The Alamo
The Alamo
Dierkes was born on February 10, 1905 in Cincinnati, Ohio. He attended Brown University and subsequently went to work as an economist for the United States Department of State. In 1941 he joined the Red Cross and served in the Britain duringWorld War II. There he met director John Huston who recommended that he try Hollywood after the war. Instead, Dierkes went to work for the U.S. Treasury Department which coincidentally sent him to Hollywood to function as technical advisor for the film To the Ends of the Earth (1948). Because of his appearance and very tall frame (6 feet, 6 inches), Dierkes enjoyed a long career as a character actor, often portraying villains or soldiers. In the 1953 film Shane, Dierkes portrays villain Morgan Ryker, who is the last man shot by the title character, Shane, in the final bar room shootout. One of his more memorable scenes is in the 1960 film, The Alamo. Dierkes portrays a Tennessean named Jocko, who is torn between leaving before the attack to care for his blind wife, or staying to support the Texans' cause. Understanding that if Jocko stays to fight she will likely be widowed, Jocko's wife coaxes him to stay and defend the fort, despite her disability. Dierkes died in 1975 of emphesyma and was survived by his wife Cynthia, two sons, and two daughters.
Born: 1905-02-10 in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
The Alamo
Friendly Persuasion
The Moonlighter
The Left Handed Gun
The Hanging Tree
The Thing from Another World
The Omega Man
Three Husbands
Not as a Stranger
The Naked Jungle
The Raven
Valerie
Blood Arrow
The Raid
Touch of Evil
Daughter of Dr. Jekyll
Gun Fury
Les Miserables
The Haunted Palace
Johnny Cool