"Hardy Boys, Baywatch Star to Visit Triad"
by Jim Longworth
June 11th, 2014
| 
		
 Like most of us guys who grew up in the 1950s and early 1960s, Parker came by his love of Westerns honestly. PS: I watched Roy Rogers, and The Rifleman, then I’d go running around the back yard playing cowboy and different characters. My Dad and I also loved Gunsmoke. And though there’s delightful symmetry in pretending to be Matt Dillon at age 5, then ending up appearing on Matt Dillon’s TV show, Parker’s first acting job had nothing to do with cowboys. PS: In kindergarten I played a pumpkin or some kind of vegetable (laughs). And I decided this is the place for me! That love of acting was nurtured by Parker’s mother, actress Sarah Meade. PS: In the Summers I’d go to the Poconos to see her in summer stock shows. And she’d take me to New York City to see plays that she had friends in, so I got to go back stage, which was kind of cool. By age 14, Stevenson was auditioning for commercials, and later, while still at Princeton, landed a number of TV and film roles. Then came his big break – being cast as Frank Hardy in The Hardy Boys Mysteries. 
 Nice, but crazy. The Hardy Boys quickly became a big hit with teenage girls, and the show’s stars were inundated with fan mail. PS: A lot of the popularity was because of the books, but a lot of it was because of Shaun’s music, and it was a time when merchandising was really big. T-shirts, posters, all that stuff generated enormous fan mail. 
 PS: I had grown up staring at this portrait in my grandparents’ house in Philadelphia. It was of General George Gordon Meade, Union commander at Gettysburg, who, it turns out, was my great-great-grandfather. So being in North & South became kind of personal. It became a wonderful connection for me and my mother’s side of the family. In the years that followed North & South, Parker continued to act in shows like Melrose Place and Matlock while he and Kirstie raised a family. The couple had an amicable divorce in 1997, after which Parker went on to star in and direct Baywatch. 
 PS: They had seen me in a movie I did called Lifeguard and thought I seemed like a California beach guy, which I wasn’t. JL: Maybe they just wanted a vegetable in swim trunks. PS: Yeah they wanted a vegetable in a red bathing suit (laughs). But Baywatch was really fun … going to work early in the morning and you get to the coast and the sun comes up, and Oh my God it’s just beautiful. It was a great gig. 
 PS: Well I’ve taken pictures since I was a kid. I was always running around shooting my friends, shooting weddings in my neighborhood at 13 (laughs). About ten years ago people started asking me if I would do head shots of them, and I found I loved it. Naturally I asked the multi-talented Parker which he enjoyed most, acting, directing, or photography. 
 Fans can meet Parker at next month’s Western Film Fair, July 9-12 in Winston- Salem. He might even regale you with stories from “Dodge City”… PS: On Gunsmoke, if the horses went to the bathroom, someone would run out in a cart with a broom and a shovel, and it was gone just like that. I thought, “Man, this place is really clean.” |