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Daniel J. Travanti
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Daniel J. Travanti : ウィキペディア英語版
Daniel J. Travanti

Danielo Giovanni "Daniel J." Travanti (born March 7, 1940) is an American actor best known for his starring role as Captain Frank Furillo in the 1980s television drama ''Hill Street Blues''.
==Biography==
Travanti, one of five children, was born in Kenosha, Wisconsin, to Italian immigrant parents. His father was a factory worker. During his teen years, Travanti was an athlete and good student, earning scholarships to Harvard University, Princeton University, and Dartmouth College, though he eventually attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison.〔 〕 In 1957, before his senior year, he attended the youth government and leadership program called Badger Boys State as a representative chosen from his high school.
In the very early 1960s he played Cathy Lane's besotted beau, "Rock" in an episode of ''The Patty Duke Show''. In 1964, Travanti guest-starred in the episode "Murder by Scandal" of CBS's drama about newspapers, ''The Reporter''. He made his feature film debut in 1965 (credited as "Dan Travanty") playing a deaf-mute nightclub bouncer in the psychological thriller ''Who Killed Teddy Bear?'' starring Sal Mineo and Juliet Prowse.
In 1966 he played the role of radio talk-show host and murderer Barney Austin in the ''Perry Mason'' episode, "The Case of the Midnight Howler." He (credited as Dan Travanty in all four) was the lead guest-star in the Season 3 episode "Collision Of Planets" of ''Lost in Space'' in 1967, appeared in the episode "The Octopus" of the single-season crime drama ''The Silent Force'' in late 1970, was featured in the Season 5 episode "Murder Times Three" of ''Mannix'' in late 1971, and appeared in the Season 6 episode "Image" of ''Mission: Impossible'' in early 1972. Also in 1972 he played a fugitive in ''The Devil's Playground'' episode of ''Cannon'' with his future ''Hill Street Blues'' co-star James B. Sikking. In 1982 Travanti appeared briefly in the ''Newhart'' episode "A View From The Bench".
Years later, Travanti earned five nominations and two Emmy Awards for his portrayal of Hill Street Station Captain Frank Furillo. In 1983, Travanti starred in the TV movie ''Adam'' for which he received another Emmy nomination. Since then, Travanti has appeared in a number of TV movies and has made appearances in television programs such as ''Poltergeist: The Legacy'' (1997) and ''Prison Break'' (2005). In 1986, HBO broadcast the made-for-cable biographical film ''Murrow'', with Travanti's portrayal of Edward R. Murrow receiving a Cable Ace nomination. He co-starred in the film ''Millennium'' (1989) and as Lt. Ray McAuliffe in the television series ''Missing Persons'' (1993).
Travanti has publicly acknowledged his past as an alcoholic〔http://members.wizzards.net/~mlworden/choices/sparkle.htm〕 who found sobriety through Alcoholics Anonymous, calling the affliction a "disease of loneliness and secrecy." In 1981, he made such a confession to Rona Barrett in an interview on NBC and even recited, from memory, all of the organization's "Twelve Steps" on camera. Captain Furillo, his best-known character, was also a recovering alcoholic, and the character was shown multiple times taking part in AA meetings.
In January–March 2007, Travanti appeared off-Broadway in Oren Safdie's ''The Last Word...'' at the Theater at St. Clements in New York City, and in November–December 2008, Travanti played the "Con Melody" in an off-off Broadway production of Eugene O'Neill's ''A Touch of the Poet'' for Friendly Fire Theater in New York.
In 2010, he appeared in an episode of ''Criminal Minds'' as a 75-year-old serial killer suffering from Alzheimer's.
Travanti had a recurring role on the Starz television series ''Boss''.
On 9 May, 2001, Travanti gave the opening remarks for the Disclosure Project's National Press Club conference on government relations with extraterrestrials, in Washington D.C.

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