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Actor Hal Williams Left Columbus in Search of a Career in Hollywood


Actor Hal Williams grew up in Columbus, Ohio, and moved to California in 1968 to take a shot at acting.

One Wednesday evening in 1968, Hal Williams walked out the door of his Brentnell Avenue home with two pistols and a tub of Kentucky Fried Chicken, got into his Pontiac Bonneville and left Columbus in the rearview mirror, heading west until he reached California, his sights set on Hollywood.

“I didn’t tell nobody but my parents, who thought I’d lost my mind,” Williams says. “I said, ‘My career has come to a stop in social work. My marriage is failing. I’m extremely unhappy. What’s the one thing I want to try to do?’ … I was scared to death, but I said, ‘If I don’t do this now, I know I will never get the guts to do it.’”

Just entering his 30s, Williams gave himself three years to make it as an actor. And the gamble paid off. By 1971, he had landed a recurring role as police officer Smitty on Sanford and Son, the launching pad for a decades-long career that includes TV series like 227The WaltonsRoots: The Next Generations and The Sinbad Show, plus movies such as “Private Benjamin” and “Guess Who”—more than 100 film and TV credits in all.

Hal Williams with Lynn Hamilton from “The Waltons”

The Hollywood pivot came as a surprise to everyone but Williams, whose love for acting goes back to his elementary years. “I wasn’t allowed to leave the yard often, and I had a dog named Sandy. I used to play games with him, pretending he was the Lone Ranger and I was Tonto,” says Williams, who also spent Saturday afternoons at the movies, often taking in a double feature and the latest chapter of a serial film. “The East Side was primarily the Black side of town, and it had four theaters: the Cameo, the Lincoln, the Empress and the Pythian. And every Saturday I used to be in the Empress Theater, because they had two regular movies and a chapter.”



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