only a year on NBC, and for "Picket Fences."

Among the movies in which he appeared were "The Blackboard Jungle," "The Little Prince," "Looking for Mr. Goodbar," "Endless Love" and "Patch Adams."

Mr. Kiley was born in Chicago and studied at Loyola University and Barnum Dramatic School. After serving in the Navy during World War II, he got his first big break touring in the national company of "A Streetcar Named Desire." He replaced Anthony Quinn in the role of Stanley Kowalski.

Mr. Kiley first gained notice in New York in 1953, appearing in a revival of George Bernard Shaw's "Misalliance" and winning a Theater World Award, given to promising newcomers.

Later that year, he played the caliph in "Kismet" and sang the show's hit song, "Stranger in Paradise."

Mr. Kiley starred with Diahann Carroll in 1962 in "No Strings," the only Broadway musical for which Richard Rodgers wrote the music and lyrics. In this tale of an interracial romance, Carroll played a high-fashion model and Mr. Kiley played a jaded, prize-winning novelist.

Mr. Kiley also appeared on Broadway in an adaptation of Allen Drury's "Advise and Consent" in 1960 and in Alan Ayckbourn's comedy "Absurd Person Singular" in 1974. He starred in a praised 1987 revival of Arthur Miller's "All My Sons."

Mr. Kiley's first marriage, to Mary Bell Wood, ended in divorce. They had six children. In 1968, he married Pat Ferrier, a dancer he had met in "Redhead."

CAPTION: Richard Kiley won an Emmy for his part in the series "A Year in the Life," which lasted only a year on NBC.