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・ Donald N. Bastian
・ Donald N. Bersoff
・ Donald N. Frey
・ Donald N. Langenberg
・ Donald N. Levine
・ Donald N. Sills
・ Donald Martin Carroll
・ Donald Martino
・ Donald Matheson Sutherland
・ Donald Mathieson
・ Donald Matthews (political scientist)
・ Donald Mattison
・ Donald Max
・ Donald Maxwell
・ Donald Maxwell (baritone)
Donald May
・ Donald Maynard Hultstrand
・ Donald McAllister
・ Donald McAlpine
・ Donald McAlpine (politician)
・ Donald McCaig
・ Donald McCallum
・ Donald McCallum (footballer, born 1996)
・ Donald McCarthy, 1st Earl of Clancare
・ Donald McClelland
・ Donald McCormick
・ Donald McCormick (footballer)
・ Donald McCowen
・ Donald McCullough
・ Donald McCullough (broadcaster)


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Donald May : ウィキペディア英語版
Donald May

Donald May (born February 22, 1927) is an American actor.
In 1959–1960, May temporarily replaced Wayde Preston as the lead in four episodes the ABC/Warner Brothers western television series, ''Colt .45''. May portrayed "Sam Colt, Jr.," cousin to Preston's character, Christopher Colt. The ''Colt .45'' series also aired on the BBC under the title ''The Colt Cousins''.
May was born in Chicago, Illinois. His first credited role was in 1956-1957 as Cadet Charles C. Thompson as the host of the ABC military drama series ''The West Point Story''. He subsequently appeared in several other ABC/WB series, ''Sugarfoot'', ''Cheyenne'' (as a young man plotting revenge in the episode "The Longest Rope"), ''77 Sunset Strip'', ''Hawaiian Eye'', ''Surfside 6'', and ''The Roaring 20s'', in which he was cast from 1960 to 1962 in forty-two episodes in the recurring role of fictitious newspaper reporter Pat Garrison. One of his principal co-stars on ''The Roaring 20s'' was Dorothy Provine.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Donald May )
In 1962, May played a physician, Paul Larson in the episode "County General" of ABC's drama series, ''Bus Stop'', starring Marilyn Maxwell. That same year, he was cast as Major Thompson in "Any Second Now" of the ABC war drama, ''Combat!''. In 1964, he portrayed Thatcher in the three-part episode, "The Tenderfoot" of NBC's ''Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color''. He was cast in 1964 in two other films, as Captain Anderson in ''A Tiger Walks'', and as Secret Service agent John O'Connor in ''Kisses for My President'', with Polly Bergen as the first woman President of the United States, with Fred MacMurray as "First Husband." Two years later, May was cast as Edward White, Jr., with, again, Fred MacMurray in the lead, in the film about the Boy Scouts of America, ''Follow Me, Boys!''.〔
May subsequently guest starred on CBS's ''Men into Space'', ''Barnaby Jones'', ''The Dukes of Hazzard'', ''Dallas'', and ''Falcon Crest''. He appeared on ABC's ''Fantasy Island''. May was featured in several soap operas, including his role from 1967 to 1977 of crime busting lawyer, Adam Drake in ''The Edge of Night''. He played Grant Wheeler in 1981 in twenty-nine segments of ''Texas''. He also had recurring roles in ''One Life to Live'' and ''All My Children''.〔
May's most recent screen role was in 1993 as Andrew Laraby in the episode "Come Rain or Come Schein" on the NBC legal drama, ''L.A. Law''.〔
From his first marriage to Ellen Cameron, May has two sons, Christopher and Douglas May. Cameron appeared on screen only once—in an episode of ABC's ''Arrest and Trial''. May is currently married to Carla Borelli, an actress who has also appeared in the television serials ''Texas'' and ''Falcon Crest''.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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