
Actor
Born January 5, 1916 in New York City, New York, USA
Alfred Ryder, the veteran actor who appeared on radio and Broadway and in the movies and TV and who also was a renowned stage director, was born Alfred Jacob Corn on January 5, 1916, in New York City. He made his professional debut as an actor at the age of eight and attended New York City's Professional Children's School. His Broadway debut came in 1929, when the 13-year-old Ryder played a "lost boy" in Eva Le Gallienne's production of J.M. Barrie's "Peter Pan". Ryder studied acting with Benno Schneider, Robert Lewis and Lee Strasberg. He appeared in the 1938 Broadway production of "Our Town" - his Broadway debut as an adult performer - as well as numerous Broadway productions before World War II, including the 1939 revival of Clifford Odets's "Awake and Sing!". For many years he was the voice of Sammy in the radio serial "Rise of the Goldbergs" Ryder joined the Army Air Force during World War II, eventually appearing in the U.S. Army Air Force's gala Broadway stage show "Winged Victory" in 1943. The following year, he made his movie debut as "PFC Alfred Ryder" in the film version of the show Winged Victory (1944)). After the war he made more films, including director Anthony Mann's classic 1947 film noir T-Men (1947). On Broadway, he appeared as Oswald in the 1948 revival of Henrik Ibsen's "Ghosts" and as Mark Antony in the 1950 production of "Julius Caesar". Also that year, he appeared as Orestes in the Broadway play "The Tower Beyond Tragedy". Ryder had the singular honor of being cast as the understudy for Laurence Olivier in one of the legendary actor's greatest roles, that of Archie Rice, in the 1958 Broadway production of John Osborne's "The Entertainer". Olivier's Archie Rice is considered one of the greatest performances of the 20th century, and Ryder was chosen to keep the Broadway patrons in their seats in the event the great British theatrical knight couldn't go on. Ryder also appeared in the original Broadway production of Eugène Ionesco's absurdist masterpiece "Rhinoceros" in 1960.

David and Goliath
Narrator

Bogie
Mike Romanoff

Buck Rogers in the 25th Century
Garedon

Sergeant Matlovich vs. the U.S. Air Force
Col. Grand

Meeting of Minds

Tracks
The Man

Quincy, M.E.

Charlie's Angels
Barkley

The Swiss Family Robinson

Ellery Queen

Switch
Nathan Monk

Escape to Witch Mountain
Astrologer

The Abduction of Saint Anne
Frank Benedict

The Specialists
Dr. Al Marsdan

W
Investigator

The Legend of Hillbilly John
O.J. Onselm

The Six Million Dollar Man
Joe Lannon

Indict and Convict
Dr. Frank Larsen

Kojak
Emile

The Stone Killer
Tony Champion

The Streets of San Francisco

Search

Probe
Cheyne

Cannon

McCloud

The D.A.: Murder One
Dr. Donald Stuart

True Grit
Goudy

Operation Heartbeat
Dr. George Corlane

Lancer

Land of the Giants
Parteg

Hawaii Five-O
Harry Quon

It Takes a Thief
Hunza Schroeder

Mannix

Judd, for the Defense

Ironside

Hotel
Capt. Yolles

The Invaders
Mr. Nexus

Mission: Impossible
Colonel Valentin Yetkoff

Felony Squad

The Rat Patrol
Col. Gerschon

Star Trek
Robert Crater

The F.B.I.
Otto Mann

The Wild Wild West
Captain Philo

Laredo

Invitation to a Gunfighter
Doc Barker

The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
Corio

Hamlet
Hamlet

The Raiders
Captain Benton

The Outer Limits
Edgar Price

Combat!
Heismann

The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
Attorney Johnathan Rudolph

The Virginian
Ketch

Ben Casey

Bus Stop

Target: The Corruptors!

Dr. Kildare
Dr. Tony Stewart

87th Precinct

The Defenders
Dr. Stanley Winters

Route 66

Outlaws

The Aquanauts
Nico Kofie

The Story on Page One
Lt. Mike Morris

Play of the Week

One Step Beyond
John Marriott

Naked City
Carl Blakely

Shirley Temple's Storybook
First Minister

Decoy
Lester Ringle

DuPont Show of the Month
Gaspard

Gunsmoke
Hank Voyles

The Wonderful World of Disney
Astrologer

Inner Sanctum

Robert Montgomery Presents

Studio One

The Philco Television Playhouse

T-Men
Tony Genaro / Tony Galvani

Winged Victory
Milhauser

The 400 Million
Additional Voice (voice)