Robert Harland


Robert "Bob" Harland, is an American actor whose principal work was performed on television in the late 1950s and 1960s. He appeared as a regular in the role of the young investigator Jack Flood on ABC's , co-starring with Stephen McNally as the syndicated newspaper columnist Paul Marino.

Background

In 1934, Harland was born in Chester, Pennsylvania. His parents, of Lithuanian descent, were Frank Yurgatis, a longshoreman, and Gabler Yurgatis. Harland and his wife, the former Jane Earle, have two children born in Chester, a daughter in 1957, and a son, Robert "Bob" Yurgatis.
Prior to Target: The Corruptors! Harland had previously appeared in a recurring role as Deputy Billy Lordan on NBC's Law of the Plainsman with Michael Ansara and Gina Gillespie. Among the episodes in which Harland appeared were "Trojan Horse", "Amnesty", "Rabbit's Fang", "A Question of Courage", "The Comet", "The Rawhiders", and "Common Ground".
Harland's first acting appearance occurred 1958 in the role of Hank Moore in the film, As Young As We Are. Pippa Scott plays a new high school teacher who falls in love with Harland, who turns out to be a student though Harland was about a year older than Scott at the time. Harland starred in one of the final episodes of CBS's The Millionaire fantasy drama series with Marvin Miller.

Other acting roles

His other early work was mostly on westerns, including appearances as Andy Forrest in the episode "A Case of Slow" on ABC's Black Saddle with Peter Breck.
On October 11, 1960, Harland and Gigi Perreau, cast as Lin and Sara Lou Proctor, play a young couple from the East who has eloped and is headed west in the second episode, "The Land Beyond", of ABC's Stagecoach West, with Wayne Rogers and Robert Bray. A mysterious stranger named Dawson, portrayed by Richard Anderson, is following the Proctors.
Harland appeared on November 3, 1960 as Mike Duane in the episode "Shorty" of NBC's The Outlaws with Barton MacLane and Don Collier. He starred in three episodes, all in 1960, on CBS's Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater': as Jack Hoyt in "Knife of Hate" with Lloyd Nolan as Dr. Elisha Pittman and Susan Oliver, as Dr. Pittman's daughter; Lee Phelps in the gripping western drama, "Killer Instinct", and Les in "The Reckoning". He appeared in 1961 as Corporal Clay Taylor in an episode of NBC's Wagon Train, and as Phil Davies in "The Convict's Revenge" episode of ABC's The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp with Hugh O'Brian.
After 1962, Harland's work was mostly in dramas, such as ABC's
Ben Casey with Vince Edwards and three times on CBS's Perry Mason with Raymond Burr. Those episodes included the role of Kenneth L. "Ken" Judson in "The Case of the Greek Goddess", as Todd in "The Case of the Badgered Brother", and as title character and defendant Bill Jarvis in "The Case of the Bullied Bowler".
In 1961, Harland guest starred with Gloria Talbott in the episode "Terror in the Afternoon" of the syndicated crime drama
The Brothers Brannagan. In 1964, he played the character Hal Jackson in the episode "Have Library, Will Travel" on the CBS sitcom, Petticoat Junction. In 1967, he guest-starred as agent MacGregor in the episode "The Gray Passenger" of the ABC crime series, The F.B.I., starring Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.
After a seven-year absence from the screen, Harland in 1973–1974 appeared seven times as Sergeant Older in ABC's dramatic series,
The Rookies in episodes entitled "Walk a Tightrope", "Rolling Thunder", "Eyewitness", and "A Matter of Justice". He also wrote two episodes in 1973 for The Rookies: "Margin for Error" and "Easy Money".
In 1988, after a 14-year absence from the screen, Harland made his last four television appearances, three times as James Rayford in the ABC night-time soap opera
Dynasty. In 1997, Harland's last film role was as Bob Potter in The Rest of My Life''.
While not acting, Harland was employed for many years at the Budweiser plant in Van Nuys, California. His son, Robert, worked at the plant too for thirty-one years before he retired in 2009.