Tom Tryon

About Tom Tryon

After beginning in a stock theatre company as a set painter and assistant manager, and later becoming a production assistant with NBC-TV, the Yale-educated Tryon entered film in 1955 with "Scarlet Hour". He appeared in mostly forgettable fare including "I Married a Monster from Outer Space" (1958) (as a stone-faced alien), and as the title character in the 1958 Walt Disney TV series "Texas John Slaughter". The height of his acting career was the starring role in Otto Preminger's "The Cardinal" (1963). In 1971, Tryon wrote the highly popular, supernatural thriller "The Other", which he adapted to the screen the following year, and then switched full time to his eventually more successful writing career. His novel "Harvest Home" was made into a 1978 TV movie "The Dark Secret of Harvest Home", and his "Crowned Heads" was adapted in part for the 1978 Billy Wilder film, "Fedora".

Partners

Wife

Ann Noyes. married in June 1955; divorced in 1958

Education

The Neigborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre, New York , New York

Art Students League of New York, New York , New York

Yale University, New Haven , Connecticut

Career Milestones

1978

Novel, "Crowned Heads" adapted in part as Billy Wilder film, "Fedora"

1972

Began writing full time

1972

Wrote first screenplay, adapting the "The Other"

1971

First novel published, "The Other"

1971

Acted in final film, "The Nacro Men"

1962

Cast opposite Marilyn Monroe in the never-completed film, "Something's Got to Give"

1958

Appeared in title role of Walt Disney TV series, "Texas John Slaughter"

1955

Film debut, "Scarlet Hour"

1955

TV acting debut, "The Way of the World"

1955

Moved to California

Worked as TV production assistant at CBS before switching to acting

1952

Broadway debut as understudy in the musical, "Wish You Were Here"

Joined Cape Playhouse stock company in Dennis, Massachusetts as set designer, assistant stage manager and later actor

1943

Enlisted in the US Navy at age 17 and spent three years as a radio specialist in the South Pacific during WWII

Grew up in Wethersfield, Connecticut