Jan-Michael Vincent

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Jan-Michael Vincent as Stringfellow Hawke
Jan-Michael Vincent as Stringfellow Hawke

Jan-Michael Vincent (born July 15, 1944) is an American actor most well-known for his role as helicopter pilot Stringfellow Hawke on the 1980s U.S. television series Airwolf (1984-1986). Vincent had an extensive television and film career that began in the late 1960s and lasted until the early 2000s. He is currently said to be retired from acting.

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Vincent was born in Denver, Colorado to Doris and Lloyd Vincent. His family moved to Hanford, California when Jan-Michael was in his teens. Vincent attended Ventura College in Southern California.

Vincent's first acting job was in the movie Los Bandidos, directed by and starring Robert Conrad, in 1964. His acting career took off in the late 1960s when casting agent Dick Clayton signed Vincent to Universal Studios. In 1970, Vincent garnered critical praise for his role in the Made for TV film "classic" known as Tribes, co-starring Darren McGavin, about a tough, Marine boot-camp drill sergeant, that has to deal with a "hippie" draftee (portrayed by Jan-Michael), who won’t play by "the rules". Vincent also appeared in the Disney film The World's Greatest Athlete as a Tarzan-like young man who becomes a great professional athlete. He also appeared in the "Danger Island" segments on Hanna-Barbera's Banana Splits series as Link.

Vincent became a popular and an acclaimed film star during the 1970s, especially for his co-starring role with Charles Bronson in the crime film The Mechanic. Other notable films included the Western The Undefeated with John Wayne and the surfing film Big Wednesday with William Katt and Gary Busey. In 1975, he also starred in the cult classic trucker movie White Line Fever, followed by the notorious Damnation Alley, based on Roger Zelazny's science fiction novella, in 1977. In 1980, he starred in the gang-themed drama, Defiance, which received only a limited release,[1] and in The Return, a little-seen science-fiction film which was released directly to television and video.

After an acclaimed performance in the 1983 television miniseries The Winds of War, Vincent was cast as Stringfellow Hawke for the action-espionage series Airwolf, in which Vincent co-starred with Ernest Borgnine. It is probably the role for which Vincent is best known and remembered, and one for which he was especially well paid. It was noted, at the time, that Vincent's salary for his work on Airwolf was the highest paid of any actor in American television, at the time.

After the end of Airwolf, Vincent's acting career took a downturn, and he found himself in increasingly smaller-budget and lower-exposure film projects, that typically went directly to video.

Jan-Michael Vincent has been involved in two, severe car crashes, from which he barely escaped alive. As a result of an automobile accident in 1996, in which Jan broke three vertebrae, he sustained a permanent injury to his vocal cords, leaving him with a harsh, rasping voice. This further diminished his attractiveness to film producers as an actor.

Little news has been heard from Jan-Michael Vincent in very recent years. It is rumored that he retired from acting in the early 2000s and is now living in seclusion in Mississippi. There are reports of people seeing him in and around Redwood, Mississippi as of late 2004[citation needed].

His last film role was in the Independent Film entitled White Boy AKA: Menace (USA video title) released in March 2002.

On television, he had a very small guest-role on Nash Bridges, playing the title-character's long-lost brother. It was a role that somewhat mirrored his own life.

Vincent has a daughter, named Amber Springbird Vincent, from his marriage to first wife (now divorced), Bonnie Portman (1974-75).

  1. ^ "50 Top-Grossing Films". (Week ending March 19, 1980). He also had a starring role alongside Burt Reynolds in the stuntman film Hooper. Variety, March 22, 1980

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