Don Porter
Donald "Don" Porter (September 24, 1912 –February 11, 1997) was an American actor who appeared in a number of films since the 1940s, including Top Sergeant and Eagle Squadron. On television, he portrayed the widowed father of 15-year-old Frances "Gidget" Lawrence (Sally Field) in the 1965 ABC sitcom Gidget. Besides his work in film and television, Porter was active on stage, as he acted in more than 200 plays, including The Front Page, Plaza Suite, and Any Wednesday. He appeared in various films in the 1940s before landing the role of Peter Sands, the boss of Susan Camille MacNamara (Ann Sothern), on the 1950s sitcom Private Secretary. A retooled version of the series appeared later, titled The Ann Sothern Show. It featured many of the same actors, including Porter as hotel manager James Devery in the venue of a fashionable New York City hotel. He later guest starred on episodes of Green Acres, Love, American Style, The Mod Squad, Barnaby Jones, The Six Million Dollar Man, Hawaii Five-O, Three's Company (on which he played Jack Tripper's uncle), and Switch.
Acting
TV
The Six Million Dollar Man
as Dr. Stanley Bacon
1974
TV
The Bionic Woman
1976
TV
Dallas
as Matt Devlin
1978
TV
The Love Boat
as Slade Summerhill
1977
Movie
The Candidate
as Senator Crocker Jarmon
1972
TV
Three's Company
1977
TV
Hawaii Five-O
as Jonathan Cavel
1968
TV
Hawaii Five-O
as Alex Kelsey
1968
TV
Matlock
as Erskine Tate
1986
Movie
Desk Set
as Don the Elevator Operator (uncredited)
1957
Movie
She-Wolf of London
as Barry Lanfield
1946
TV
Green Acres
1965
Movie
White Line Fever
as Cutler
1975
Movie
Who Done It?
as 'Murder at Midnight' program manager
1942
Movie
The Racket
as R. G. Connolly
1951
TV
Ellery Queen
1975
Movie
711 Ocean Drive
as Larry Mason
1950
Movie
Night Monster
as Dick Baldwin
1942
Movie
The Turning Point
as Joe Silbray
1952
Movie
The Legend of Lizzie Borden
as George Robinson
1975
Movie
Mame
as Mr. Upson
1974
Movie
Buck Privates Come Home
as Capt. Christie
1947
TV
Here's Lucy
as Ken Richards
1968
Movie
Live a Little, Love a Little
as Mike Lansdown
1968