
Prolific American character actor of primarily villainous roles. The son of German parents, Cincinnati feed-store manager August Wilke and his wife Rose, Robert Joseph Wilke grew up in Cincinnati. He worked as a lifeguard at a Miami, Florida, hotel, where he made contacts in the film business. He was able to obtain work as a stuntman and continued as such until the mid-'40s, when he began getting actual roles in low-budget westerns and serials. A prominent appearance as one of the heavies in Le train sifflera trois fois (1952) led to work in higher-quality films. He worked extensively in television as well as movies, and became an enormously familiar face, though a fairly anonymous one to the general public. His weathered visage made him a perfect western bad guy, but he occasionally played sympathetic parts as well, as in Les moissons du ciel (1978). An expert golfer, he was said by his friend Claude Akins to have earned more money on the golf course than he ever did in movies. He died in 1989. -

The Magnificent Seven
1960 · as Wallace

Spartacus
1960 · as Guard captain

High Noon
1952 · as Jim Pierce

Stripes
1981 · as Gen. Barnicke

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
1954 · as First Mate of the Nautilus

From Here to Eternity
1953 · as Sgt. Henderson (uncredited)

Days of Heaven
1978 · as The Farm Foreman

The Lone Ranger
1956 · as Cassidy

The Far Country
1954 · as Madden

Night Passage
1957 · as Concho

Man of the West
1958 · as Ponch

Written on the Wind
1956 · as Dan Willis

Star Reporter
1939 · as Reporter

Vengeance Valley
1951 · as Cowhand (uncredited)

The Hallelujah Trail
1965 · as Chief Five Barrels

Wichita
1955 · as Ben Thompson

The Lone Gun
1954 · as Hort Moran (as Robert Wilke)

The Fighting Seabees
1944 · as Arriving Construction Worker (uncredited)