Quote:
Originally Posted by Sailor Steve
(Post 2363706)
I still remember him from the old TV series T.H.E. CAT. ...
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I remember that series also, although it only lasted one season, in the mid-60s, I believe. The pilot for the series was filmed at the Catholic school and parish church in San Francisco I attended, St.Paul's Catholic Church and School. The filming was a really big event in our blue-collar neighborhood, since the whole Hollywood scene was rather a bit exotic for us working class folk. Some of the ladies in the parish knew who Loggia was because he had apparently been on some soap operas on afternoon TV, but he was unknown to the rest of us. There was one scene in the pilot where Loggia's character, a famed cat burglar turned to honest work (a la "It Takes A Thief") has to test the security set up by law enforcement to protect a witness, a priest being sought by assassins for the mob. In the scene, T.H.E. Cat (Thomas Hewitt Edward Cat) sets up a zip line from the roof of the school to the roof of the church and uses it to circumvent the police guards and enter the priest's residence. The stunt was done by a pro stuntman and was a big sensation in our neighborhood. It was done at night and it seemed like every person in the neighborhood plus more came to watch. It was amusing watching the crew trying to quiet down a crowd of predominantly Irish and Italian working class folks all hyped up on the glamour of Hollywood and the riskiness of the stunt (the zip line was about five stories up and there was no net; OSHA wasn't around back then). Loggia came out to talk to the crowd and ask for their cooperation; he was a true gentleman and was very willing to sign autographs and pose for a few pictures, as he was for the course of the entire shoot. I was very impressed by his behavior and attitude (the crew and some of the other 'talent' were quite much arrogant, snobbish twits). Over the later years, I always tried to catch anything Loggia appeared in, just to see how his career progressed. He was always an interesting actor, someone who could play either a principal lead or a character role with ease and make the characters he play fully fleshed and dimensional. He may not have had the grand marquee star status or notoriety of other actors, but his presence in any production was a significant asset. All of us in the neighborhood were very disappointed when his series wasn't renewed, but he went on to bigger and better roles...
RIP, Mr. Loggia; thanks for a great childhood memory and thanks for all the great acting memories later on...
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