Kiel Urban Mueller (July 26, 1944 – December 28, 1990), known professionally as Kiel Martin, was an American actor best known for his role as Detective John "J. D." LaRue on the 1980s television police drama Hill Street Blues.[1]
Early years
Martin was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,[2] and raised in the city of Hialeah, Florida in Miami-Dade County. He was named after the city of Kiel, Germany in honor of his family's German ancestry.[3]
A 1962 graduate of Hialeah High School, Martin considered dropping out when he reached the age of 16. To prevent this, his father arranged for him to audition for a minor role in the school's production of the musical Finian's Rainbow. Martin was instead offered the lead.[4] When he was 18, he made 90 dollars a day dubbing voices for "Mexican fairy-tale movies imported by K. Gordon Murray."[5]
Martin was a drama student at Miami-Dade Junior College, the University of Miami, and Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas,[5][6] later saying "I went to whatever college that was doing a play I wanted to be in. And I left whenever they ran out of plays. I was not a serious college-goer."[7] He briefly served in the army where he played the lead in a production of Neil Simon's Come Blow Your Horn.[7] He was discharged in 1964.[4]
Career
Martin's debut as a professional actor came in repertory theatre in Florida.[2] After an attempt at stand-up comedy in Miami, he learned to play the guitar, working for two years in New York as a musician and a dockworker. He also performed in Shakespearean plays at San Diego's Old Globe Theatre and worked as a repertory actor in New York and New Orleans[4] before becoming a client of the William Morris Agency.[6]
In 1967, Martin was signed as a contract player at Universal Studios after being recommended by June Havoc, who saw him perform when they were both working at the New Orleans Repertory Company.[8] However, in August of that year, he broke 15 bones in a motorcycle accident after crashing into an oak tree. He spent four days in a coma and required two years recuperation during which he lost 40 pounds.[9]
Martin made guest appearances on various television shows throughout the late 1960s and the 1970s, including Dragnet, Ironside, The Virginian, and Gunsmoke. He was also a regular on the soap opera The Edge of Night.[2] He considered himself to have been typecast as a villain, saying that Hill Street Blues "was the first time in my career I played a part where I wasn't some terrible creep. I'd killed every goddamned thing in America, including nuns and babies. I did soap for a year and a half, and I axed five people because their contracts were up."[15]
Martin was also cast in roles that required his musical skills. He wrote and performed the song "Not for Long" for the 1972 made for TV movie The Catcher, also co-writing the film's title track with Jackie DeShannon, who sang it.[16] He had earlier sung the blues song "Alberta" on The Virginian and Tom Paxton's "I'm Bound for the Mountains and the Sea" for the soundtrack of Then Came Bronson, accompanying himself on acoustic guitar. His Moonrunners character Bobby Lee Hagg is also a guitar player.
Hill Street Blues
In 1980, Martin was cast in his most famous role as Detective John "J. D." LaRue, a skilled yet morally questionable plainclothes detective, who he played on all seven seasons of the police proceduralHill Street Blues (1980–1987). Martin had earlier come to the attention of Steven Bochco, co-creator of Hill Street with Michael Kozoll. Martin had guest-starred on Bochco's The Bold Ones: The New Doctors and two of Bochco's earlier and short-lived police shows, Delvecchio and Paris. He was one of three Hill Street regulars, along with Michael Conrad and Charles Haid, who had appeared on Delvecchio and one of two, along with Michael Warren, who had appeared on Paris.[17][18] To prepare for the role, Martin rode the "Skid Row Beat" with cops in Los Angeles, and he later visited officers injured in the line of duty. In 1985, he was made an honorary detective sergeant by the Macon, Georgia police department.[19][20]
Martin described LaRue as "a total opportunist, totally impetuous and quite unrealistic in his attitude toward advancement and success. But he's a very good cop, which is something that not many people mention."[3] Though LaRue boasts of "two medals of valor, three citations for bravery"[21] and "a higher arrest tally than any clown in this room,"[22] his many vices often threaten to derail his police career. In the final episodes of the first season, "Rites of Spring" and "Jungle Madness", each two hours long, Hill Street precinct captain Frank Furillo (Daniel J. Travanti) gives LaRue an ultimatum to either face his drinking problem or leave the force. A later scene in which LaRue attends a meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous and is warmly greeted by Furillo, revealed also to be an alcoholic, is often cited as the most memorable of the series.[23]
Though LaRue, at last, conquers his addiction in the second season, for the rest of the series he remains a womanizer and a frequent orchestrater of scams, get rich quick schemes, and sometimes dangerous practical jokes. Martin believed that "J. D. is close to being the kind of person he arrests. He pulls back just at the brink."[24] He objected to a storyline about LaRue having a sexual relationship with a teenage girl, believing it would make his character "unredeemable." In response to his concerns, the script was changed so that LaRue rejects her.[3]
He often appears onscreen paired with his partner and best friend Detective Neil Washington (Taurean Blacque) who alternates between being LaRue's conscience and co-conspirator. It was one of two interracial partnerships on the show, Martin commenting "my character is involved in enough screwups and career-shortening attitudes that he doesn't need to be a racist on top of it."[3]
Martin was married three times. In 1969, he married Claudia Martin, who was actor and crooner Dean Martin's daughter. They had a daughter named Jesse. The marriage ended in 1971.[28][29]
He was married to Christina Montoya from 1978 to 1980. His final marriage was to Joanne La Pomaroa from 1982 to 1984.
Martin, like his character J. D. LaRue, struggled with an alcohol addiction that negatively affected his work. In 1984, at the insistence of Hill Street Blues' producers, Martin completed an alcohol rehabilitation program. LaRue was written out of four episodes of the fourth season, the only of the series in which he did not appear.[23] Martin returned for the season finale, having achieved sobriety two years after his character. In 1986, Martin revealed that Steven Bochco had written LaRue's first season plotline with the goal of encouraging Martin to seek help for his real-life alcoholism. He explained that the episodes "Rites of Spring" and "Jungle Madness" where LaRue confronts his worsening addiction and eventually joins AA "were written as a message of love to me. Steven Bochco loved me and cared for me. It was a message I failed to heed."[30] Martin's friend Ron Herbinger later said that Bochco was responsible for Martin entering rehabilitation and emerging "super clean."[31]
Martin worked with charities, including the Better Hearing Institute[32] and United Cerebral Palsy, appearing in the latter's annual telethon.[33] He was also an avid golfer and took part in many celebrity golf tournaments for charitable causes.[34][35] Martin contributed a short essay to the Los Angeles Times about his lifelong love of fishing.[36][37] A guitarist and composer, he continued to play and write songs as a hobby.[38]
Death
In January of 1990, Martin was performing the role of Sgt. Merwin J. Toomey in a Calgary production of Neil Simon's Biloxi Blues[39] when he was forced to leave the play following chest pains.[40] A biopsy revealed that he was suffering from lung cancer and he soon began chemotherapy.[41] Friends would later describe him as displaying "courage" and "a positive attitude" during this time.[33]
Martin died of cardiovascular collapse caused by lung cancer, aged 46, at his home in Rancho Mirage, California.[2][42] Though most obituaries reported that no funeral services were held for Martin, friend Ron Herbinger explained that "in Kiel's will he set aside some money for a party in some park in Palm Springs for close friends. He then was cremated and his ashes were flown over the gathering and spread from the sky."[31]
^ abcMarill, Alvin H. (1980). Movies Made for Television: The Telefeature and the Mini-Series 1964-1979. Farncombe, Godalming, Surrey: LSP Books Limited. pp. 99, 198. ISBN9780853210818.
^ abcdMcNeil, Alex (1991). Total Television: A Comprehensive Guide to Programming From 1948 to the Present. New York, New York: Penguin Books. p. 230, 346, 672. ISBN9780140157369.
^ abCaparrós Lera, J. M. (1992). El cine espanol de la democracia: De la muerte de Franco al "cambio" socialista (1975-1989). Barcelona: Anthropos. p. 372. ISBN9788476583128.
^ abcdefLentz, Harris M. (1996). Western and Frontier Film and Television Credits 1903-1995, Volume 2. Jefferson, North Carolina, and London: McFarland & Company, Inc. pp. 1466, 1620, 1646, 1743, 1744, 1745. ISBN9780786402182.
^ abcdeMartindale, David (1991). Television Detective Shows of the 1970s: Credits, Storylines, and Episode Guides for 109 Series. Jefferson, North Carolina, and London: McFarland & Company, Inc. p. 59, 137, 190, 251, 372. ISBN9780899505572.
^ abcGianakos, Larry James (1978). Television Drama Series Programming: A Comprehensive Chronicle, 1959-1975. Metuchen, N.J. & London: The Scarecrow Press, Inc. pp. 388, 389, 672. ISBN9780810811164.
^ abcdGianakos, Larry James (1981). Television Drama Series Programming: A Comprehensive Chronicle, 1975-1980. Metuchen, N.J. & London: The Scarecrow Press, Inc. p. 141, 180, 203, 343. ISBN9780810814387.
^ abcdefghijklInman, David (2001). Performers' Television Credits, 1948-2000. Jefferson, North Carolina, and London: McFarland & Company, Inc. p. 1887. ISBN9780786410415.
^Sandercombe, W. Fraser (2010). Masters of SF: the Science Fiction Hall of Fame. Burlington, Ont.: Collector's Guide Publishing Inc. p. 126. ISBN9781897350287.