Roger Wendell Bowen (May 25, 1932 – February 16, 1996) was an American comedic actor and novelist, best known for his portrayal of Lt. Col. Henry Blake in the 1970 film M*A*S*H.
Bowen considered himself a writer who only moonlighted as an actor. He wrote eleven novels (including Just Like a Movie) as well as sketches for Broadway and television. He was also one of the co-founders of Chicago's comedy and acting troupe The Second City.
Life
The only child of Wendell and Edith (nee Hudson) Bowen. He was a native of Providence, Rhode Island, Bowen majored in English at Brown University, then attended graduate school at the University of Chicago.
Bowen served in the U.S. Army in Korea, after the Korean War had ended. (After serving in Japan as a Special Agent in the Counter Intelligence Corps (441st CIC Detachment – Beppu Field Office) from 1957–58, Bowen was sent to the 308th CIC Detachment in Seoul, South Korea in 1958.)
Career
While writing theater reviews for The Chicago Maroon, he was asked to pen material for an improvisational troupe that included Alan Arkin and Mike Nichols. The troupe, Compass Players, evolved into The Second City.
<blockquote>Roger Bowen wrote the promotional material and took on the function of running the Compass on dark Mondays, booking and introducing amusing debates or folk music nights.</blockquote>
Bowen spent most of the 1960s playing "preppie" types on a number of TV & radio commercials. His first film role was 1968's Petulia, but his big movie break came in 1970 when he landed the role of Lieutenant Colonel Henry Blake in Robert Altman's film M*A*S*H.
After M*A*S*H, Bowen returned to television and gained a fan following as Hamilton Majors Jr., the pleasantly snooty Ivy League CEO of Continental Flange and supportive boss of Herschel Bernardi on the TV sitcom Arnie (1970–72). He then joined the cast of The Brian Keith Show, and returned to TV commercials and smaller movie roles. In 1976, Bowen appeared in the TV parody film Tunnel Vision, doing a convincing Henry Kissinger impersonation that he was often asked to perform at parties around Hollywood. (The film featured a galaxy of comic stars including Chevy Chase, John Candy, Howard Hesseman and Joe Flaherty, but Bowen received top billing as the others were still relatively unknown at the time.) Bowen also played minor roles in such films as Heaven Can Wait (1978), The Main Event (1979) and Zapped! (1982).
Chess
Bowen was a tournament chess player who participated in several events in the 1970s. In the early 1980s, Bowen enjoyed another round of weekly TV work with recurring roles on House Calls (starring former M*A*S*H sitcom alumnus Wayne Rogers), At Ease, and Maggie Briggs. He made his final credited film appearance in the 1991 comedy What About Bob? starring Bill Murray and Richard Dreyfuss.
Personal life and death
Bowen met and married the Bronx-raised Ann Raim, in Chicago.
After they moved to San Francisco, Ann formed the Pitschel Players, " named after Second City/Committee master carpenter Roland Pitschel and master Committee waitress/tip hustler Barbara Pitschel",<!-- 1926 in Berkeley?, "Pitschel Players" "Berkeley Playmakers" https://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/roho/ucb/text/heard_bartlett_winifred.pdf "The Playmakers, formerly the Playshop. is an experimental theatre in Berkeley now in its fourth season. Originally it grew out of the work in Playwriting and Play Production offered in the University of California Summer Session by Professor George Pierce Baker, then of Harvard, and insofar as possible was conducted along the same lines as the 47 Workshop." --><!-- November 27, 1969 - Family Dog on the Great Highway - The New Riders of The Old Purple Sage (sic), Cleveland Wrecking Company, The Lamb, Deacon and The Suprelles [Music] Pitchell Players, East Bay Sharks, Morning Glory Theater, Rapphael Garratt Circus, [Theater] Newsreal, Punch by The Free City Puppets, Lights by the Holy See ["Free City Puppet Bash"] https://mksgrist.wixsite.com/playlandatthebeach/family-dog-at-the-highway-shows https://archive.org/post/390615/details-of-the-various-family-dog-sponsored-shows-and-events-including-those-at-660-the-great --><!-- A new theater company called the Pitchell Players will hold preview performances of their first show, "Lyndon's Banes," at 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday at 120 Julian St. (between 15th and 16th off Mission). https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/458912996/ --><!-- Pasadena, California : Star News, November 3, 1972, p. 43 › NewspaperArchive.com › "Paulene Myers at Beckman clubs Ash Grove san Francisco Pitchell players John from Mer thru Sam Wil Liams 8162 Melrose ave., la Carriage room ..." https://newspaperarchive.com/star-news-nov-03-1972-p-43/ --> an improvisational comedy group, and directed the group of political<!-- https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/p15932coll8/id/85529 https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/api/collection/p15932coll8/id/85529/download https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/p15932coll8/id/28729 https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/api/collection/p15932coll8/id/28729/download--> and social satirists, that played for ten years, performing with Country Joe McDonald,<!-- https://dc.library.northwestern.edu/items/147c6c79-1cb8-4bb0-a9f2-dabe494476ad https://rockposters.com/collections/pitschel-players-theatrical-satire/products/aor-2-243-original-poster-art-haight-ashbury-festival-wes-wilson-1969-ink-on-poster-board-golden-gate-park-excellent --> at Episcopal Church of St. John the Evangelist, San Francisco, on weekends at the Intersection for the Arts<!-- https://content.wisconsinhistory.org/digital/collection/p15932coll8/id/59341/https://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/article/letters-to-datebook-2624414.php --> and other venues in San Francisco and the Bay Area. The Pitschel Players included Paul Willson, John Pray,<!-- https://patch.com/california/millvalley/an--holy-city-zoo-reunion-at-142-throckmorton-theatre79ab2faca1 --> Robin Menken,<!--
https://dc.library.northwestern.edu/search?subject=Menken%2C+Robin
https://dc.library.northwestern.edu/items/64591809-cfea-4037-adf5-1e265c4f6f45
https://dc.library.northwestern.edu/items/594de1eb-f050-467f-b0b6-c3bf0e1b60f6
https://dc.library.northwestern.edu/items/c858abeb-2337-4940-bd50-5e97c26d85df
https://dc.library.northwestern.edu/items/16f28d9a-bb97-4362-aaef-a578d2357b03
--> John Bailey, James Carroll Pickett III,<!-- https://web.archive.org/web/20240911013855/https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-advocate-messenger-james-carroll-pic/23879587/ https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0681890/ https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/199078084/james-carroll-pickett https://elisa-rolle.livejournal.com/2175674.html --> Gene Babo (musical director<!-- https://digitalassets.lib.berkeley.edu/sfbagals/Kalendar/1975_Kalendar_Vol04_NoL10_May_30.pdf -->) and Edie McClurg (beginning 1975).<!--
- Edie McClurg at encyclopedia.com
- Mcclurg - TCMdb - Turner Classic Movies
--> In 1974, producer Joe Roth and the Pitschel Players relocated to Los Angeles.<!-- https://newspaperarchive.com/van-nuys-news-feb-14-1975-p-24/ --><!-- https://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/person/166006%7C0/Joe-Roth/ --> Soon after 11 November 1973,<!-- https://web.archive.org/web/20120130053117/http://www.lastagetimes.com/2012/01/la-stage-insider-50 https://jerrygarciasbrokendownpalaces.blogspot.com/2012/07/ash-grove-pitchell-players-cabaret-8162.html --> Roth and Bowen leased 8162 Melrose Avenue, as the Pitschel Players Cabaret,<!-- Jerry Garcia Band --> which was the former Ash Grove nightclub site, and the later L.A. Improv.<!-- https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2000-mar-26-tm-12666-story.html --> Al Franken and Tom Davis performed at the Pitschel Players Cabaret.<!-- "Anyway, eventually the owners of the Ash Grove were looking to sell and it just so happened that Tom and I were back in New York. When Budd told me that he was starting a club in LA, I said, “Well, the Ash Grove—the old Ash Grove—might be up for sale.” He didn’t know that until I told him. I also know he never paid me a finder’s fee. They weren’t the actual landlords, but the lease to the building was controlled by Joe Roth, a film producer who had been part of a comedy team I’d worked with in New York, and an actor named Roger Bowen, who played the colonel in the film version of M*A*S*H. At the time, they managed both the Pitchell Players and the building; although it was dilapidated like the New York club was when I first found it, it had great bones." Al Franken --> David Lander and Michael McKean "moonlighted" by performing at the Pitschel Players Cabaret.<!-- https://web.archive.org/web/20160601183346/https://michaelmckean.com/2016/06/01/the-reality-building/ --> The Pitschel Players appeared in 1977's Cracking Up.
In 1980, Bowen and Ann moved back to New York.<!-- https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/nytimes/name/ann-bowen-obituary?id=8128749 -->
Bowen died of a heart attack at the age of 63 while on vacation in Marathon, Florida. (Stevenson also died from a heart attack; because of this strange coincidence, Bowen's family did not make the news of his death public until a week afterward in an attempt to minimize any confusion over the two actors and their obituaries.)
Filmography
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Year
! Title
! Role
! class="unsortable" | Notes
|-
|1967|| Funnyman || Lester, Social Scientist ||
|-
|1967|| Petulia || Warren ||
|-
|1968|| Bullitt || Man ||
|-
|1970|| M*A*S*H || Lt. Col. Henry Blake |||
|-
|1970|| Move || Rabbi ||
|-
|1970|| Arnie || Hamilton Majors Jr. || TV series 1970-72
|-
|1973|| Steelyard Blues || Fire Commissioner Francis ||
|-
|1973|| Wicked, Wicked || Simmons, Hotel Manager ||
|-
|1976|| Tunnel Vision || Henry Kissinger ||
|-
|1978|| Heaven Can Wait || Newspaperman ||
|-
|1979|| The Main Event || Owner Sinthia Cosmetics ||
|-
|1980|| Foxes || Counsellor ||
|-
|1980|| First Family || Senator William 'Wild Bill' Hubley ||
|-
|1982|| Zapped! || Mr. Springboro ||
|-
|1982|| At Ease || Col. Clapp || TV series
|-
|1987|| Morgan Stewart's Coming Home || Dr. Cabot ||
|-
|1991|| What About Bob? || Phil ||
|-
|1993|| Even Cowgirls Get the Blues || Naturalist filming whooping cranes from aircraft || Uncredited, (final film role)
|}
Bibliography
References
External links
- <!-- https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0100796/ -->
