William Traylor
William Traylor was an actor who had a successful Hollywood career. Traylor started his acting career landing roles in films, such as the Victor Mature adaptation "The Last Frontier" (1956), "1 + 1 - Exploring the Kinsey Reports" (1961) and the Tony Curtis crime thriller "The Boston Strangler" (1968). He also appeared in "Cisco Pike" (1972) and the Severn Darden fantasy "Who Fears the Devil?" (1972). He additionally landed roles in the TV movies "Incident in San Francisco" (ABC, 1970-71) and "The Execution of Private Slovik" (NBC, 1973-74). He also starred in the TV movies "One of Our Own" (1974-75), "Fear on Trial" (CBS, 1975-76) and "The Greatest Thing That Almost Happened" (CBS, 1977-78). He also appeared in "S*H*E" (CBS, 1979-1980). He also had roles in film during these years, including roles in the David Carradine western "The Long Riders" (1980) and the dramatic adaptation "The Postman Always Rings Twice" (1981) with Jack Nicholson. He held additional roles in television including a part on "Shell Game" (CBS, 1986-87). He also had a part in the TV miniseries "World War III" (1981-82). Traylor also held acting roles in films like "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai: Across the 8th Dimension" (1984) with Peter Weller and "Fletch" (1985) with Chevy Chase. Traylor more recently acted in "Fletch Lives" (1989).