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This is one happy man. —David Doyle about himself
And why not? He's Bosley, after all, the only male
regular on the greatest girl-watcher's show in TV
history, Charlie's Angels. Sure, Doyle suffered a bit of
panic earlier this summer when the superdraw of the
gumshoe series, Farrah Fawcett-Majors, announced her
departure. The unseen Charlie of the show's title was
not modeled after Finley of the Oakland Athletics, but
there was some resemblance to whoever was in charge—the
producers or the ABC network. There was no way that
Farrah's take was going to be bumped from $5,000 to
$75,000 a show (if that's what she really wanted) or
that she would be let out of her contract altogether.
By the time Doyle had calculated how long his savings
account could survive if Angels folded its wings (18
months), he had recovered his sense of proportion and
humor. "I figured there are four, maybe six good-looking
girls who come to Hollywood every year," he cracks. In
any case, at that point all the press clamor over
Farrah's fate had hyped Charlie's Angels into the
highest-rated show on the tube—which it had not been
before. Just as fortuitously, Cheryl Ladd, 25, had been
signed to play Farrah's younger sister should she
belatedly return—or as her replacement. "Pinup-wise,
Cheryl is just as impressive," Doyle glows, "and she's
as gifted as, if not more so than, Farrah. I think it's
a stronger show now."
That's the closest Doyle's ever gotten in his 47 years
to an invidious statement. If there were a sealed
intra-Angel ballot tomorrow to choose the most beautiful
human of them all, the vote would go to David Doyle, 4
to 0. That counts fallen-away Angel FF-M, who remains as
fond of him as he is of her. "She's a sweet girl," David
says, "and if she has a fault, it's that she thinks with
her heart rather than her head.
"We all knew the problems Farrah was having," he
elaborates. "She is crazy about husband Lee Majors and
anxious to spend more time with him. But she would be up
at 5 a.m., work all day and then get home around 7." As
for her $6 million man, "Lee would get home from tossing
buildings around about 7:30, just in time for a bite to
eat. Then they would study their scripts and go to
sleep. On weekends Farrah was off shooting commercials.
It wasn't any bed of roses.
"We all know what Farrah did for the show. Why resent
it? I realize," David adds, "that's easier for me to say
than for one of the girls." But what is astounding is
that Charlie's two other charter Angels, Kate Jackson
and Jaclyn Smith, are equally sympathetic to the
show-stealing Farrah. "That's where their maturity comes
in," David says, modestly downplaying his own decisive
influence on morale on the set.
"If you want to sink into problems," notes Kate, "you'd
better stay away from him—David's never down and keeps
everyone else up." To her and Jackie, the other
unmarried Angel, Doyle doubles as a confessor (heavy
subjects arise, though—reports to the contrary—Warren
Beatty isn't one of them). "He treats me like a
daughter," says Jackie, "and I love him personally."
When Ladd first arrived, feeling "like the new girl on
the block," Doyle was a one-man welcome wagon. "Within
two weeks, we were all friends," Cheryl smiles, "and I
feel like David is my adopted dad." Says "Dad": "She was
eager, a little nervous, but a pro." Cheryl had sung and
worked in movies (on one set she met her husband of four
years, David Ladd, the son of the late actor and brother
of 20th Century-Fox chieftain Alan Ladd Jr.). But Doyle
hastens to insert, "No one did this girl a favor by
giving her a job. She can cut it, which we all knew
after a couple days of shooting." Returning the
compliment, Cheryl notes, "If anyone should act like a
star, it's David Doyle. He really knows his craft the
way I hope to someday, and he has real sensitivity."
That has come to him partially through tragedy. Doyle's
first wife, Rachael, died in a freak staircase fall in
1968 when their daughter, Leah, was 7. And his second
wife, Anne, suffers from a hereditary eye disease,
Retinitis pigmentosa, that gives her night blindness and
tunnel vision and could eventually cost her her sight.
That just deepens the traditional closeness of the
Doyles. David himself grew up in a very tight
Nebraska-based family of lawyers (grandfather, father,
brother, nephew).
Rambunctious as a kid, he once ignited his parochial
school fire escape and by 13 was stealing his dad's
Packard. Grabbed by the collar by an irate nun on one
occasion, he recalls, "I fell to the floor in a phony
faint. She thought she'd killed me, and there was quite
a flap." His next showbiz audition was delayed by two
years of prelaw majoring in Latin at the University of
Nebraska. A summer at Virginia's Barter Theater ended
all that, and in 1950 he switched his studies to New
York's Neighborhood Playhouse, where he was a classmate
of Joanne Woodward. With Korea, he enlisted in the Navy
in hopes of becoming a pilot, but his blood pressure was
too high. "I blame that on the beautiful girl I would
stay with until the wee hours of the morning," he quips.
He fetched up as air controller, and later radio deejay
at the U.S. base in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
Doyle's career got rolling after he replaced Walter
Matthau on Broadway in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?
(His visiting mother lamented his working "in-such a
dirty little vehicle.") His subsequent credits onstage
included The Beauty Part with Bert Lahr, and he's also
directed 60 plays. Among his films were Vigilante Force,
with Kris Kristofferson, and David established his face
on TV (to the extent it's still not confused with Tom
Bosley) as the Irish dad in Bridget Loves Bernie and as
the star's boss on The New Dick Van Dyke Show.
After his first wife's death, Doyle vowed never to marry
again and "was resigned to a life totally focused on my
daughter and career." Then, while in a revival of South
Pacific, he met singer-dancer Anne Nathan. "Two weeks
before he proposed he told me I really ought to be
seeing other people," she grins. So when he did propose
she said, "You're kidding." Explains Doyle: "By then I
figured that eventually I would want to get married
again, and if I waited for five years or so Anne
wouldn't be around." She recalls that the initial months
were "rocky." She's Jewish, and her mother had opposed
her marriage to a Catholic. Also, Anne found herself
"paranoid" in trying to take over as mom of Leah Doyle,
then 8.
When away from their rambling Encino ranch house, David
is a member of the so-called Hollywood Hackers, a
hang-loose golf group consisting of Efrem Zimbalist Jr.,
David Wayne and Sheldon Leonard. He also keeps up with
his old New York Players Club cronies like Jimmy Cagney,
Pat O'Brien and Harry Morgan.
During the latest Angels recess he shot three films: The
Comeback, with singer Jack Jones; a cameo as Elliott
Gould's boss in the upcoming Capricorn I; and a larger
role in an ABC movie-of-the-week with Desi Arnaz Jr. and
Bill Bixby. His main professional objective right now is
to get some "real dimension" written into his role on
Angels. The first season, he feels, "Bosley was sort of
an officious, effeminate snip. I fantasize Charlie
really works for Bosley, who's the brains of the
operation—a man with style, class and the nerve of
Napoleon."
With a more favorable time slot (one hour earlier on
Wednesday), more persuasive scripts, plus Cheryl Ladd,
Doyle anticipates that the Farrah-less Angels can be
still more formidable in the ratings. (And about the
reviewers: "I'm tired of critics who think that if
they're sarcastic enough people will mistake it for
intelligence. To those demeaners," snorts David, "I say,
'Try to imagine how little I care.' ")
What Doyle and the new Angels do care about—and
genuinely—is FF-M herself. "We all feel she is making a
terrible mistake leaving the show. One flop movie can
put you out of action." "I just hope she's done the
right thing for herself," chimes in Kate Jackson. Then
she adds with a Sabrina smile: "I think it's about time
everyone stopped asking us about last year—dragging up
stuff—and started thinking about this season. Everybody
knows when you look back you turn to salt."
-By Sue Reilly |