Tim Considine
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Tim Considine | |
![]() Tim Considine introduces the first Hardy Boys serial on Mickey Mouse Club |
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Born | December 31, 1940 Los Angeles, California |
Notable roles | Spin Evans, Frank Hardy, Mike Douglas |
Tim Considine (born December 31, 1940, in Los Angeles, California), a grandson of the early film producer Alexander Pantages, is an American actor who was popular in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
Considine's most famous roles were in the Disney TV serials Spin and Marty (he played Spin) and The Hardy Boys (he played Frank), both of which appeared in 15-minute segments on the Mickey Mouse Club; in the Disney motion picture The Shaggy Dog; and as the eldest son, "Mike Douglas", in the first years of the long-running television sitcom My Three Sons. In the latter two, he starred with Fred MacMurray. Considine also had a notable bit role in the 1970 film, Patton, as one of two soldiers being slapped by the general for being a coward. Considine and David Stollery, who played "Marty", appeared in a 2000 Spin and Marty reunion production on the ABC network.
His older brother is actor John Considine. His uncle, Bob Considine (1906-1975), was an actor and King Features Syndicate columnist.
As an adult, Tim Considine is a respected automobile historian, photographer, and writer who specializes in motor sports. He is the author of The Photographic Dictionary of Soccer (1979, ISBN 0446879533), The Language of Sport (1982, ISBN 0871966530), and American Grand Prix Racing: A Century of Drivers and Cars (1997, ISBN 0760302103). He has also filled in for William Safire as writer of the "On Language" column in The New York Times Magazine, according to his Disney Legends biography.