DUEL INTERESTS WENT FAR BEYOND ACTING
Rochester Times Union, December
31, 1971
When Peter Duel went to Hollywood in 1963, he
set a goal for himself.
He wnated to be a feature film performer of note within five years.
He didn't quite make it. Although he made a few feature films, he still was better known as a television performer. But Duel's widespread exposure on "Alias Smith and Jones," might have eventually been the route to a film career for the former Penfield resident.
Although he was ambitious as an actor, Duel also liked to discuss other things in talks with reporters.
Photo Caption: Peter Duel holds his dog Shoshone in photo taken when he visited parent's home in Penfield last year.
In an interview at his parents' home here last year, Duel discussed pollution, which he said was more worth talking about than his career.
"After two or three interviews, talking about pictures and how they're made and what I do in them and what I'm going to do next, there's nothing more to say," he said.
He said "there isn't much to smile about anymore," with air and water pollution, oil-smeared beaches, DDT, over population, racism, and the deliberate killing off of species.
Duel also said he was concerned because "there was a lot left out of the history books we used in school." He said that he learned a lot from working on Sen. Eugene McCarthy's 1968 presidental campaign.
He said that it took him four months to get over "the whole Chicago (convention) thing."
Duel signed with Ben Cooper's Celebrity Speakers Bureau on the West Coast to spread his opinions. Among the strongest of his ideas was that over population is a very real problem.
He maintained that couples should be limited, voluntarily or involuntarily, to one child. Duel used to argue that "the human race is already doomed."
In between acting and ecological involvement, Duel found time for piano lessons, writing free verse, guitar-playing and sketching.
The only suggestion of his Penfield background
which could be seen in his Hollywood apartment was several paintings
of hometown scenes by artist J. Erwin Porter, including one of
his parents' century-old home and the church next door.
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