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  1. Browse Getty Images' premium collection of high-quality, authentic Deforest Kelley stock photos, royalty-free images, and pictures. Deforest Kelley stock photos are available in a variety of sizes and formats to fit your needs.

  2. Jackson DeForest Kelley (January 20, 1920 – June 11, 1999), known to his friends and colleagues as "De,” was an American actor, poet, and singer. He was best known for his roles in Westerns and as Dr. Leonard "Bones" McCoy of the USS Enterprise in the television and motion picture series Star Trek® (1966–1991). Studio portrait of ...

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  4. Jan 19, 2011 · By StarTrek.com Staff. DeForest Kelley – born on January 20, 1920 -- was that rarest of Hollywood rarities, a true gentleman, an old-school Southern fella who hailed from Georgia. He always insisted that anyone who met him call him “De.”. He treated everyone – lifelong friends and newbie Star Trek fans excited just to be in his presence ...

  5. Feb 23, 2024 · DeForest Kelley and cast members from 1959’s Warlock ©20th Century Fox/courtesy MovieStillsDB.com The first attempt of DeForest Kelley to star in his own series was in the form of 1960’s 333 Montgomery , a TV pilot featuring him as Jake Brittin, a San Francisco defense attorney who takes on seemingly impossible cases, starting with a man ...

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    – DeForest Kelley as Dr. "Bones" McCoy (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan)

    Jackson DeForest Kelley (20 January 1920 – 11 June 1999; age 79) was famous for his role as Leonard "Bones" McCoy, MD, on Star Trek: The Original Series. He went on to voice the character on Star Trek: The Animated Series and to play the character in the first six Star Trek movies. He also appeared as an aged Admiral McCoy in the Star Trek: The Next Generation first season episode "Encounter at Farpoint". Footage of Kelley from "The Trouble with Tribbles" was used in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Trials and Tribble-ations". Kelley had his makeup test and approval on Thursday 28 May 1987 and filmed his scenes for "Encounter at Farpoint" on Tuesday 2 June 1987 on Paramount Stage 9. His image also appeared in Star Trek Generations in a photograph in Kirk's cabin in the Nexus and again more prominently in Star Trek Beyond in a photograph that was among Spock's possessions bequeathed to his alternate reality counterpart.

    From Sawdust to Stardust; DeForest Kelley has become the only Original Series

    Kelley was born in Atlanta, Georgia. Having always wanted to be a doctor yet thwarted by the Great Depression, Kelley instead went into show business starting as a singer with the Lew Forbes Orchestra and in radio.

    In 1937 Kelley went to Long Beach, California, to stay with his uncle for two weeks. Those two weeks became a year. Even after returning to Georgia, he decided that California was where he wanted to be. While living in California, Kelley joined a local theater group. There he met Carolyn Dowling, whom he would marry in 1945.

    During the Second World War, Kelley served in the United States Army Air Forces in a non-fighting capacity from March 1943 onward, as he, having a theatrical background at the time, was assigned to the First Motion Picture Unit, responsible for the production of propaganda, and training films. Towards the end of the war, a talent scout for Paramount Pictures saw Kelley in a Navy training film which led to a screen test and a contract upon his release from the armed forces in January 1946, and him starring in his first motion picture Fear in the Night (1947). Later that same year, Kelley co-starred with such legendary entertainers as Bob Hope and Bing Crosby in the musical comedy Variety Girl. Future TOS guest actor Richard Webb made an appearance as himself in this film.

    Kelley went on to co-star with fellow TOS performers Jeff Corey and Whit Bissell as prison escapees in the 1948 thriller Canon City. He appeared in smaller, uncredited roles in several films throughout the 1950s, most notably The Men (1950), House of Bamboo (1955, with Biff Elliot), and The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956, with John Crawford and Kenneth Tobey). He did, however, have a larger, supporting role in the 1955 film noir Illegal, co-starring future Star Trek alumni Robert Ellenstein and Lawrence Dobkin.

    Throughout the late 1950s and the 1960s, he starred or appeared primarily in Westerns. He played Morgan Earp in the acclaimed 1957 John Sturges Western Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, in which fellow Trek alumni Whit Bissell and Kenneth Tobey also appeared. Interestingly enough, Kelley had earlier played Ike Clanton on a 1955 episode of You Are There entitled "The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral". He, of course, revisited the O.K. Corral one more time on Star Trek in the 1968 episode, "Spectre of the Gun".

    Additional appearances As Leonard McCoy

    •TOS: •"The Corbomite Maneuver" •"Mudd's Women" •"The Enemy Within" •"The Man Trap" •"The Naked Time" •"Charlie X" •"Balance of Terror" •"Dagger of the Mind" •"Miri" •"The Conscience of the King" •"The Galileo Seven" •"Court Martial" •"The Menagerie, Part I" •"Shore Leave" •"The Squire of Gothos" •"Arena" •"The Alternative Factor" •"Tomorrow is Yesterday" •"The Return of the Archons" •"A Taste of Armageddon" •"Space Seed" •"This Side of Paradise" •"The Devil in the Dark" •"The City on the Edge of Forever" •"Operation -- Annihilate!" •"Catspaw" •"Metamorphosis" •"Friday's Child" •"Who Mourns for Adonais?" •"Amok Time" •"The Doomsday Machine" •"Wolf in the Fold" •"The Changeling" •"The Apple" •"Mirror, Mirror" •"The Deadly Years" •"I, Mudd" •"The Trouble with Tribbles" •"Bread and Circuses" •"Journey to Babel" •"A Private Little War" •"The Gamesters of Triskelion" •"Obsession" •"The Immunity Syndrome" •"A Piece of the Action" •"By Any Other Name" •"Return to Tomorrow" •"Patterns of Force" •"The Ultimate Computer" •"The Omega Glory" •"Assignment: Earth" •"Spectre of the Gun" •"Elaan of Troyius" •"The Paradise Syndrome" •"The Enterprise Incident" •"And the Children Shall Lead" •"Spock's Brain" •"Is There in Truth No Beauty?" •"The Empath" •"The Tholian Web" •"For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky" •"Day of the Dove" •"Plato's Stepchildren" •"Wink of an Eye" •"That Which Survives" •"Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" •"Whom Gods Destroy" •"The Mark of Gideon" •"The Lights of Zetar" •"The Cloud Minders" •"The Way to Eden" •"Requiem for Methuselah" •"The Savage Curtain" •"All Our Yesterdays" •"Turnabout Intruder" •TAS: •"Beyond the Farthest Star" •"Yesteryear" •"One of Our Planets Is Missing" •"The Lorelei Signal" •"More Tribbles, More Troubles" •"The Survivor" •"The Infinite Vulcan" •"The Magicks of Megas-Tu" •"Once Upon a Planet" •"Mudd's Passion" •"The Terratin Incident" •"The Time Trap" •"The Ambergris Element" •"The Eye of the Beholder" •"The Pirates of Orion" •"The Practical Joker" •"Albatross" •"How Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth" •"The Counter-Clock Incident" •Star Trek films: •••••••Star Trek Generations (Picture only) •Star Trek Beyond (Picture only) •TNG: "Encounter at Farpoint" •DS9: "Trials and Tribble-ations" (Archive footage) •ST: "Ephraim and Dot" (Archive audio)

  6. Jun 8, 2012 · Originally published Jun 8, 2012 Last edited Aug 28, 2013. Georgia native DeForest Kelley was an actor best known for his role as Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy in the Star Trek television series and feature films. Jackson DeForest Kelley was born on January 20, 1920, in Atlanta. He was the second son of Clora Casey and the Reverend Ernest David ...

  7. Jun 11, 1999 · From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jackson DeForest Kelley (January 20, 1920 – June 11, 1999) was an American actor, screenwriter, poet and singer known for his iconic roles in Westerns and as Dr. Leonard "Bones" McCoy of the USS Enterprise in the television and film series Star Trek. Kelley was delivered by his uncle at his parents' home in Atlanta, the son of Clora (née Casey) and ...

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