Dr. Richard Kimble (TV)

DR. Richard David Kimble is the main character in the 1963-67 TV Series The Fugitive, Where he was Portrayed By David Janssen.

Biography
DR, Richard David Kimble is a pediatrician from Stafford, Indiana who in the 1960s became the most famous fugitive in memory. Born in 1930, Richard joined the Marines and became a corpsman; in Korea he was injured by an enemy grenade but was rescued by soldier Joe Hallop, who was disfigured and mentally scarred by the battle enough to make an attempt on Richard's life many years later.

In 1955 Richard interned at the hospital in Fairgreen, IN, where he met a nurse, Helen Waverly. They fell in love and soon married. However, when they tried to have a child, Helen bore a son, but their son was stillborn, and in the operation that followed, Helen was rendered infertile.

Richard wished to adopt a child, but Helen, refusing to believe she could love another's child, angrilly refused, and the two quarrelled with enough frequency that, on the night of September 19, 1961, Richard was about to take Helen out to a restaurant but let slip it was an eatery recommended by a member of an adoption clinic, which threw Helen into another rage. Richard stormed out of their house and drove off, wandering about the countryside and noticing a boy fishing in a lake before relaxing.

Unknown to Richard, Helen telephoned their friend Lloyd Chandler and he visited their house, trying to calm her down after she had begun drinking furiously. A commotion in their living room brought Helen face-to-face with a heavyset drifter whose right arm was missing. The stranger tried to escape but in the ensuing fight he threw down Helen then killed her with a massive blow to the head with a lamp. Chandler, freezing in fear, couldn't bring himself to intervene, and the man escaped out the front door while Chandler supinely snapped out of his funk and slipped out the back.

The man ran out and immediately ran into the returning Richard, who got enough of a look at His face to have the image seared in His memory. When The one-armed man fled, Richard ran into the house and found Helen's body. But interrogation by the office of Lt. Philip Gerard resulted in interviews of 83 men matching the description provided by Richard, none of whom were in the area at the time of the murder. Richard was convicted and sentenced to die, but after a year's worth of appeals he was being escorted by Gerard to the death house in March 1963 when their train derailed.

The crash freed Richard from Gerard, and he now became a fugitive, wandering the country and working low-paying odd jobs (those that require no identification or security checks, and bring about little social attention) in his search for The One-Armed Man. Over the years he received help from many individuals who understood his plight, such as Chicago news columnist Michael Decker (who went to jail for aiding and abetting as a result), and newswriter Barbara Webb, who helped Richard rescue The one-armed man when he was injured in an accident. Periodically Richard returned home to see his sister, Donna Taft; in one such visit he was forced to confront his younger brother Ray, bitter over being mocked as Richard's brother. Richard managed to convince his brother of his innocence, restoring their bond. Meanwhile the bond between Richard and his father, medical doctor John Kimble, never faltered through John's death in 1966.

For Helen's family, a similar crisis occurred in 1965 as Ruth Waverly suffered heart trouble due to grief-induced stress and the ensuing medical costs threatened the family with bankrupcy. Richard, however, appeared in Fairgreen and found a secret bank account kept by Helen for emergency. In so doing Richard had to overcome the fury of Ruth as she clung tenaciously to her daughter's memory but was finally convinced of her son-in-law's innocence.

In his travels Richard periodically crossed paths with Lt. Gerard, but circumstances sometimes forced Richard to rescue Gerard from dangerous situations, such as in a 1965 incident when a group of hillbilly-types accused Gerard of molestation, and such acts of compassion helped forge a respect between puruser and pursued that aggravated the doubts about Richard's guilt that gnawed at Gerard. The respect between the two men was also illustrated in 1966 in Pennsylvania when former Mob hitman Arthur Brame was rescued by Richard, and upon learning of Gerard's pursuit lured Gerard to a warehouse where he attempted to shoot him with a sniper rifle; Richard, however, learned of Brame's contract from his wife Sharon and rescued Gerard; the two briefly cooperated to evade Brame but in the confusion Richard escaped and Gerard chose to kill Brame, as he was far more dangerous.

In 1967, The one-armed man, going by the alias Fred Johnson, was arrested in Los Angeles, and when Richard learned of the arrest he got a ride to the city but was intercepted by Jean Carlisle, the daughter of his friend Ben Carlisle. A court stenographer, Jean and her family had been persecuted in Stafford since her childhood because her father had been arrested for embezzlement, and only the Kimble family showed any sympathy, helping Jean and her mother cope. When the one-armed man was bailed out of jail, he returned to Stafford - the reason why was discovered by Richard and Jean in a bail bond receipt signed for by Leonard Taft, Richard's brother-in-law.

"Taft," however, was in reality Lloyd Chandler using Taft's name as an alias, and Richard, with help from Lt. Gerard as he finally learned the truth about Helen Kimble's murder, confronted the one-armed man in an abandoned amusement park. In the ensuing showdown the one-armed man was killed, but Chandler, doing what he knew should have been done years before, decided to testify to witnessing the one-armed man murder Helen Kimble.

Exonorated, Richard returned to pediatrics and bid farewell to Gerard as he began his new life with Jean.

Personality
Richard is smart and resourceful, and is usually able to perform well at any job he takes. He also displays considerable prowess in hand-to-hand combat. In the episode "Nemesis", he distracts and then knocks out a forest ranger, then quickly unloads the man's rifle to ensure he can't shoot him if pursued. He's also known to willingly choose to put himself at risk of getting hurt, killed or arrested by aiding a deserving person.