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Peter was the
oldest of three children born to Dr Ellsworth Deuel and his wife Lillian
and he had a younger brother, Geoffrey, and sister, Pamela.
Ellsworth
Shaut Deuel (commonly known as Bob), was of French descent and was the
third in a long line of doctors in the family - Pete's grandfather and
great-grandfather were also doctors, as were two great-uncles and two
cousins. Pete's mother, Lillian Marcella Deuel, nee Ellstrom,
was a first generation American with Swedish parents and worked as a nurse
before her marriage. She died in 1986 and is buried in Penfield
alongside Peter.
Geoffrey
Jacob Deuel was born 17 January 1943. He studied English and Music at
Ithaca College and then attended Syracruse University. He followed
Peter to Hollywood and his major break came with his role of Billy the Kid
in the John Wayne film Chisum in 1970. After that he made guest
appearances on many major series of the time. In later years he
moved to Florida and has made a couple of films since then - In the Line
of Duty: The FBI Murders in 1988 and 108 Stitches in 2001 (release
expected in 2005).
Peter
described Geoffrey as his best friend, saying "My brother and I are
very close. We were close as children growing up in the lovely little town
of Penfield, NY. We're still close now." When asked if there was any
rivalry between the two of them, Pete said, "Geoff and I find
ourselves judging, comparing-but we handle it well with each other.
We have always talked about it. He is my best friend, my brother."
After Pete's
death, Geoffrey was quoted as saying "Pete and I were always very
close, and I guess his own unhappiness over acting was getting through to
me too. You may laugh, but we were so close that we actually shared
telepathic experiences-and sometimes I feel we still do. If that sounds
incredible, I can only say that it's been real for me. I won't go into
detail-it's too personal."
Peter's
death clearly affected Geoff very deeply. "It's true that I was
very bitter at the time, but now I've come to understand that, in a sense,
what happened to Pete has helped me become what I am today. I've already
told you how close we were. Well, at the time his death made me lose all
interest in my work. The sense of loss was so deep, so grievous that
I wanted to quit acting, because I wasn't enjoying it and in a way, blamed
the system for Pete's death. In the end I forced myself to work on,
and now I'm glad I did."
"I
spent months helping the police in their investigation into his death, and
nothing was ever proved. But in my own mind I'm satisfied.
You see, we really were so close we feel in the same way, and as my career
has developed, I understand so much better the savage pressures that can
come with success. To begin with, the work-particularly on a
series-can be so that it takes your whole life, making intense fatigue
build up. Then there are people-always wanting things, always making
demands. When you also become disillusioned with your work, the
pressure really can become unbearable. So now, you understand, I
face life with the knowledge that what has happened has happened. It has
become a part of me so it can never be forgotten."
Pete's
sister, Pamela Jane Deuel, was born 27 June 1945. She also moved to
California where she worked as a nightclub singer. After Peter's
death she became a Christian and recorded several albums of gospel songs
(as Pamela Deuel Hart). She dedicated her album An Unbroken Hart to
Peter with the words "Do you also remember when we were little kids
how you fearlessly protected and defended me? You always wanted the
very best for your baby sister. When we lost you, I thought I'd
never be able to laugh again. But look at me now, my broken heart
mended because of my new life in Jesus. I dedicate this album to
you, my precious brother". The album also included a song
written by Pamela called "Odin (A Song for Peter)/An Unbroken
Hart".
Peter grew
up in the town of Penfield, New York. "We lived in a big, old house
with lots of lawns around it and chestnut, maple, and elm trees," he
recalled. "Behind the house were woods where we used to spend most of
our spare time, playing cowboys and Indians. We had a wonderful childhood.
So we grew up with a sense of values that was based on the natural beauty
that so many kids today just never see."
Over the
years the town changed and more and more houses were built and in his
ecology record in 1971, Pete described his feelings at watching the open
spaces around his childhood home disappear. "I was very
fortunate as a kid. I grew up in Penfield, New York and at that time it
was a small country town, surrounded by fields, farms and beautiful
woods. It was no accident I grew up loving the outdoors, just doing
what came naturally. To make things even better our vacation time
was spent by a lake in Northern Ontario where my brother, sister and I
swam, fished, hiked and just goofed all summer long in country almost too
lovely to describe. Things have changed a great deal since then and
it hasn't been that long. Penfield is no longer a small country
town. There are few open fields left and the woods have been pushed
back more each year. It will always be home, a part of me, because I
grew up there. I suppose it's the same for most of us.
Nevertheless it hurts to see the hills torn apart and the forests
destroyed by man and his machinery."
When he
first moved to Hollywood in 1964, Pete rented an apartment above a garage
on Fuller Avenue for $65 a month. It was a small place in a modest
area, but Pete was comfortable there and stayed there until mid
1971. After he left, he described it as "The
place was me. It was old and funky and warm and lived-in. It looked as if
I'd been living there for 40 years, really interesting-cluttered with
paintings and book cases and funky old furniture-it was a true
delight."

During 1971
he moved to a more rustic style house at Glen Green Avenue, with the help
of his girlfriend Diane Ray. "I had to move because I just
didn't have enough space for all my books, paintings, sketches, and my
fishing and camping gear. I needed more room for my three dogs to run
around in, too." he explained.
Diane
felt the move was good for him. "He's
changed. It isn't playing Hannibal that's done it, it's having moved
to this house, having the garden and the trees which he loves. If
he'd stayed on Fuller Avenue, he'd have exploded. There was just no
space. The only home he had was back in Penfield and he couldn't get
back there all that often. Now he can be at home here. He can be
much freer."
That same
year, Peter also bought some land in the High Sierra Mountains. He
had always loved the outdoors of course and often went camping in the
wilderness. "I found an absolutely fantastic spot in the Mother
Lode country, just above Sonora, California, and I've been thinking
seriously about buying a piece of it. In a way it might seem
wasteful, though. Because it's so high up and gets so much snow, the
property is accessible only six months a year. But it's twenty
wooded acres at an elevation of 8,500 feet and it's almost surrounded by
national forest land. The air and the view and the seclusion are
just unbelievable."
"I
really need a place like that to escape to. It kind of reminds
me of back home in Penfield although it's a lot more rugged. The
idea is still the same, though. It's a quiet, untouched and really
natural spot."
Of his hobby
of camping he said "I'd rather be camping out in the wilderness than
anything else I can think of. I like to load up my jeep with
provisions, tent and stove and head out to some of the remote areas of
California or Nevada. It's fun out there, exploring old mines and
ghost towns. You can also find a lot of treasures--not always gold, but
it's a good feeling just finding an old shoe from a mule or a miner's
shovel. It makes for exciting adventure."
At
this time, Pete had two dogs - Shoshone, a black and blue Australian sheep
dog named for the Indian tribe and a mixed breed dog named Carroll after
Lewis Carroll. Diane also had a dog, a toy poodle named
Champagne. Peter often took his dogs onto the Alias Smith and Jones
set with him and in fact they can be heard barking in the background and
even appear in front of the camera in more than one episode. Pete's
business manager and friend, John Napier, described the dogs. "They weren't
anything too sensational to look at. They didn't have pedigrees, or
anything posh. They weren't the sort of dogs that anybody would take a
second look at in the street - except maybe to notice that they looked mighty happy, healthy animals. It was Pete who gave them that
health and that happiness."
Pete
obviously had a great love for animals. Years previously he and a
friend had run into the icy Hudson River to save a puppy from drowning and
while he was working on The Psychiatrist, his co-star Roy Thinnes
described how distraught he was when he an injured bird he had taken home
to care for, had died.

Pete was
often described as a loner, but two people who counted themselves as his
friends were Harold Frizzell and John Napier.
Harold
Frizzell worked as Pete's stand in on Alias Smith and Jones. When
Pete lost his driving licence in 1971, it was Hal who drove him to and
from the studio every day. He had also spent part of the evening at
Pete's house on the night of his death. Of Pete, Hal said
"He was one of the greatest guys you could ever meet. He was a hard
person to understand---but I could read him. He just had so much love that
he wanted to spread it. He loved people in general, everybody. His
attitude was that people were human beings and entitled to be treated as
human beings. He loved kids. He wanted to settle down with a good woman
who would look after him and give him kids--a whole house full of
kids."
John Napier
was Pete's business manager. He described some of Pete's varying
moods. "I have shared days and hours with him when he was
happy, sad, depressed, full of energy, exhausted, laughing, lonely, happy,
angry, crying, enthusiastic and ready to fight, play and love. All of us
go through many different and varied emotions in a given time and they are
all very personal to each of us and, yet, in a way his was no different
than yours or mine. He sought Peace in many ways. Peace for himself. Peace
for a violent world. And when he signed his autograph for you, it was
"Peace and Ecology Now", meaning that he hoped you would obtain
peace for yourself by fighting for a peaceful world and a clean
environment."
As for
relationships with women, Pete never married but he did have several
relationships which could be described as serious.
In his early
days in Hollywood, he described himself as not being ready for marriage,
citing the demands of his budding career as the main reason.
"I
don't have any immediate plans for marriage and it may just take that long
before I find a gal who really understands me. And I'll be very
honest with you--I'm not an easy guy to live with. At least not
right now. I don't think I'd make a very good husband. I feel
that I've got to stay single for a long while yet. I've been trying
to make my way as an actor for a number of years now and only recently
have I been able to take my real first steps."
"This
series is the greatest thing that's happened to my career so far and I
feel that, for a while yet, I'm going to have to devote myself
completely to my work. I'd like to continue in television for a
while and then I hope that I'll be able to do films. That's what I'd
like most to do in the future. I just can't see how I can take on
the responsibilities of marriage and share my life with a wife.
First of all, I think it would be unfair to ask any girl to take second
place to my career, but that really would be necessary - until my career
is firmly established. And look at the crazy kind of life I
lead. If I were married right now, my wife would have to settle for
seeing me almost on a weekends only basis. I'm at the studio almost round
the clock during the week. And when I do have time off, I spend most
of it learning a new script. Most new brides wouldn't be too happy
with that arrangement."
"Because
I feel that I can't get married for a while, I haven't made it too easy
for any girl to really get to know me - as we bachelors put it, no one's
got their hooks into me yet. I enjoy dating, but I'm very cautious
about letting any relationship go too far. I don't want to hurt
anyone and I don't want to get hurt either. To get right to the
point, I try not to let any girl fall in love with me. I figure that
I can't offer marriage - just an occasional date and some fun."
"I
guess I am a hard guy to love - mainly because I won't let anyone
try. I don't mean to say that I don't need love - everyone needs
love. It's just that right now, falling in love could be
dangerous. I've waited a long time to get as far as I am in my
career - and it's sure been worth it. I look forward to getting
married and raising a family one day - and the waiting is going to make
that part of my life all the more worthwhile when it happens. Until
then, I've got to be a loner."
Around
the same time, 1967, he started seeing Jill Andre, a divorced actress a
few years older than himself who had two children, Gabriel, 3, and Pascal,
1. Pete described himself as being in love with her.
"What
first attracted me was her spontaneity, her great open-faced enjoyment of
things. Jill has a wide range of appreciation. We go to dinner
and the movies together; we also go to baseball games. We both like
good books and good music - everything from present day folk rock to
classical music and opera. Sometimes we both go skiing. But whether
we're skiing in the snow or romping in the sun or just cueing each other
on lines in a TV show, we enjoy being together; we're together during
almost all our free time."
He admitted
though that he was at times, less than faithful. "Before I fell
in love with Jill I wasn't the most faithful guy in the world. I run
the straight and narrow with her now. When we were first going
together - well, let me put it this way - there have been periods in our
relationship when I was less faithful than I am now."
He seemed to
have great affection for her two children, saying
"We
do things together as a family unit, the four of us. True, I'm not
there as much as a husband or father would be, but I assume far more
responsibility than a boyfriend. When I'm around, I have just as
much control as Jill, and I share their disciplining. And they respect me
just as much as they do Jill, too. I really love those two
kids. They are such beautiful children. Such great kids.
And we let them know they are loved, which is the most important thing in
a child's life."
But on the
other hand, he also admitted "True, I'm going with an older woman who
has two children and I love them very much. The only qualm I have is that
a guy, when he first gets married, would like to start his own family from
scratch. But, rarely, if ever, does a guy find an ideal
situation."
On the
question of marriage, he still sounded reluctant. "She's
divorced. It would be silly for her to jump out of one divorce into
another marriage; we both feel that way. Then too, quite frankly, knowing
myself, I feel that I am not emotionally ready to be married. I'm not
ready to totally commit myself to marriage."
"Some
men are ready for marriage at 22. At 26, I'm not. There's such
a bloody pressure on people - particularly in my business - to get
married. 'When are you going to get married?' everyone's always
asking. I may never get married - who knows? Anyway, I have a
feeling that I won't get married for at least three or four years.
That could change, but I'm sure I'll get married only when I feel ready."

There are
few details of Pete's next relationship with Mary Beth Griswold. It
seems they planned to marry in June 1968, but their plans were put on hold
because of Peter's involvement with the Eugene McCarthy presidential
campaign. The date was reset for October or November but this was
evidently cancelled too and it was rumoured that the split because they
didn't spend enough time together.
In
1969, Pete went to work on the movie Generation in which he co-starred
with Kim Darby. The played a young couple on screen and their
friendship turned to romance off the screen too. Kim, however, had
recently divorced and may have been concerned about becoming involved on
the rebound. It seems that they separated for a while before
reconciling.
When Kim was
asked about Pete, she replied "We re very close. It s very
private--and it's very nice. And that s all I want to say now."
In 1969,
Pete still appeared to be shy of marriage "Kim's a very special
person and there aren't many around like her. But marriage - well, we're
making no plans. It's difficult. The death rattle of a bachelor is a
long and painful thing."
In early
1970, Kim said "Pete is the best person in Hollywood. I adore
him! I'm not disillusioned about marriage. I think it could be
wonderful!"
Around the
same time, Pete said
"All I can say is that I love her and a marriage date is up to her.
I'm ready to be a husband and father."
However, it
wasn't to be. Reports said that Kim's ex-husband, Jim Stacey, was
trying to win her back. It was also rumoured that she was secretly
dating her co-star in her new film, Bruce Davidson. Then on 6th
February 1970 while Pete was in New York, Kim suddenly married
actor-businessman James Westmoreland, whom she had first met just two
weeks previously. According to reports, Kim did ring Pete a few days
before the wedding to tell him the news and he was very upset by
it. Six weeks after the wedding, Kim and James Westmoreland
split.
Around the
same time, Pete went to work on The Psychiatrist and in February 1970 he
began dating Diane Ray, a production secretary at Universal. In May
she left Universal Studios and began doing Pete's secretarial work.
"When
Pete and I met, there was a tremendous amount of charisma between us that
couldn't be helped." she said.
When asked
what he looked for in a woman, Pete replied "The qualities I see in
Diane: compassion, generosity, intelligence and beauty--not only
physically, but emotionally and spiritually as well. She's also very
curious, a person who delights in the varieties of life, who likes
experiencing different things meeting different people. She delights in
life itself."
For Diane,
Pete's feelings about his family were important. "I
try not to judge people, but I do prefer that he cares as much for his
family as I do for mine. It says a lot about a person. It's one of the
most important things in the world. I honor my parents the way Pete honors
his."
They shared
a passion for idealistic concerns - ecology in his case and health food in
hers - and of course they became interested in each other's
causes.
"I was
interested in health food for a while, but I really didn't know where to
hang my hat on any of it. And Diane was really into it. She
grew up as a Seventh Day Adventist and they're pretty much
vegetarians. So I naturally observed Diane's eating habits while she
explained to me the philosophy behind her different kind of diet. It
was very easy; I said, ‘Sure, I'll try this. I'll try that.' And I
found that I liked it."
At some
point, however, their relationship broke up. When asked why, Pete
replied "If a relationship has lasted a long time, there's never one,
particular thing. There is no specific reason why - nothing like I
didn't clean my fingernails."
Towards the
end of 1971, Pete said "Let's say that we're dealing with each other
again". When questioned about his terminology, he added
"When you have broken up with someone, ‘seeing each other ‘ isn't
even good. When I say we are seeing each other again I mean first
our romance, our relationship, our whole thing breaks up, and now we're
working at it again. We're trying to put it together again."
Diane Ray
was, however, with him on the night of 30th December 1971. She was
reportedly asleep in bed at his house when she was woken by the
gunshot. It was she who found his body and called the police.
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