
Personal Info
Known For
Acting
Gender
Male
November 22, 1904
Died
October 22, 1989 (84 years old)
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Also Known As
- Roland Winternitz
Roland Winters
Biography
Roland Winters (born Roland Winternitz) was an American actor who played many character parts in films and television but today is best remembered for portraying Charlie Chan in six films in the late 1940s.
Monogram Pictures eventually selected Winters to replace Sidney Toler in the Charlie Chan film series. Winters was 44 when he made the first of his six Chan films, The Chinese Ring in 1947 and ending with Charlie Chan and the Sky Dragon (also known as Sky Dragon) in 1949. His other Chan films were "Docks of New Orleans", "Shanghai Chest", "The Golden Eye" and "The Feathered Serpent". He also had character roles in three other feature films while he worked on the Chan series.
Yunte Huang, in Charlie Chan: The Untold Story of the Honorable Detective and His Rendezvous with American History, noted differences in the actors' appearances, especially that Winters' "tall nose simply could not be made to look Chinese." Huang also cited the actor's age, writing, "at the age of forty-four, he also looked too young to resemble a seasoned Chinese sage."
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In contrast to Huang, Ken Hanke wrote in his book, Charlie Chan at the Movies: History, Filmography, and Criticism, "Roland Winters has never received his due ... Winters brought with him a badly needed breath of fresh air to the series." He cited "the richness of the approach and the verve with which the series was being tackled" during the Winters era." Similarly, Howard M. Berlin, in his book, Charlie Chan's Words of Wisdom, commented that "Winters brought a much needed breath of fresh air to the flagging film series with his self-mocking, semi-satirical interpretation of Charlie, which is very close to the Charlie Chan in Biggers' novels."
After the series finished, Winters continued to work in film and television until 1982. He was in the movies So Big and Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff, played Elvis' father in Blue Hawaii and a judge in the Elvis film Follow That Dream. He made appearances as the boss on the early TV series Meet Millie as the boss and the courtroom drama Perry Mason. In one episode of the Bewitched TV series, he played the normally unseen McMann of McMann and Tate. He also portrayed Mr. Gimbel in Miracle on 34th Street in 1973.
Known For
Acting

Miracle on 34th Street
1973

Loving
1970

The Carol Burnett Show
1967

Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C.
1964

The Addams Family
1964

Bewitched
1964

The Lucy Show
1962

The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
1962

Follow That Dream
1962

Blue Hawaii
1961

Cash McCall
1960

Jet Pilot
1957

Perry Mason
1957

Bigger Than Life
1956

So Big
1953

Raton Pass
1951

To Please a Lady
1950

Between Midnight and Dawn
1950

Convicted
1950

The Underworld Story
1950

Captain Carey, U.S.A.
1950

Malaya
1949

A Dangerous Profession
1949

Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff
1949







