
Severn Darden
Acting
Born 1929-11-09
Severn Teakle Darden Jr. (November 9, 1929 – May 27, 1995) was an American comedian and actor, and a founding member of The Second City Chicago-based comedy troupe as well as its predecessor, the Compass Players. He is known from his film appearances for playing the human leader Kolp in the fourth and fifth Planet of the Apes films. His live comedy improv skit under the character of "Walther von der Vogelweide" was influential with two generations of comic performers. Born in New Orleans, Louisiana, he attended the University of Chicago, where he was a "campus legend" according to poet Paul Carroll. Darden’s offbeat and intellectual sense of humor was a major element in the style of The Second City at that time, and is evident throughout his work. Carroll described him as a combination of surrealistic New Orleans and tough, caustic "Chicago Style" comedy. An example of his offbeat humor is the way he squeezed the phrase "Know thyself" into the seven-character limitation of a New Mexico license plate: NOYOSEF. Darden was a core comedian in Paul Sills' Compass Players, the first improvisation theater in the US; it performed around the Chicago area during the mid-1950s. Sills went on to found The Second City in 1959 and brought in many of the comedians from Compass Players, including Darden.
Known for

Beyond Westworld
1980 · TV

The Six Million Dollar Man
1974 · TV

Cheers
1982 · TV

I Dream of Jeannie
1965 · TV

Barney Miller
1975 · TV

Starsky & Hutch
1975 · TV

Daniel Boone
1964 · TV

The Fall Guy
1981 · TV

The Name of the Game
1968 · TV

Faerie Tale Theatre
1982 · TV

Laverne & Shirley
1976 · TV

Alfred Hitchcock Presents
1955 · TV

Baretta
1975 · TV

Kolchak: The Night Stalker
1974 · TV

The Bionic Woman
1976 · TV

Hallmark Hall of Fame
1951 · TV

Alias Smith and Jones
1971 · TV

Barbary Coast
1975 · TV

The Monkees
1966 · TV

Honey West
1965 · TV

Occasional Wife
1966 · TV

Lincoln
1974 · TV

Harry O
1974 · TV

The Practice
1976 · TV

Beauty and the Beast
1987 · TV

Flying High
1978 · TV

City of Angels
1976 · TV