Biography
Reynolds was born to a
half-Irish,
half-Cherokee Indian
father and a mother of
English descent. After
graduating from Palm
Beach High School in
Palm Beach, Florida,
Reynolds attended
Florida State University
on a college football
scholarship, becoming an
all-star Southern
Conference halfback.
While at Florida State,
Reynolds joined the Phi
Delta Theta Fraternity,
the football team's
fraternity of choice.
After a knee injury in
1955 and then a
debilitating car
accident, Reynolds
switched from athletics
to college drama and won
the 1956 Florida State
Drama Award. He was
drafted by the Baltimore
Colts National Football
League team, but he
never played
professional football.
Burt Reynolds won a
scholarship to the Hyde
Park Playhouse and moved
to upstate New York. He
did gigs as a stuntman
for television programs
until he was
"discovered" in a
revival of Mister
Roberts in New York City
and signed to a
television acting
contract. He made his
Broadway debut in Look,
We've Come Through.
Reynolds first starred
on television, in the
1950s series Riverboat
and went on to appear in
a number of other shows,
including a role as
blacksmith Quint Asper
on Gunsmoke from 1962 to
1965. His film debut was
in 1961, in the movie
Angel Baby. At the
urging of friend Clint
Eastwood, Reynolds used
his TV fame to secure
leading roles in
overseas low budget
films commonly called
Spaghetti Westerns
beginning with Navajo
Joe in 1966. These low
budget starring roles
established Reynolds as
a bankable leading man
in film and earned him
starring roles in U.S.
big budget motion
pictures. His breakout
performance in
Deliverance (1972) made
him a star.
Burt Reynolds on the set
of Deliverance.Reynolds
gained additional
notoriety in 1972 when
he posed in the April
(Vol. 172, No. 4) issue
of Cosmopolitan
Magazine. It is said to
be the first America
magazine centerfold of a
(near) nude male.
![]() |
In the 1980s, after
Smokey and the Bandit,
he became typecast in
similar, less well-done
and less successful
movies. Comedian/actor
Robert Wuhl, in a
standup act in the late
80s, said that "Burt
Reynolds makes so many
bad movies, when someone
else makes a bad movie
Burt gets a royalty!"
During the first half of
the 1990s, he was the
star of the CBS
television series
Evening Shade, for which
he won an Emmy Award for
Outstanding Lead Actor
in a Comedy Series
(1991). In 1997,
Reynolds was nominated
for an Academy Award for
Best Supporting Actor
for his performance in
Boogie Nights and won a
Golden Globe Award for
the movie. Reynolds has
a star on the Hollywood
Walk of Fame.
Burt Reynolds has also
directed a few movies,
the best-known being
Sharky's Machine,
released in 1981.
Reynolds was married to
actress/comedienne Judy
Carne from 1963 - 1965
and actress Loni
Anderson from 1988 -
1993. The divorce from
Loni Anderson became a
highly publicized,
bitter feud. He also had
relationships with other
actresses such as Sally
Field and Dinah Shore.
He was involved with
actress Inger Stevens
shortly before her
suicide, and to date has
refused to comment
publicly about the
relationship out of
respect for her.
The bad press from his
divorce caused Reynolds'
already slowing career
to nosedive and he had
to declare bankruptcy in
late 1996. Reynolds
started a comeback with
the movie Striptease
(1996), and the
critically acclaimed
Boogie Nights (1997) put
his career back on
track. In early 2000, he
created and toured Burt
Reynolds' One Man Show.
Many fans were
astonished in 2003 to
see photographs showing
the unusual results of
extensive plastic
surgery on Reynolds [1].
In 2005, he co-starred
in two remakes: the
first one released was
of the hit 1980's TV
series The Dukes of
Hazzard (as Boss Hogg).
The second was of his
The Longest Yard this
time with Adam Sandler
playing the role of Paul
Crewe (Reynolds played
that role in the 1974
original. This time
around, Reynolds took on
the role of Nate
Scarborough.)
The continuing
popularity and
likeability of Burt
Reynolds to the average
citizen is illustrated
by a little incident at
a Minnesota Vikings game
in the 2004 season.
Reynolds was a guest in
one of the club boxes.
During a timeout, the
camera happened to zoom
in on him, his image
picking up on the
stadium video screen.
Reynolds got a loud,
spontaneous standing
ovation from the Dome
crowd, for nothing more
than simply being Burt
Reynolds.
This Burt Reynolds Biography Page is Copyright © 2004 - 2006 Chuck Ayoub