The first two novels in the series were made into telefilms in 1978 and 1979, both starring Andrew Stevens as Philip Kent, with the third adapted as a 1979 telefilm starring Randolph Mantooth as the son, Abraham Kent.
William Randolph Hearst | Randolph Scott | Lord Randolph Churchill | Randolph County, West Virginia | Randolph Caldecott | Randolph Mantooth | Randolph County | Randolph | A. Philip Randolph Institute | A. Philip Randolph | Thomas Randolph | Randolph High School | Randolph Churchill | Randolph Chitwood | Randolph Air Force Base | Jacob Hackenburg Griffiths-Randolph | Charles Randolph Grean | Willie Randolph | Thomas Jefferson Randolph | The Statement of Randolph Carter | Randolph Bourne | Randolph B. Marcy | Peyton Randolph | John Randolph of Roanoke | Jennings Randolph | Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray | Randolph Township | Randolph Townsend | Randolph Rogers | Randolph, New Hampshire |
The Santa Barbara theater also produced such notable actors as Eric Stoltz, Anthony Edwards, Randolph Mantooth, Howard McGillin, and Kathleen Wilhoite.
He landed the role and was signed to play paramedic Roy DeSoto, opposite Randolph Mantooth, Robert Fuller, Julie London, and Bobby Troup.
Stage roles include the controversial Steambath, a co-starring role with Don Knotts, Rue McClanahan and Randolph Mantooth in The Mind with the Dirty Man, and starring roles in the original plays Backbone of America at the Tiffany Theater in Los Angeles, and Aspirins and Elephants.