- Born
- Died
- Birth nameBradford Jan Harris
- Height5′ 11″ (1.80 m)
- Born in St. Anthony, a small town in eastern Idaho, Bradford Harris attended UCLA in the early 1950s, where he played fullback on the football team while studying economics. His studies may have been intended as the groundwork for a career in his family's banking business, but Harris instead drifted into the fringes of Los Angeles' movie industry, and secured employment as a stunt man. In the late 1950s he traveled to Europe as the stunt co-ordinator for a German-Italian co-production. Soon he found himself working as a second-unit director, and that led to a starring role in Goliath Against the Giants (1961). His good looks and muscular build kept him in demand during the era of "sword and sandal" movies, and when this genre began to fade away, he moved into "spaghetti westerns" and a spate of action movies with an emphasis on spy thrillers. In 1967 he married actress Olga Schoberová.- IMDb Mini Biography By: dinky-4 of Minneapolis
- SpouseOlga Schoberová(November 16, 1967 - June 1972) (divorced, 1 child)
- Children
- At the Muscle Beach Bodybuilding Championship on September 3, 2001, Harris received a special achievement award along with other "Legends of Hercules" -- Mark Forest, Ed Fury, Mickey Hargitay, Richard Harrison, Reg Lewis, Peter Lupus and Gordon Mitchell.
- Father, with Olga Schoberová, of daughter, Sabrina Calley.
- He and Olga Schoberová have one daughter, Sabrina Calley, called "Babrinka".
- He has appeared in two films that have been selected for the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant: Spartacus (1960) & Patton (1970).
- Because of Muscle Beach and Steve Reeves, I began weight training. Because of Muscle Beach and Steve Reeves I became a third-world movie star and traveled around the world many times and experienced many adventures. I now live near Muscle Beach and see it almost every evening. I walk down to the beach and sit on a turned-over trash can while gazing up into the great beyond. The oxygen from the ocean breeze is invigorating and rejuvenating. I get some of my best ideas during that quiet period of meditation under the darkening sky. Modern medicine is now discovering the value of pure oxygen used in a hyperbaric chamber to combat the many diseases that can't survive in pure oxygen. Exercise and oxygen therapy is a new medical discovery with great promise.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content