Age, Biography and Wiki
John Larkin (actor, born 1912) was born on 11 April, 1912 in Oakland, California, U.S., is an American actor (1912–1965). Discover John Larkin (actor, born 1912)'s Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 53 years old?
Popular As |
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Occupation |
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Age |
53 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Aries |
Born |
11 April, 1912 |
Birthday |
11 April |
Birthplace |
Oakland, California, U.S. |
Date of death |
1965 |
Died Place |
Studio City, California, U.S. |
Nationality |
United States
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 11 April.
He is a member of famous actor with the age 53 years old group.
John Larkin (actor, born 1912) Height, Weight & Measurements
At 53 years old, John Larkin (actor, born 1912) height not available right now. We will update John Larkin (actor, born 1912)'s Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Not Available |
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Not Available |
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Who Is John Larkin (actor, born 1912)'s Wife?
His wife is Genelle Gibbs (1 child) Teri Keane (1950–1961) (divorced) (1 child) Audrey Blum (m. 1961–1965) (2 children)
Family |
Parents |
Not Available |
Wife |
Genelle Gibbs (1 child) Teri Keane (1950–1961) (divorced) (1 child) Audrey Blum (m. 1961–1965) (2 children) |
Sibling |
Not Available |
Children |
Not Available |
John Larkin (actor, born 1912) Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is John Larkin (actor, born 1912) worth at the age of 53 years old? John Larkin (actor, born 1912)’s income source is mostly from being a successful actor. He is from United States. We have estimated John Larkin (actor, born 1912)'s net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2024 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2024 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2023 |
Pending |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
Not Available |
Source of Income |
actor |
John Larkin (actor, born 1912) Social Network
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Timeline
John Larkin (April 11, 1912 – January 29, 1965) was an American actor whose nearly 30-year career was capped by his 1950s portrayal of two fictional criminal attorneys – Perry Mason on radio and Mike Karr on television daytime drama The Edge of Night.
A native of the San Francisco Bay city of Oakland, Larkin acted on radio, the prime entertainment venue in American homes during the Depression 1930s.
By the latter part of the decade, when he was in his mid-twenties, Larkin had worked for a number of stations, including KCKN and WHB in the Kansas City Metropolitan Area, where he was an announcer and, later, in Chicago, where he became known for versatility in performing announcing and hosting duties in addition to acting in front of the microphone for numerous scripted shows, including Vic and Sade, one of network radio's most popular programs of the 1930s, and the one for which he received his first major credit as a radio actor.
He also played Frankie McGinnis in the 1935–41 NBC radio soap opera Girl Alone, a role that included some singing.
An item in Movie Radio Guide noted, "when the script calls for Frankie to sing, John Larkin does his own singing."
Following military service in World War II (1942-1946), he established himself in the capital city of network radio, New York and was offered, in 1947, the title role in CBS Radio Network's three-and-a-half-year-old afternoon crime serial, Perry Mason which, as was the case with all radio daytime dramas, consisted of an 11-minute script, broadcast Monday through Friday in a 15-minute time slot, including commercials, promos and credits.
During the show's run, he also continued to perform in radio's numerous primetime dramas — as an example, in May 1948, he was in Lux Radio Theater's version of the 1946 Gary Cooper vehicle Cloak and Dagger (May 3), and Ford Theater's versions of The Front Page (May 9), playing Hildy Johnson, as well as Laura (May 30), in which he voiced police lieutenant McPherson, who falls in love with the portrait of the title character.
Following the pattern set by radio, much of daytime programming, including all soaps, was structured as 15-minute productions during television's first eight years of full-schedule broadcasting (1948–56).
The show's leading characters, Dr. Jim Brent, a surgeon, and his wife, were played by daytime veterans Don MacLaughlin and Virginia Dwyer who also voiced the roles in the radio version.
By the early- to mid-1950s, however, most of radio's entertainment and information programming had already transferred to the new medium of television, with the process reaching its completion at the start of the 1960s.
Although Larkin had done some television announcing and isolated acting appearances during the medium's early years, his first sustained work came in the final year of his Perry Mason radio run.
Another Procter & Gamble radio soap, Road of Life, which had been on the air since 1937, had initiated a separate TV version, which premiered on CBS' daytime schedule December 13, 1954.
Larkin's voice had soon come to symbolize the Perry Mason radio persona and he remained with the role for eight-and-a-half years until the program's conclusion in December 1955.
Nine months after the show's cancellation on July 1, 1955, MacLaughlin and one of radio's earlier Perry Masons, Santos Ortega, would spend thirty and twenty years, respectively, on one of daytime's first two half-hour soaps, As the World Turns.
John Larkin, as Dr. Brent's friend, Frank Dana, had a medium-sized role amidst the show's large supporting cast, including thirty-year-old Jack Lemmon who, later in the year, would be cast in his Oscar-winning role as Ensign Pulver in Mister Roberts.
Larkin played Frank Dana for the first four months of the show's course, with another actor briefly playing the part in subsequent episodes.
John Larkin thus had his first television leading role, and The Edge of Night, premiering, along with As the World Turns, on Monday, April 2, 1956, ushered in a new era of half-hour soaps to TV, with other daytime dramas eventually expanding to a 30 minutes, then an hour and, ultimately, in one unsuccessful experiment (NBC's Another World) to 90 minutes.
The Edge of Night's title was derived from the fact that it aired at the end of the afternoon period, 4:30, a late time slot which had never previously been occupied by a soap.
Procter & Gamble could not, however, come to terms with Erle Stanley Gardner regarding Perry Mason's position as a daytime TV character and the defense attorney, while remaining with CBS, returned in twenty-one months, on September 21, 1957, as a primetime show, starring Raymond Burr.
Daytime's biggest advertiser, however, had another solution, which still permitted Larkin to portray afternoon TV's "Perry Mason" in all but name.
Irving Vendig, having scripted the radio Perry Mason for the past nine years, proposed the creation of a late-afternoon daytime drama with basically the same Perry Mason-type scripts, except for the name of the lead criminal lawyer, who would be called Mike Karr.
A forceful and dynamic actor, the 44-year-old Larkin was the dramatic fulcrum of the live show, delivering vividly effective courtroom speeches and presenting human frailty tempered by stalwart determination in the face of the multiple vicissitudes which the plotlines devised for dedicated crime fighter Mike Karr and his eventual wife, Sara Lane, whom Mike married in 1958, at the start of the show's third year.
As the storylines began, Mike was a police officer attending law school who, upon passing his bar exam, became an assistant district attorney and, in the course of time, a criminal attorney in private practice.
The show was one of the most popular offerings in daytime television and made the middle-aged Larkin something of a sex symbol, receiving sackfuls of fan mail.
Producers of prime-time shows had also taken notice, with Larkin receiving inquiries regarding his availability.
The Edge of Night, however, which revolved almost entirely around him, required his full attention.
Road of Life lasted only six-and-a-half months on TV, but continued on radio for another four years, finally ending its twenty-two-year run in 1959.
Larkin remained with Perry Mason until its final episode at the end of the year and was almost immediately offered a continuation of the role on television.
The show's place in its audience's affection was ultimately measured by a widely reported event of Friday, February 17, 1961, when, in the final scene of that day's live episode, Sara ran out of the house after the Karrs' two-year-old, Laurie (played by Victoria Larkin, daughter of John Larkin and his wife, Audrey Blum), had wandered into the street, followed by the sound of screeching tires and an impact.
Unseen over the weekend, Sara Karr turned out to have saved Laurie at the cost of her own life, as she lingered in a coma during Monday and Tuesday episodes, finally dying on Wednesday, February 22 and engendering an avalanche of calls to CBS along with thousands of letters (over 2,500 in the first day alone).
In a response, unprecedented in the annals of daytime drama, Larkin and the actress who had played Sara, Teal Ames, appeared on-screen following the last scene of the next day's episode, with Ames explaining that she was fine and had simply decided to leave the show in order to pursue other career options.
Later that year, John Larkin also arrived at the decision that the time had come for a new career direction which, in his case, meant Hollywood.
Mike Karr's final installment, on October 10, had the intrepid lawyer departing for the state capital to organize a crime commission.
For the next two months, the plotlines centered around supporting character Ed Gibson, another crime-fighting attorney, played by Larry Hagman, until Mike Karr, now portrayed by Laurence Hugo, returned in mid-December.
Although he was born in the San Francisco Bay area, Larkin had spent his entire career in other venues and was now, shortly before his fiftieth birthday, returning to his native state of California.
In his remaining three years, he worked continuously, appearing in prime-time TV shows (including four guest-starring roles as four different characters on Raymond Burr's Perry Mason) as well as playing supporting roles in three feature films.
After having acted in an estimated 7,500 dramatic shows on radio, he devoted his final decade to television and, from April 1962 to January 1965, was a key member of the supporting cast in two prime-time series and made at least twenty major guest-starring appearances in many of the top drama series of the period.
All of Larkin's prime-time appearances were in hour-long dramatic shows, with the first six broadcast within a five-week period in 1962.
He was a guest star in the April 24 episode of Leslie Nielsen's police drama The New Breed, followed three days later, on April 27 by a role in The Detectives Starring Robert Taylor.
The following day, April 28, he appeared as one of the murder suspects in "The Case of the Counterfeit Crank", the first of his four Perry Masons. Three days later, on May 1, he was seen in the "Savage Sunday" installment of the prestigious anthology series, The Dick Powell Show, which was structured as the pilot episode for his upcoming newspaper series, Saints and Sinners.