William de Clerq Reynolds (born December 9, 1931) is a retired American actor.He is best known for his film roles in the 1950s and his television roles in the 1960s and 1970s.
- William Reynolds Poker Net Worth Anything
- William Reynolds Poker Net Worth Money
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- William Reynolds Poker Net Worth Forbes
William Reynolds Poker Net Worth Anything
Reynolds in 1969 | |
Born | December 9, 1931 (age 89) Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Pasadena City College |
Occupation | Actor: The Islanders, The Gallant Men, and The F.B.I. Businessman |
Years active | 1951–1978, 1989 |
Spouse(s) | Molly Sinclair (m. 1950–1992, her death) |
Children | 2 |
Vitor Coelho (right) holds up his pocket nines after doubling thru William Reynolds (left). They got it all in on a board of AhKc9s4s, and the AsJh (pair of aces) of Reynolds was drawing dead. Reynolds was knocked down to just 10 big blinds, and he was eliminated in 13th place a few minutes later. Total Live Earnings $1,871,651 in 2007 for $205,000, came second in a $1k event on PokerStars in November in 2008 for $60k William Reynolds. Some robbers and thieves commit acts so remarkable they become mythological, even sympathetic to some degree.$160,000 The Bellagio is one of the biggest and most magnificent casinos in the world.
William de Clerq Reynolds (born December 9, 1931) is a retired American actor. He is best known for his film roles in the 1950s and his television roles in the 1960s and 1970s.
Early years[edit]
Reynolds's mother died when he was five years old, and he was sent to boarding schools. He eventually attended Pasadena City College and worked in their radio department.
Film[edit]
After a talent agent spotted the handsome, capable actor in some minor theatrical roles, Reynolds signed with Universal Studios in 1952 and began appearing in pictures such as Carrie (1952), where he had a prominent role as the son of Laurence Olivier. Reynolds was drafted into the United States Army in 1952, but en route to Korea he stayed in Japan doing radio work.[1] He returned to Universal making horror film Cult of the Cobra (1955). He also appeared in the Douglas Sirk melodramas All That Heaven Allows (1955) and There's Always Tomorrow (1956). He often played the son of the leading character.
Television[edit]
Reynolds became tired of his dull, stereotyped roles in the movies and began his move to television in 1959, playing the title role in Pete Kelly's Blues.[2]:826-827 During this series, he developed a close friendship with actor and producer Jack Webb. In 1960–1961, he starred as Sandy Wade on the ABC/Warner Brotherstelevision seriesThe Islanders.[2] He also guest starred in 1961 as Jerry Bolton on the episode 'Nobody's Millions' of another ABC/WB drama series, The Roaring 20s.
In 1961, Reynolds appeared as Johnny Tremayne in an episode of Cheyenne 'The Brahma Bull'. In 1962-1963, Reynolds costarred on ABC's The Gallant Men. He then played Hoodoo Henderson as an adult in 1966's Walt Disney film Follow Me, Boys!.
Two years with no acting jobs led Reynolds to enhance his education, and he passed the examinations to become a lawyer specializing in real estate.[3]
Reynolds caught his big break co-starring with Efrem Zimbalist, Jr., in another ABC series, the long-running The F.B.I.. Reynolds first made guest appearances in seasons one and two in 1966, before he appeared as series regular Special Agent Tom Colby from 1967 to 1973.[4] He was replaced by actor Shelly Novack for the final season, because the network considered Reynolds, then at the age of forty-one, too old for the part. Still, he managed to make two appearances as Colby in the ninth season (1973–74), which included the final network-aired episode, a rerun of 'The Animal,' on September 8, 1974.
He also appeared in guest roles in Jack Webb-produced shows such as Dragnet, and in other series like Rod Serling'sThe Twilight Zone, starring in the episode 'The Purple Testament' (Season 1, Episode 19). Additionally, he guest starred in an episode of the Maverick tv series with James Garner.
Later years[edit]
Reynolds left show business after The F.B.I. ended its run and became a businessman. In 2004, he made an appearance at a Twilight Zone convention in Los Angeles.
Personal life[edit]
Reynolds married actress Molly Sinclair in 1950 and remained with her until her death in 1992. The couple had a daughter born in 1958 and a son born the following year.
Partial filmography[edit]
- Dear Brat (1951) - Robbie
- No Questions Asked (1951) - Floyd
- The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel (1951) - Manfred Rommel (uncredited)
- The Cimarron Kid (1952) - Will Dalton (uncredited)
- The Battle at Apache Pass (1952) - Lem Bent
- Has Anybody Seen My Gal? (1952) - Howard Blaisdell
- Francis Goes to West Point (1952) - Wilbur Van Allen
- Carrie (1952) - George Hurstwood, Jr.
- Son of Ali Baba (1952) - Mustapha
- The Raiders (1952) - Frank Morrell
- The Mississippi Gambler (1953) - Pierre Loyette
- Gunsmoke (1953) - Brazos
- Cult of the Cobra (1955) - Pete Norton
- There's Always Tomorrow (1955) - Vinnie Groves
- All That Heaven Allows (1955) - Ned Scott
- Away All Boats (1956) - Ens. Kruger
- Mister Cory (1957) - Alex Wyncott
- The Land Unknown (1957) - Lt. Jack Carmen
- The Big Beat (1958) - John Randall
- The Thing That Couldn't Die (1958) - Gordon Hawthorne
- Pete Kelly's Blues (1959, TV Series, 13 episodes) - Pete Kelly
- The Twilight Zone (1960, TV Series, 1 episode) - Lt. Fitzgerald
- The Islanders (1960-1961, TV Series, 24 episodes) - Sandy Wade
- The Gallant Men (1962-1963, TV Series, 26 episodes) - Capt. Jim Benedict
- A Distant Trumpet (1964) - 1st Lt. Teddy Mainwarring
- Follow Me, Boys! (1966) - Hoodoo Henderson - Man
- The F.B.I. (1966-1974, TV Series, 161 episodes) - Special Agent Tom Colby / SAC Kendall Lisbon / Franklin Benton
References[edit]
- ^http://www.classicimages.com/articles/2009/10/02/past_articles/reynoldswilliam.txt
- ^ abTerrace, Vincent (2011). Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 through 2010. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN978-0-7864-6477-7. Pp. 512-513.
- ^Crosby, Joan (October 15, 1967). 'From Flops To FBI Hit'. Kingsport Times-News. Tennessee, Kingsport. Newspaper Enterprise Association. p. 35. Retrieved December 9, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^Aaker, Everett (2006). Encyclopedia of Early Television Crime Fighters. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN978-0-7864-6409-8. P. 603.
External links[edit]
- William Reynolds on IMDb
The final table of the $25,000 high roller no-limit hold'em championship at the 2010 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure began a little after noon EST today in the Bahamas. The final-table bubble took many long hours the night before and the unfortunate bubble girl was Team PokerStars pro Sandra Naujoks. The final eight players had fought long and hard to find their way to the final day, playing through a tough field of 84 players. The blinds were pretty high coming into the day at 10,000-20,000 with a 2,000 ante and play was ready to shoot out of the gates when cards got into the air. Here were the chip counts at the start of play:
Seat 1: Adolfo Vaeza — 758,000
Seat 2: William Reynolds — 482,000 (pictured above right)
Seat 3: Michiel Brummelhuis — 394,000
Seat 4: Dmitry Stelmak — 150,000
Seat 5: Will Molson — 669,000
Seat 6: Tobias Reinkemeier — 1,072,000
Seat 7: Lisa Hamilton — 440,000
Seat 8: Matt Marafioti — 236,000
Dmitry Stelmark was the first player to shove on a short stack at the final table and it happened on the second hand of play. His K-10 was dominated by the A-10 of chip leader Tobias Reinkemeier, and Stelmark was eliminated in eighth place ($66,885) after the board ran out A-10-9-K-J. Matt Marafioti was the next player to fall in seventh place ($87,465). His pocket sevens were racing against the A-K of Williams Reynolds preflop, and an ace on the turn sealed Marafioti's fate.
There was a lull in the eliminations for a while after that and during that time the fortunes of the chip leader (Reinkemeier) heading into the day changed dramatically. Reinkemeier doubled up Will Molson, and even after doubling up once himself he was still at risk. The final hand came for Reinkemeier when he shoved with pocket eights but ran into the pocket kings of Reynolds. The kings held and Reinkemeier exited in sixth place ($108,045). Lisa Hamilton fell next in fifth place ($133,770). She was at risk with pocket jacks and they were off to the races against the A-Q of Molson. Molson found a queen and Hamilton's run was over.
Adolfo Vaeza doubled up a few times to survive a little longer than Michiel Brummelhuis, who picked a bad spot to move all in against Reynolds. Brummelhuis shoved preflop with Q-9 and Reynolds was waiting with pocket aces. The board provided no assistance and Brummelhuis was eliminated in fourth place ($154,350). Vaeza had held on for a while but his tournament run came to an end in third place ($218,150) when he decided to move all in on a draw. He shoved with 5-3 in the hole on an A-6-4 flop and Reynolds snap-called with A-K in the hole. The turn and river changed nothing and that brought about a heads-up final between the two most active players at the table, Reynolds and Molson.
William Reynolds — 2,455,000
Will Molson — 1,747,000
The first major pot during heads-up play went to Molson and he pulled even in chips with Reynolds after the hand. His Q-J beat the J-8 of Reynolds on a K-J-3-9-J board. Once things were even though, Reynolds took control of the match and grinded Molson to less than 1 million down during the next hour. Molson eventually shoved on a short stack with A-9, which had the A-8 of Reynolds dominated. The flop ran out 9-9-5-7-3 and Molson doubled up back to even with Reynolds.
Reynolds was the next player to find his stack all in and he shoved with pocket sevens preflop. Molson was waiting with A-3, but the sevens held for Reynolds and he once again held a dominant 4-1 chip lead. A few minutes later the final hand of the match hit the books. Molson moved all in preflop with K-8 in the hole and Reynolds made the call with A-10. The board brought no help for Molson, who now has the distinction of finishing runner-up in this event two years in a row. He was awarded $322,075 in second place and Reynolds was crowned the champion. Reynolds was awarded a silver trophy and $576,240 in prize money.
1: William Reynolds — $576,240
2: Will Molson — $322,075
3: Adolfo Vaeza — $218,150
4: Michiel Brummelhuis — $154,350
5: Lisa Hamilton — $133,770
6: Tobias Reinkemeier — $108,045
7: Matt Marafioti — $87,465
8: Dmitry Stelmark — $66,885
Here is a look at how the elimination hands played out, as featured on CardPlayer.com'slive updates:
Dmitry Stelmark Eliminated in Eighth Place ($66,885)
In the second hand at the final table, Dmitry Stelmark (pictured left) moved all in for 136,000 from the button. Tobias Reinkemeier made the call in the big blind and they flipped over their cards:
William Reynolds Poker Net Worth Money
Stelmark: K 10
Reinkemeier: A 10
Board: A 10 9 K J
Reinkemeier won the pot and Stelmark was eliminated on the hand in eighth place. He takes home $66,885 in prize money.
Matt Marafioti Eliminated in Seventh Place ($87,465)
Matt Marafioti (pictured right) raised to 45,000 from middle position preflop and William Reynolds moved all in on the button. Marafioti called all in for 146,000 and they revealed their hole cards:
Reynolds: A K
Marafioti: 7 7
Board: 10 9 4 A 6
Marafioti was eliminated on the hand in seventh place and he will take home $87,465 in prize money.
Tobias Reinkemeier Eliminated in Sixth Place ($108,000)
William Reynolds raised to 56,000 preflop and Tobias Reinkemeier (pictured left) reraised all in from the small blind. Reynolds quickly called and they turned over their cards:
Reinkemeier: 8 8
Reynolds: K K
Board: J 7 4 A Q
Reinkemeier was eliminated in sixth place and he took home 108,045 in prize money.
Lisa Hamilton Eliminated in Fifth Place ($133,770)
William Reynolds raised to 70,000 from the cutoff and Will Molson made the call from the small blind. Lisa Hamilton (pictured right) reraised to 180,000 from the big blind. Reynolds mucked and Molson reraised all in. Hamilton made the all-in call for 572,000 and the two players flipped over their cards:
Hamilton: J J
Molson: A Q
Board: 8 6 4 Q K
Hamilton was eliminated in fifth place and she will take home $133,770. Molson increased his chip lead to 2 million after the hand.
Michiel Brummelhuis Eliminated in Fourth Place ($154,300)
Paradise fishing slot machine near me now. Michiel Brummelhuis (pictured right) moved all in under the gun for 291,000 and William Reynolds snap-called in the big blind. Their cards:
Brummelhuis: Q 9
Reynolds: A A
Board: 10 6 3 J 7
Brummelhuis was eliminated in fourth place and takes home $154,350 in prize money.
Reynolds left show business after The F.B.I. ended its run and became a businessman. In 2004, he made an appearance at a Twilight Zone convention in Los Angeles.
Personal life[edit]
Reynolds married actress Molly Sinclair in 1950 and remained with her until her death in 1992. The couple had a daughter born in 1958 and a son born the following year.
Partial filmography[edit]
- Dear Brat (1951) - Robbie
- No Questions Asked (1951) - Floyd
- The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel (1951) - Manfred Rommel (uncredited)
- The Cimarron Kid (1952) - Will Dalton (uncredited)
- The Battle at Apache Pass (1952) - Lem Bent
- Has Anybody Seen My Gal? (1952) - Howard Blaisdell
- Francis Goes to West Point (1952) - Wilbur Van Allen
- Carrie (1952) - George Hurstwood, Jr.
- Son of Ali Baba (1952) - Mustapha
- The Raiders (1952) - Frank Morrell
- The Mississippi Gambler (1953) - Pierre Loyette
- Gunsmoke (1953) - Brazos
- Cult of the Cobra (1955) - Pete Norton
- There's Always Tomorrow (1955) - Vinnie Groves
- All That Heaven Allows (1955) - Ned Scott
- Away All Boats (1956) - Ens. Kruger
- Mister Cory (1957) - Alex Wyncott
- The Land Unknown (1957) - Lt. Jack Carmen
- The Big Beat (1958) - John Randall
- The Thing That Couldn't Die (1958) - Gordon Hawthorne
- Pete Kelly's Blues (1959, TV Series, 13 episodes) - Pete Kelly
- The Twilight Zone (1960, TV Series, 1 episode) - Lt. Fitzgerald
- The Islanders (1960-1961, TV Series, 24 episodes) - Sandy Wade
- The Gallant Men (1962-1963, TV Series, 26 episodes) - Capt. Jim Benedict
- A Distant Trumpet (1964) - 1st Lt. Teddy Mainwarring
- Follow Me, Boys! (1966) - Hoodoo Henderson - Man
- The F.B.I. (1966-1974, TV Series, 161 episodes) - Special Agent Tom Colby / SAC Kendall Lisbon / Franklin Benton
References[edit]
- ^http://www.classicimages.com/articles/2009/10/02/past_articles/reynoldswilliam.txt
- ^ abTerrace, Vincent (2011). Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 through 2010. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN978-0-7864-6477-7. Pp. 512-513.
- ^Crosby, Joan (October 15, 1967). 'From Flops To FBI Hit'. Kingsport Times-News. Tennessee, Kingsport. Newspaper Enterprise Association. p. 35. Retrieved December 9, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^Aaker, Everett (2006). Encyclopedia of Early Television Crime Fighters. McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN978-0-7864-6409-8. P. 603.
External links[edit]
- William Reynolds on IMDb
The final table of the $25,000 high roller no-limit hold'em championship at the 2010 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure began a little after noon EST today in the Bahamas. The final-table bubble took many long hours the night before and the unfortunate bubble girl was Team PokerStars pro Sandra Naujoks. The final eight players had fought long and hard to find their way to the final day, playing through a tough field of 84 players. The blinds were pretty high coming into the day at 10,000-20,000 with a 2,000 ante and play was ready to shoot out of the gates when cards got into the air. Here were the chip counts at the start of play:
Seat 1: Adolfo Vaeza — 758,000
Seat 2: William Reynolds — 482,000 (pictured above right)
Seat 3: Michiel Brummelhuis — 394,000
Seat 4: Dmitry Stelmak — 150,000
Seat 5: Will Molson — 669,000
Seat 6: Tobias Reinkemeier — 1,072,000
Seat 7: Lisa Hamilton — 440,000
Seat 8: Matt Marafioti — 236,000
Dmitry Stelmark was the first player to shove on a short stack at the final table and it happened on the second hand of play. His K-10 was dominated by the A-10 of chip leader Tobias Reinkemeier, and Stelmark was eliminated in eighth place ($66,885) after the board ran out A-10-9-K-J. Matt Marafioti was the next player to fall in seventh place ($87,465). His pocket sevens were racing against the A-K of Williams Reynolds preflop, and an ace on the turn sealed Marafioti's fate.
There was a lull in the eliminations for a while after that and during that time the fortunes of the chip leader (Reinkemeier) heading into the day changed dramatically. Reinkemeier doubled up Will Molson, and even after doubling up once himself he was still at risk. The final hand came for Reinkemeier when he shoved with pocket eights but ran into the pocket kings of Reynolds. The kings held and Reinkemeier exited in sixth place ($108,045). Lisa Hamilton fell next in fifth place ($133,770). She was at risk with pocket jacks and they were off to the races against the A-Q of Molson. Molson found a queen and Hamilton's run was over.
Adolfo Vaeza doubled up a few times to survive a little longer than Michiel Brummelhuis, who picked a bad spot to move all in against Reynolds. Brummelhuis shoved preflop with Q-9 and Reynolds was waiting with pocket aces. The board provided no assistance and Brummelhuis was eliminated in fourth place ($154,350). Vaeza had held on for a while but his tournament run came to an end in third place ($218,150) when he decided to move all in on a draw. He shoved with 5-3 in the hole on an A-6-4 flop and Reynolds snap-called with A-K in the hole. The turn and river changed nothing and that brought about a heads-up final between the two most active players at the table, Reynolds and Molson.
William Reynolds — 2,455,000
Will Molson — 1,747,000
The first major pot during heads-up play went to Molson and he pulled even in chips with Reynolds after the hand. His Q-J beat the J-8 of Reynolds on a K-J-3-9-J board. Once things were even though, Reynolds took control of the match and grinded Molson to less than 1 million down during the next hour. Molson eventually shoved on a short stack with A-9, which had the A-8 of Reynolds dominated. The flop ran out 9-9-5-7-3 and Molson doubled up back to even with Reynolds.
Reynolds was the next player to find his stack all in and he shoved with pocket sevens preflop. Molson was waiting with A-3, but the sevens held for Reynolds and he once again held a dominant 4-1 chip lead. A few minutes later the final hand of the match hit the books. Molson moved all in preflop with K-8 in the hole and Reynolds made the call with A-10. The board brought no help for Molson, who now has the distinction of finishing runner-up in this event two years in a row. He was awarded $322,075 in second place and Reynolds was crowned the champion. Reynolds was awarded a silver trophy and $576,240 in prize money.
1: William Reynolds — $576,240
2: Will Molson — $322,075
3: Adolfo Vaeza — $218,150
4: Michiel Brummelhuis — $154,350
5: Lisa Hamilton — $133,770
6: Tobias Reinkemeier — $108,045
7: Matt Marafioti — $87,465
8: Dmitry Stelmark — $66,885
Here is a look at how the elimination hands played out, as featured on CardPlayer.com'slive updates:
Dmitry Stelmark Eliminated in Eighth Place ($66,885)
In the second hand at the final table, Dmitry Stelmark (pictured left) moved all in for 136,000 from the button. Tobias Reinkemeier made the call in the big blind and they flipped over their cards:
William Reynolds Poker Net Worth Money
Stelmark: K 10
Reinkemeier: A 10
Board: A 10 9 K J
Reinkemeier won the pot and Stelmark was eliminated on the hand in eighth place. He takes home $66,885 in prize money.
Matt Marafioti Eliminated in Seventh Place ($87,465)
Matt Marafioti (pictured right) raised to 45,000 from middle position preflop and William Reynolds moved all in on the button. Marafioti called all in for 146,000 and they revealed their hole cards:
Reynolds: A K
Marafioti: 7 7
Board: 10 9 4 A 6
Marafioti was eliminated on the hand in seventh place and he will take home $87,465 in prize money.
Tobias Reinkemeier Eliminated in Sixth Place ($108,000)
William Reynolds raised to 56,000 preflop and Tobias Reinkemeier (pictured left) reraised all in from the small blind. Reynolds quickly called and they turned over their cards:
Reinkemeier: 8 8
Reynolds: K K
Board: J 7 4 A Q
Reinkemeier was eliminated in sixth place and he took home 108,045 in prize money.
Lisa Hamilton Eliminated in Fifth Place ($133,770)
William Reynolds raised to 70,000 from the cutoff and Will Molson made the call from the small blind. Lisa Hamilton (pictured right) reraised to 180,000 from the big blind. Reynolds mucked and Molson reraised all in. Hamilton made the all-in call for 572,000 and the two players flipped over their cards:
Hamilton: J J
Molson: A Q
Board: 8 6 4 Q K
Hamilton was eliminated in fifth place and she will take home $133,770. Molson increased his chip lead to 2 million after the hand.
Michiel Brummelhuis Eliminated in Fourth Place ($154,300)
Paradise fishing slot machine near me now. Michiel Brummelhuis (pictured right) moved all in under the gun for 291,000 and William Reynolds snap-called in the big blind. Their cards:
Brummelhuis: Q 9
Reynolds: A A
Board: 10 6 3 J 7
Brummelhuis was eliminated in fourth place and takes home $154,350 in prize money.
Adolfo Vaeza Eliminated in Third Place ($218,150)
William Reynolds raised to 90,000 on the button and Adolfo Vaeza (pictured left) made the call from the big blind. The flop was dealt A 6 4 and Vaeza moved all in for 700,000. Reynolds made the call and they flipped over their cards:
Vaeza: 5 3
Reynolds: A K
Turn and River: J and 5
Vaeza was eliminated in third place on the hand and he takes home $218,150 in prize money.
William Reynolds Wins the PCA $25,000 High Roller Championship ($576,240) — Will Molson Eliminated in Second Place ($322,075)
Will Molson (pictured right) moved all in preflop for 910,000 and William Reynolds snap called. Their cards:
Reynolds: A 10
Molson: K 8
William Reynolds Poker Net Worth Aj
Board: 9 7 5 J A
William Reynolds Poker Net Worth Forbes
Molson was eliminated in second place for the second year in a row and he will take home $322,075. Reynolds wins the event and he takes home the top prize worth $576,240.