John Randolph (June 1, 1915 - February 24, 2004) was a Tony Award-winning American film, television and stage actor.
John Randolph (1727-January 31, 1784) was an American lawyer in colonial Williamsburg, Virginia. He served as king's attorney for the Province of Virginia from 1766 until the American Revolution.
Randolph at first attempted to reconcile the rebelling Burgesses with the Royal Governor Dunmore, but when revolution became inevitable he left for Scotland with Lord Dunmore. He believed that to remain during the revolution would conflict with his oath of office, but was sympathetic with its cause.
When Randolph died in London in 1784, his last request was to be buried in America. His remains were returned and he is interred in the chapel at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg. His son, Edmund Randolph became Governor of Virginia and Attorney General of the United States.
Veteran performer John Randolph was a Tony Award-winning character actor whose union and social activism in the 40s and 50s caused him to be blacklisted during the McCarthy era. The balding performer may not have been a household name but he was a regular face in movies and TV for over four decades. The son of Russian and Romanian immigrants, he was born Emanuel Cohen in the Bronx. When his father died and his mother remarried, his stepfather, Joseph Lippman, renamed him Mortimer. He began his dramatic training in the 30s, studying under Stella Adler and changing his name to the less ethnic moniker of "John Randolph". He served in the Army Air Forces during WWII and married actress Sarah Cunningham (I) in Chicago in 1945 while performing in Orson Welles' stage production of "Native Son". They had two children, Martha and Harrison. After the war, Randolph become one of the original members of the Actors Studio. Making his film debut with Naked City, The (1948), his passionate, outspoken leftist views and defense of other accused figures led to Randolph and his wife being blacklisted. In 1955, they were both called before the House Un-American Activities Committee and plead the Fifth Amendment. Although Randolph lost many jobs during this 15-year blacklist, he continued to find work onstage, mainly in New York. Finally, director John Frankenheimer broke the Hollywood blacklist after casting Randolph, along with fellow "marked" actors Will Geer and Jeff Corey (I), in Seconds (1966) in which he played a disillusioned older man surgically made to look decades younger (now played by Rock Hudson). Randolph continued to flourish in films and TV following this breakthrough with important roles in Serpico (1973), Frances (1982), Prizzi's Honor (1985) and You've Got Mail (1998), along with the TV movies Missiles of October, The (1974) (TV) and _"Lincoln" (1975) (mini)_. He also played the recurring role of Roseanne's father on her popular sitcom. In 1987, he was the recipient of both Tony and Drama Desk awards for his close-to-home portrayal of a communist, left-wing grandfather in Neil Simon's "Broadway Bound". Randolph continued his activism into the 1980s, heading the Council of American-Soviet Friendship, a cultural exchange organizations. He died of natural causes at age 88.