Leonard Harris

An aristocratic face and presence and a confident voice granted Leonard Harris – an acquaintance of Martin Scorsese – a significant role in Marty’s classic Taxi Driver (1976), playing the potential presidential candidate Senator Charles Pallantine, a target Travis Bickle has to eliminate in order to impress the girl he wants to date (and who also happens to work for Pallantine’s campaign). He has a bunch of scenes in the film but certainly leaves a mark in all of those, specially his memorable exchange with Travis in the cab.Harris wasn’t actually an actor. Born in New York, he was a journalist who wrote obituaries and book reviews during his first years in journalism, and later on during an extensive time he was a culture critic during the late 1960’s and early 1970’s with many TV appearances. In between those works he wrote three novels. His other film credit is Hero at Large (1980), which also features Gene Palma, the street drummer who has a minor part in Taxi Driver.He was married with Mary Ann Wurth for 12 years and they had two children. Harris died of pneumonia in Connecticut, at age 81.

Movies

Taxi Driver

Travis Bickle is an ex-Marine and Vietnam War veteran living in New York City. As he suffers from insomnia, he spends his time working as a taxi driver at night, watching porn movies at seedy cinemas during the day, or thinking about how the world, New York in particular, has…

More about this movie

Fun Facts

Cast by acquaintance director Martin Scorsese as a U.S. Senator in Taxi Driver (1976).

Graduated from NYC's City College then, during the Korean War, served in the Army at Fort Dix, New Jersey. Began his journalism his career writing obituaries and book reviews for The Hartford Courant in 1955. From 1966-1974 1966, he worked as the on-camera culture critic for New York's WCBS-TV.

Wrote three novels: 'The Masada Plan', 'Don't Be No Hero,' and 'The Hamptons.'.

Quotes