Biography
David McCallum's parents were both members of the London Philharmonic; his mother was a cellist and his father was first violinist. The young Scots-born McCallum himself planned to pursue a musical career after serving with the Royal West African Frontier Force, but decided instead upon acting. Following his studies at the RADA, McCallum entered films in 1957, where he was usually cast as a troublemaking street punk or callow junior officer. His first American film (albeit lensed principally in England) was
Freud (1962), in which he played a profoundly mother-obsessed mental patient.
McCallum became the rage of the teeny-bopper set when he was cast as cool-headed Russian secret agent Ilya Kuryakin on TV's The Man From UNCLE (1964-68). At one point, McCallum was receiving far more fan mail than the series' ostensible star,
Robert Vaughn; he took advantage of his celebrity to launch a brief singing career, duetting with
Nancy Sinatra on the 1966
UNCLE episode "The Take Me to Your Leader Affair." He also wrote the music and lyrics and sang the title song of his 1967 movie vehicle
Three Bites of the Apple. Following
UNCLE, McCallum had a handful of solid dramatic film roles before returning to the small screen in the short-lived 1975 series
The Invisible Man. A man of sundry outside interests, McCallum's range of expertise includes computers and small-arms weaponry. Once wed to actress
Jill Ireland, David McCallum has since 1967 been married to Katherine Carpenter. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide