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John Vivyan

John Vivyan ( John R. Vukayan; May 31, 1915 – December 20, 1983)[1] was an American stage and television actor, who was best known for portraying the title character in the television series Mr. Lucky.

John Vivyan

John R. Vukayan

(1915-05-31)May 31, 1915
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

December 20, 1983(1983-12-20) (aged 68)

Actor

1946–1983

 United States

U.S. Army

1941–1944

36017866

Early life[edit]

John R. Vukayan was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to parents of Serbian background.[2] His family moved to Chicago when he was an infant.[3] He attended the Serbian Orthodox Church on Schiller Street as a boy, where he sang in the choir.[4] After a year at Lake View High School,[5] he dropped out to start work.


He was employed by the Continental Can Company in Chicago during October 1940, when he registered for the draft as John Vukayan. The Draft Registrar recorded him as being 6'3" and weighing 185 pounds, with brown eyes and hair, and a scar on his forehead.[2]

Military service[edit]

Two months before his 26th birthday, on April 8, 1941, he enlisted in the US Army.[6] His enlistment papers carried the name "John R. Vukayan", and noted he was a citizen, single, had completed one year of high school, and was semi-skilled in metal working.[6] He was assigned to the 132nd Infantry Regiment (Illinois National Guard), which deployed overseas to Australia in January 1942. From there his regiment moved to New Caledonia in March 1942, eventually forming part of the Americal Division. His regiment was sent to take part in the Battle of Guadalcanal on December 8, 1942, and within a week was engaged in fighting off Japanese infiltrators. John was a corporal[7] with Company E of the 2nd Battalion, which was thrown into the Battle for Mt Austen on January 2, 1943. The battalion suffered heavy casualties during the fighting, one of whom was John, his left leg hit by gunfire.[8]


Evacuated from the Solomon Islands on January 6, 1943, he would spend the next fourteen months in Army hospitals recovering from his wounds.[8] He later recounted that the Army doctors had several times considered amputating the leg.[9] He was eventually moved stateside to a hospital in Michigan, where he recalled meeting actress Loretta Young when she visited wounded soldiers.[10] Awarded a Purple Heart[7] and Bronze Star[11][12] he was judged unfit for further active service and was discharged from the Army on March 23, 1944.[13] The injury to his left leg would continue to bother him and limit his physical activity for years to come.[5]

Early stage career[edit]

While pondering his career options during his long convalescence, John became interested in the theater.[5] In June 1946 he starts appearing as "John Vivyan" among the cast of the Barter Theatre group's junior company, at the "Barter Colony" near Abingdon, Virginia.[14] The circumstances of his stage name's adoption are not known, and from later sources it is apparent he retained "John R. Vukayan" as his legal name until at least 1960.[15][16]


The Barter Theatre provided free room and board for prospective actors but no pay. When not performing, they were expected to help out with sets, lighting, and costumes, as well as work in the lodging and cafeteria used by the troupe. It was a lifestyle that appealed to many recently discharged veterans, thirty-six of whom, including Vivyan, were inducted into the American Legion at a ceremony in July 1946.[17] Performances had short runs, often no more than two evenings and a matinee. At the time, the Barter Theatre group had no venue of its own, so plays were performed at the Municipal Theatre in nearby Abingdon. The Barter Theatre performers also entertained at local social clubs; Vivyan sang Serbian folk songs at one such event.[18]


Vivyan finished out his time with the Barter Theatre group during a 1946-47 winter tour of Virginia and South Carolina, in which the troupe alternated the plays Arms and the Man and Much Ado About Nothing.[19][20]

Summer stock and New York television[edit]

In 1947, Vivyan moved to Manhattan.[21] He used his G.I. Bill money to pay for lessons at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts there.[22] After graduating, however, he was unable to find any acting jobs. He later told an interviewer that this was a grim period in his life.[21] He scraped by on doing summer stock theatre, performing work disdained by established actors for its low pay and grueling pace.


He also found work in the new television industry, doing a couple of minor roles each year from 1949 thru 1954.[9] New York City was a creative center for early live television, particularly anthology series, which featured a new story and cast with each episode. Film actors disliked the pressure of performing live, so an out of work stage actor had an advantage.


After years of near obscurity, Vivyan caught a break in 1952. He was cast opposite June Havoc in a summer touring company production of W. Somerset Maugham's Rain.[23] This two-month tour provided Vivyan with the time to hone his portrayal of the unfortunate Rev. Davidson, drawing good reviews in several cities. He followed this success with a late summer engagement in a Noël Coward play, On Approval, with the popular Arthur Treacher casting reflected glory on his younger co-star.[24]


Following those off-season successes, Vivyan landed a role in a high season production of a recent Broadway musical. Joan Blondell was the star of a multi-city tour for A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, with Vivyan playing her romantic interest.[25] The tour opened in Bridgeport, went to Boston and Washington, D. C., before finishing in Chicago.[26][27][28] At the latter, the local paper noted he attended services and sang with the choir at the same Serbian Orthodox Church to which he belonged growing up.[4]


The following years were less successful. Vivyan had only a few weeks acting during August 1953 with the musical Lady in the Dark, performed al fresco at Pitt Stadium, which starred Billie Worth and included Lee Bergere and a young Shirley Jones among the cast.[29] This was followed by an even quicker stint in a new play about the United Nations, called The Paradise Question. Starring Leon Ames, the show lasted only two weeks in New Haven, Connecticut and Philadelphia.[30][31]

Later career and life[edit]

Vivyan once complained to a columnist that being on CBS limited the guest spots he could accept for that network's own shows.[40] Having gone through lean periods, he was inclined to pursue performing opportunities whenever they arose. Following the cancellation of Mr. Lucky, he resumed doing stage work in between television shows. He also did another film, Rider on a Dead Horse (1962), and voice-over work for an animated short in 1963. He had a brief recurring role as the gangster Lepke Buchalter on The Lawless Years, but most of his other television work was for single appearances. These tapered off quickly to two or three shows a year, then became more infrequent after Vivyan turned fifty in 1965. His stage work also ceased about the same time.


He did no performing work for seven years after open heart surgery, at age sixty, in 1975.[22] He resumed doing television in 1982, appearing on commercials and an episode each of two popular shows, WKRP in Cincinnati and Simon & Simon. The latter show was broadcast just two weeks before he died of heart failure at Santa Monica Hospital on December 20, 1983.[22]

Personal life[edit]

Vivyan told a newspaper columnist that he had tried marriage once, but it did not work out.[12] There is no readily-available public record of his marriage, and he continued to be regarded as an eligible bachelor while active in show business.[42] During 1958 he dated Ellen Powell, the daughter of Joan Blondell and Dick Powell.[43] Later, he was said to occasionally date actress Nita Talbot among others.[44]


According to newspapers, he owned a cabin cruiser which he used for deep sea fishing.[42] He lived in a modest apartment on Sweetzer Avenue in West Hollywood during most of his peak popularity. His main hobby was woodworking, and hand restoring old furniture that he would buy from second-hand shops.[42] He told an interviewer that he had not gambled since his Army days as "I get no kicks out of it".[12]

at Find a Grave

John Vivyan

at IMDb 

John Vivyan

at the American Film Institute Catalog

John Vivyan