
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Gene Lyons (February 9, 1921 – July 8, 1974) was an American television actor from Pittsburgh, best known for his role as police commissioner Dennis Randall on the NBC detective series Ironside starring Raymond Burr. A life member of The Actors Studio, Lyons was in the Broadway production of Witness for the Prosecution for two years. His other Broadway credits include Masquerade (1958), The Trip to Bountiful (1953), Harriet (1942), and This Rock (1942). In 1953, Lyons played a police detective on the CBS drama series Pentagon U.S.A.. He appeared in 1954 as Steve Rockwell on the CBS daytime drama Woman with a Past. Before joining Raymond Burr as a regular on Ironside, he appeared on Perry Mason in 1965 as murderer Ralph Balfour in "The Case of the Wrathful Wraith." He also made guest appearances on nearly two dozen other series including The Dick Van Dyke Show, Gunsmoke, Have Gun, Will Travel, The Fugitive, Ben Casey, Star Trek ("A Taste of Armageddon"), The Twilight Zone ("King Nine Will Not Return"), The Alfred Hitchcock Hour and The Untouchables. He also appeared in films including Kiss Her Goodbye and The Young Don't Cry. Lyons died in Los Angeles, California on July 8, 1974 and is buried at Calvary Catholic Cemetery in Pittsburgh.

as Art McNeil

as Ralph Balfour
1957

as Ambassador Fox
1966

as Art McNeil
1963

as Commissioner Dennis Randall
1967

as Psychiatrist
1959

as Max Wilding
1962
as Paul Lepson
1963

as Ray Murdock
1961

as Paul Cochran
1948

as Sawyer
1967

as Sam Blake
1959

as Tom Keith
1965
as Police Commissioner Dennis Randall
1967
as Art McNeil
1 ep.

as Ralph Balfour
1 episodes

as Ambassador Fox
1 episodes

as Art McNeil
1 episodes

as Commissioner Dennis Randall
2 episodes

as Psychiatrist
1 episodes

as Max Wilding
1 episodes
as Paul Lepson
1 episodes

as Ray Murdock
1 episodes

as Paul Cochran
1 episodes

as Sawyer
1 episodes

as Sam Blake
1 episodes

as Tom Keith
1 episodes