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'''Vince Edwards''' (July 9, 1928—March 11, 1996) was an American television actor, best known as the star of the popular medical drama series ''[[w:Ben Casey|Ben Casey]]'' from 1961 to 1966.  During the show's run he recorded several albums and received some starring film work, but following the show's cancellation he was never able to duplicate that success again as an actor (which in later years he blamed on a gambling addiction).  His one other regular series ''Matt Lincoln'' (1971) lasted just one season.
'''Vince Edwards''' (July 9, 1928—March 11, 1996) was an American director and actor who directed four episodes of ''[[Battlestar Galactica (TOS)|Battlestar Galactica]]'' and ''[[Galactica 1980]]'', the two-parters "[[The Living Legend]]" and "[[The Super Scouts]]" respectively, and is best known for starring as the title character of the medical drama series ''[[w:Ben Casey|Ben Casey]]'' (1961–1966).


While acting remained his primary field, he branched out into television direction during ''Ben Casey's'' run.   He directed the 1978 Season 3 opener of ''The Hardy Boys'' for [[Glen A. Larson]] which led in turn to his directing work on both ''[[Battlestar Galactica (TOS)|Battlestar Galactica]]'' and ''[[Galactica 1980]]''.
== Career ==
Born Vincent Edward Zoino,<ref group="external" name="upi_archives_edwards_birthname_birthdate">{{cite web|url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1996/03/12/Actor-Vince-Edwards-dead-of-cancer/7840826606800/#:~:text=Edwards%20was%20born%20Vincent%20Edward%20Zoino%20on%20July%209%2C%201928|title=Actor Vince Edwards dead of cancer|publisher=UPI|date=1996-03-12|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref> Edwards trained as a competitive swimmer in high school and won an athletic scholarship to Ohio State University, where he was part of a team that won a national swimming championship; an appendicitis operation ended his hopes of competing in the Olympics and redirected him toward acting.<ref group="external" name="imdb_edwards_biography_swimming_olympics">{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0250436/#:~:text=an%20appendicitis%20operation%20cut%20short%20his%20swimming%20career|title=Vince Edwards|publisher=IMDb|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref> He studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, made his Broadway debut in the chorus of ''High Button Shoes'' in 1947,<ref group="external" name="rottentomatoes_edwards_broadway_debut_1947">{{cite web|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/celebrity/vince_edwards#:~:text=Broadway%20debut%20in%201947%20in%20%22High%20Button%20Shoes%22|title=Vince Edwards|publisher=Rotten Tomatoes|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref> and signed a contract with Paramount Pictures in 1950, debuting on film the following year in ''Mister Universe''.<ref group="external" name="imdb_edwards_biography_swimming_olympics"/> Through the 1950s he took supporting and lead roles in a series of B-pictures and film noirs, including ''The Killing'' (1956) and ''Murder by Contract'' (1958).<ref group="external" name="imdb_edwards_biography_swimming_olympics"/>


Edwards died of pancreatic cancer in Los Angeles, California, on March 11, 1996. He was buried at the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.
Edwards reached the peak of his career as the title character of ''Ben Casey'', an ABC medical drama that ran from 1961 to 1966 and made him a television star.<ref group="external" name="washingtonpost_obituary_edwards_marinadelrey">{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1996/03/13/vince-edwards-dies/71ff6a2a-9d5c-46f8-bb5a-a63b15f4ccad/#:~:text=lived%20in%20the%20coastal%20suburb%20of%20Marina%20Del%20Rey|title=Vince Edwards Dies|publisher=The Washington Post|date=1996-03-13|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref> He directed roughly 20 of the show's 154 episodes himself, his first regular directing work, and used the series' popularity to launch a recording career, releasing six albums.<ref group="external" name="rottentomatoes_edwards_bencasey_directing_count">{{cite web|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/celebrity/vince_edwards#:~:text=directing%20about%2020%20of%20the%20154|title=Vince Edwards|publisher=Rotten Tomatoes|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref> After ''Ben Casey'' ended, Edwards found his post-''Casey'' career hampered by the role's typecasting, and his one further regular series, ''Matt Lincoln'' (1970&ndash;71), lasted a single season.<ref group="external" name="rottentomatoes_edwards_bencasey_directing_count"/>
 
He continued to direct television through the 1970s, helming episodes of ''The Hardy Boys Mysteries'', ''David Cassidy&mdash;Man Undercover'', ''B.J. and the Bear'', ''Police Story'', ''Battlestar Galactica'', and ''Galactica 1980''. He wrote and directed the 1973 ABC television movie ''Maneater'', and provided voice work for the animated series ''Punky Brewster'' (1985) and ''The Centurions'' (1986). In the mid-1980s he co-starred in and directed episodes of the revival series ''The Return of Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer'', and in 1988 he returned to his signature role in the syndicated TV movie ''The Return of Ben Casey''. He made his final film, ''The Fear'', in 1995, and was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer shortly after filming.
 
Edwards died of pancreatic cancer on March 11, 1996, at UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles.<ref group="external" name="upi_archives_edwards_death_ucla_medical_center">{{cite web|url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1996/03/12/Actor-Vince-Edwards-dead-of-cancer/7840826606800/#:~:text=Edwards%20died%20Monday%20night%20at%20UCLA%20Medical%20Center|title=Actor Vince Edwards dead of cancer|publisher=UPI|date=1996-03-12|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref> He was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California (Section CC, Tier 64, Grave 29).<ref group="external" name="findagrave_edwards_burial_plot_holycross">{{cite web|url=https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/1549/vince-edwards#:~:text=Section%20CC%2C%20Tier%2064%2C%20Grave%2029|title=Vince Edwards (1928-1996)|publisher=Find a Grave|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref>
 
=== Direction on ''Battlestar Galactica'' and ''Galactica 1980'' ===
Edwards directed the 1978 Season 3 opener of ''The Hardy Boys'' for [[Glen A. Larson]], which led to his work directing the two-part "[[The Living Legend]]" on ''Battlestar Galactica'' and the two-part "[[The Super Scouts, Part I|The Super Scouts]]" on ''Galactica 1980''. He is also credited for ''[[Mission Galactica: The Cylon Attack]]'' (1979), a theatrical feature assembled from "The Living Legend" and roughly fifteen minutes of "[[Fire in Space]]" for release outside the United States.<ref group="external" name="imdb_missiongalactica_cylonattack_codirectors">{{cite web|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077937/#:~:text=Christian%20I.%20Nyby%20II|title=Mission Galactica: The Cylon Attack|publisher=IMDb|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref>
 
Story editors [[Allan Cole]] and [[Chris Bunch]] later recalled friction with Edwards' directing approach during production of "The Super Scouts, Part I." When the two were sent to cut scene setups from an overlong script, Edwards objected that doing so would undermine the cast's motivation.<ref group="commentary" name="cole_misadventures_lornegreene_edwards_motivation_objection">{{cite web|url=http://allangcole.blogspot.com/2011/09/lorne-greene-rides-to-rescue.html#:~:text=if%20anyone%20-%20including%20Glen%20-%20complains%2C%20send%20them%20to%20me|title=Lorne Greene Rides To The Rescue|website=My Hollywood MisAdventures|last=Cole|first=Allan|date=2011-09-23|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref> During the school ship ''[[Delphi (ship)|Delphi]]''<nowiki/>'s bridge-explosion sequence on the same episode, Cole recalled that Edwards directed the cast to evacuate a burning set at a deliberately unhurried pace, drawing an angry reaction from Larson in the dailies, and that a falling prop beam, triggered late on cue, narrowly missed Edwards himself.<ref group="commentary" name="alpha_control_bunch_cole_edwards_beam_incident">{{cite book|title=Galactic Sci-Fi Television Series Revisited|publisher=Alpha Control Press|year=1995}}</ref><ref group="commentary" name="larocque_cole_edwards_direction_superscouts">{{cite web|url=https://members.tripod.com/john_larocque/tns/acole.html#:~:text=Vince%20also%20had%20the%20brainy%20kid|title=Interview with Galactica 1980 Story Editor Allan Cole|last=Larocque|first=John|date=2005-02-28|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref>


== Director credits for "Battlestar Galactica" ==
== Director credits for "Battlestar Galactica" ==
* The [[Battlestar Galactica (TOS)|Original Series]]
* The [[Battlestar Galactica (TOS)|Original Series]]
** "The Living Legend", [[The Living Legend, Part I|Part I]] and [[The Living Legend, Part II|Part II]]
** "The Living Legend", [[The Living Legend, Part I|Part I]] and [[The Living Legend, Part II|Part II]]
* ''[[Galactica 1980]]''
* ''[[Galactica 1980]]''
** "The Super Scouts", [[The Super Scouts, Part I|Part I]] and [[The Super Scouts, Part II|Part II]]
** "The Super Scouts", [[The Super Scouts, Part I|Part I]] and [[The Super Scouts, Part II|Part II]]
* Theatrical compilations
** ''Mission Galactica: The Cylon Attack'' (1979), assembled from "The Living Legend" and footage from "[[Fire in Space]]"; co-directed with Christian I. Nyby II


''See also: [[:Category:Episodes directed by Vince Edwards|Episodes directed by Vince Edwards]]''
''See also: [[:Category:Episodes directed by Vince Edwards|Episodes directed by Vince Edwards]]''


== Personal life ==
Edwards married four times. His first marriage, to actress Kathy Kersh on June 13, 1965, ended in divorce later that year; a daughter was born of the marriage. He later married actress Linda Ann Foster in 1967&mdash;named in his UPI obituary as "actress Linda Winters"<ref group="footnotes" name="footnote_lindafoster_lindawinters_name_variant">Edwards' second wife is named "Linda Ann Foster" in his Film Reference biographical entry and as "actress Linda Winters" in his 1996 UPI obituary.</ref>&mdash;and actress Cassandra Edwards in 1980. His fourth and final marriage, to Janet Friedman, took place in late 1994; the couple had been married a year and four months when he died.<ref group="external" name="variety_archerd_edwards_gambling_courtship_book">{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/1996/voices/columns/edwards-gets-memorial-tribute-at-emmys-1117862972/#:~:text=took%20him%20to%20court%20for%20gambling%20debts|title=Edwards gets memorial tribute at Emmys|publisher=Variety|author=Archerd, Army|date=1996-09-06|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref>
At the time of his death he was survived by his widow, Janet Edwards, and by daughters Angela, 26, and Nicole, 27, who visited him shortly before he died.<ref group="external" name="upi_archives_edwards_lindawinters_daughters">{{cite web|url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1996/03/12/Actor-Vince-Edwards-dead-of-cancer/7840826606800/#:~:text=ex-wife%2C%20actress%20Linda%20Winters%2C%20said%20Edwards|title=Actor Vince Edwards dead of cancer|publisher=UPI|date=1996-03-12|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref> Nicole Nadolenco, his daughter by his second wife, worked for Emmy Awards producer Al Schwartz at the time and was involved in preparing a memorial tribute to her father for the 1996 Primetime Emmy Awards broadcast.<ref group="external" name="variety_archerd_edwards_nicole_nadolenco_daughter">{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/1996/voices/columns/edwards-gets-memorial-tribute-at-emmys-1117862972/#:~:text=Nicole%20Nadolenco%20asked%20to%20be%20excused|title=Edwards gets memorial tribute at Emmys|publisher=Variety|author=Archerd, Army|date=1996-09-06|accessdate=2026-06-18}}</ref>
In his later years, Edwards battled a compulsive gambling addiction. Following his death, his widow Janet was completing his memoir, ''Easy, the Hard Way&mdash;The Reel to Real Story'', which was to recount how she had once taken him to court over gambling debts during their four-year courtship and married him immediately after winning the case; literary agent Mike Hamilburg was handling the book deal, and producer Herman Rush had expressed interest in adapting it as a film.<ref group="external" name="variety_archerd_edwards_gambling_courtship_book"/>
== References ==
=== Footnotes ===
{{reflist|group=footnotes}}
=== Commentary and Interviews ===
{{reflist|group=commentary}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Edwards, Vince}}
=== External Sources ===
{{reflist|group=external}}


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Latest revision as of 17:10, 18 June 2026

Vince Edwards
Role: Director
BSG Universe: Original Series and Galactica 1980
Date of Birth: July 9, 1928
Date of Death: March 11, 1996
Age at Death: 67
Nationality: USA USA
IMDb profile

Vince Edwards (July 9, 1928—March 11, 1996) was an American director and actor who directed four episodes of Battlestar Galactica and Galactica 1980, the two-parters "The Living Legend" and "The Super Scouts" respectively, and is best known for starring as the title character of the medical drama series Ben Casey (1961–1966).

Career

edit

Born Vincent Edward Zoino,[external 1] Edwards trained as a competitive swimmer in high school and won an athletic scholarship to Ohio State University, where he was part of a team that won a national swimming championship; an appendicitis operation ended his hopes of competing in the Olympics and redirected him toward acting.[external 2] He studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, made his Broadway debut in the chorus of High Button Shoes in 1947,[external 3] and signed a contract with Paramount Pictures in 1950, debuting on film the following year in Mister Universe.[external 2] Through the 1950s he took supporting and lead roles in a series of B-pictures and film noirs, including The Killing (1956) and Murder by Contract (1958).[external 2]

Edwards reached the peak of his career as the title character of Ben Casey, an ABC medical drama that ran from 1961 to 1966 and made him a television star.[external 4] He directed roughly 20 of the show's 154 episodes himself, his first regular directing work, and used the series' popularity to launch a recording career, releasing six albums.[external 5] After Ben Casey ended, Edwards found his post-Casey career hampered by the role's typecasting, and his one further regular series, Matt Lincoln (1970–71), lasted a single season.[external 5]

He continued to direct television through the 1970s, helming episodes of The Hardy Boys Mysteries, David Cassidy—Man Undercover, B.J. and the Bear, Police Story, Battlestar Galactica, and Galactica 1980. He wrote and directed the 1973 ABC television movie Maneater, and provided voice work for the animated series Punky Brewster (1985) and The Centurions (1986). In the mid-1980s he co-starred in and directed episodes of the revival series The Return of Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer, and in 1988 he returned to his signature role in the syndicated TV movie The Return of Ben Casey. He made his final film, The Fear, in 1995, and was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer shortly after filming.

Edwards died of pancreatic cancer on March 11, 1996, at UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles.[external 6] He was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California (Section CC, Tier 64, Grave 29).[external 7]

Direction on Battlestar Galactica and Galactica 1980

edit

Edwards directed the 1978 Season 3 opener of The Hardy Boys for Glen A. Larson, which led to his work directing the two-part "The Living Legend" on Battlestar Galactica and the two-part "The Super Scouts" on Galactica 1980. He is also credited for Mission Galactica: The Cylon Attack (1979), a theatrical feature assembled from "The Living Legend" and roughly fifteen minutes of "Fire in Space" for release outside the United States.[external 8]

Story editors Allan Cole and Chris Bunch later recalled friction with Edwards' directing approach during production of "The Super Scouts, Part I." When the two were sent to cut scene setups from an overlong script, Edwards objected that doing so would undermine the cast's motivation.[commentary 1] During the school ship Delphi's bridge-explosion sequence on the same episode, Cole recalled that Edwards directed the cast to evacuate a burning set at a deliberately unhurried pace, drawing an angry reaction from Larson in the dailies, and that a falling prop beam, triggered late on cue, narrowly missed Edwards himself.[commentary 2][commentary 3]

Director credits for "Battlestar Galactica"

edit

See also: Episodes directed by Vince Edwards

Personal life

edit

Edwards married four times. His first marriage, to actress Kathy Kersh on June 13, 1965, ended in divorce later that year; a daughter was born of the marriage. He later married actress Linda Ann Foster in 1967—named in his UPI obituary as "actress Linda Winters"[footnotes 1]—and actress Cassandra Edwards in 1980. His fourth and final marriage, to Janet Friedman, took place in late 1994; the couple had been married a year and four months when he died.[external 9]

At the time of his death he was survived by his widow, Janet Edwards, and by daughters Angela, 26, and Nicole, 27, who visited him shortly before he died.[external 10] Nicole Nadolenco, his daughter by his second wife, worked for Emmy Awards producer Al Schwartz at the time and was involved in preparing a memorial tribute to her father for the 1996 Primetime Emmy Awards broadcast.[external 11]

In his later years, Edwards battled a compulsive gambling addiction. Following his death, his widow Janet was completing his memoir, Easy, the Hard Way—The Reel to Real Story, which was to recount how she had once taken him to court over gambling debts during their four-year courtship and married him immediately after winning the case; literary agent Mike Hamilburg was handling the book deal, and producer Herman Rush had expressed interest in adapting it as a film.[external 9]

References

edit

Footnotes

edit
  1. Edwards' second wife is named "Linda Ann Foster" in his Film Reference biographical entry and as "actress Linda Winters" in his 1996 UPI obituary.

Commentary and Interviews

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  1. Cole, Allan (2011-09-23). Lorne Greene Rides To The Rescue (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  2. (1995) Galactic Sci-Fi Television Series Revisited. Alpha Control Press.
  3. Larocque, John (2005-02-28). Interview with Galactica 1980 Story Editor Allan Cole (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on 2026-06-18.

External Sources

edit
  1. Actor Vince Edwards dead of cancer (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). UPI (1996-03-12). Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Vince Edwards (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  3. Vince Edwards (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  4. Vince Edwards Dies (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). The Washington Post (1996-03-13). Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Vince Edwards (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  6. Actor Vince Edwards dead of cancer (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). UPI (1996-03-12). Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  7. Vince Edwards (1928-1996) (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Find a Grave. Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  8. Mission Galactica: The Cylon Attack (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). IMDb. Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Archerd, Army (1996-09-06). Edwards gets memorial tribute at Emmys (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Variety. Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  10. Actor Vince Edwards dead of cancer (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). UPI (1996-03-12). Retrieved on 2026-06-18.
  11. Archerd, Army (1996-09-06). Edwards gets memorial tribute at Emmys (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Variety. Retrieved on 2026-06-18.