Acting credits
28
Active
Consistent number of acting credits.

Acting
These indicators come from TMDB. They are relative signals, not review ratings.
Acting credits
28
Active
Consistent number of acting credits.
TMDB popularity
0.5
Low visibility
TMDB internal trend index. Higher usually means more searches and page activity now.
TMDB ID: 101658
IMDb ID: nm0076162
Known for: Acting
Born: January 15, 1948
Age: 78
Place of birth: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Gender: Male
Adult content flag: No
Career span: 1953 - 1970
Years active: 18
Average TMDB rating: 6.9
Wikidata: Q7817052
Also known as
Bernard Girouard • Butch Bernard • Tommy Nolan • Maurice Joseph Girouard Jr.
Young Tommy Nolan was a familiar child star face on 50s and 60s TV and in a few films as well. The name may not be as familiar but his adorable, jug-eared presence was a well-known commodity throughout the Hollywood community at the time, and he was considered a reliable and talented tyke who could easily turn on the waterworks on command. He was French-Canadian, born in Montreal on January 15, 1948. His birth name was Bernard Girouard. His family relocated to Los Angeles where the boy started dance classes at age 3. He made a reputable debut on TV playing Prince Edward of Wales, the son of Henry VIII, on a "Hallmark Hall of Fame" presentation starring Sarah Churchill. As one who could easily tug at the heartstrings, he often played sympathetic young boys with afflictions, such as his crippled youngster on an episode of "My Friend Flicka" or his wealthy asthmatic on "Medic". Tommy hit his TV peak at age 10 after being cast as Jody in the gentle, non-violent TV western Buckskin (1958) opposite Sally Brophy, who played his widowed mom. Set in the frontier town of Buckskin, Montana, the show was seen from his young perspective, narrating each episode sitting on his corral fence and playing his harmonica. Although it only played for one full season, Tommy had comic books out with his character and his autograph was well in demand at parades, conventions and other public outings. After the series' demise, Tommy continued on other shows, many of them westerns such as "Rawhide", "The Rifleman", "Gunsmoke" and "Wagon Train", not to mention recurring roles on "Lassie". Unable to find another regular series that could maintain the momentum, he also was starting to move in his awkward teens stage and this pretty much signified that the end was not far away. After years of scattered parts here and there, including a role in the exploitation film Maryjane (1968), he ended his career with a small part in the movie The Moonshine War (1970). Later years were spent as a writer, penning articles for a number of publications including "Playboy", the "Los Angeles Times" and the "Village Voice". He returned to acting as a young adult (shortening his name to the grown-up-sounding Tom Nolan) with a small part in the Richard Gere film Yanks (1979) and has since given it the old college try, appearing as a minor player in such films as Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982),Up the Creek (1984), School Spirit (1985), Pretty Woman (1990), The Thing Called Love(1993) and White Man's Burden (1995). His most recent credit was as a valet in Batman Begins (2005). On TV he has been glimpsed in everything from waiters to courtroom deputies. Now having entered his fifth decade of acting, Tom continues to live in the San Fernando Valley area. - IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / [email protected]


Movie credits linked with Tom Nolan.
as Lowell
as Vic
as Tommy
as Rafe Runkel
as Tremont
as Johnnie Mulligan
as Boy (uncredited)
as Kirk Eunson
as Tyrone (uncredited)
as Ronnie (Skunky) Fletcher (as Butch Bernard)
as Crippled Boy (Uncredited)
as 'Owly' Kimmel
as Ricky Sherman (uncredited)
as Boy (as Butch Bernard)
as Child Dancer (uncredited)
Series credits linked with Tom Nolan.
as Wilbur • 1 eps
1 eps
as Pvt. Hamilton • 1 eps
as Hank Hattering • 1 eps
as Paul Fellows • 1 eps
1 eps
as Tommy Jones • 1 eps
as Joey Gardner • 1 eps
as Boy • 1 eps
as Sonny • 1 eps
1 eps
as Jay • 1 eps
as Drake (as Butch Bernard) • 1 eps