Steven Keats

A character actor throughout the 70s and 80s who held his own alongside everyone from Robert Mitchum to Frank Sinatra.

Tom Brogan
4 min readFeb 8, 2021
Steven Keats in Starsky and Hutch (1975). Copyright Spelling-Goldberg Productions.

“Nobody told Kirk Douglas to fill in the dimple on his chin, so why should they tell me to fill in the gap between my two front teeth? I can put caps on them, the same as I can put a hump on my back. That’s what an actor does; he changes physically and psychologically from role to role”.

1970s American films threw up a number of reliable character actors whose faces seem familiar even if you can’t always recall their names. Steven Keats may well fall into that bracket. A regular guest star on many drama series he was also a standout in a few notable films of the era.

Born in the South Bronx in 1945 his father was a Danish immigrant born to Polish Jewish parents from Warsaw. His mother was born in New York, also to a Polish Jewish family. Keats grew up in Canarsie, Brooklyn. “I was the black sheep”, he told the New York Times. “The bad guy, the one who belonged to street gangs, the classic ghetto kid.”

At 18 he enlisted in the Air Force. His parents cut all ties with him. He was assigned to the Forward Air Controllers in Vietnam. It was to have an intense effect on him for the rest of his life. Their mission was to fly in search of the enemy, direct…

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Tom Brogan

Author of We Made Them Angry Scotland at the World Cup Spain 1982. Writing about films, music, football and television. https://uk.bookshop.org/shop/tombrogan