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Veteran character/voice actor Hamilton Camp appeared as Bart Furley in one episode of Three's Company. | ||||
Personal Information | ||||
Born: | 30 October 1934 | |||
Birthplace: | London, England | |||
Died | 2 October 2005 | (aged 70)|||
Deathplace: | Los Angeles, California | |||
Website/URL: | http://www.hamiltoncamp.com | |||
Career/Family Information | ||||
Occupation/ Career: |
Actor and Voice artist | |||
Years active: | 1960 to 2005, his death | |||
Character information | ||||
Appeared on: | Three's Company guest appearance | |||
Character played: | Bart Furley in "Furley vs. Furley" in Season 5 |
Hamilton Camp appeared as Bart Furley, the hard-harded, mean-spirited, and ruthlessly cruel brother of Ralph Furley and owner of the Hacienda Palms Apartments in the fifth season Three's Company episode titled "Furley vs. Furley". Hamilton was an actor, a singer, and a songwriter.
Life and Career[]
His acting career started at age twelve in 1946; his music career began in the early 1960s, when he and Bob Gibson made their mark on folk music with the live album, Gate of Horn. In 1964, Hamilton wrote and recorded the folk classic, "Pride of Man", also recorded by artists like Gordon Lightfoot, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Tony Rice, and Gram Parsons.
In the spring of 2004, he appeared as Sir Andrew Aguecheek in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night at A Noise Within in Los Angeles. F. Kathleen Foley, writing for the LA Times, said this of his performance: In July of that year, Hamilton appeared in A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Hollywood Bowl, and reprised his role as Snug the Joiner in the production at A Noise Within in Los Angeles during the Fall. During the summers of 2004 and 2005 he coached theater games in Door County, Wisconsin.
In January, 2005, he traveled to the Washington, DC area for appearances at the World Folk Music Association annual benefit concerts (January 14 & 15), and a concert at Jammin' Java on the 16th.
Personal Life[]
Hamilton married Rasjadah Lisa Jovita Cisz in 1961, and they had six children. His wife Rasjadah died in 2002. He died suddenly of a heart attack 2 October 2005, at the age of 70, four weeks before his 71st birthday, and is survived by his six children and thirteen grandchildren.
External Links[]
- Hamilton Camp's Official website
- Hamilton Camp at the Internet Movie Database
- Hamilton Camp at Find a Grave
- Hamilton Camp article at Memory Alpha, (a Star Trek wiki)