Andy Griffith
- Original name:
- Andrew Samuel Griffith
- Born:
- June 1, 1926, Mount Airy, North Carolina, U.S.
- Died:
- July 3, 2012, Manteo, North Carolina (aged 86)
- Also Known As:
- Andrew Samuel Griffith
- Awards And Honors:
- Presidential Medal of Freedom (2005)
- Grammy Award (1997)
- On the Web:
- Wilkes Heritage Museum - Andy Griffith (Oct. 29, 2024)
Andy Griffith (born June 1, 1926, Mount Airy, North Carolina, U.S.—died July 3, 2012, Manteo, North Carolina) was an American actor who was perhaps best known for his portrayal of homespun characters, notably the sheriff on the television sitcom The Andy Griffith Show (1960–68) and a defense attorney in the dramatic series Matlock (1986–95).
While attending the University of North Carolina on a music scholarship, Griffith discovered an interest in performing and began taking acting classes. In 1955 he made his Broadway debut in No Time for Sergeants and earned a Tony Award nomination for his portrayal of an air force draftee. He reprised the role for the 1958 movie after having made a strong film debut in A Face in the Crowd (1957). Griffith received a second Tony nomination for the musical Destry Rides Again (1959).
Griffith earned arguably his greatest success for his television work. He appeared in many TV shows and movies, often using his native Blue Ridge drawl to play folksy characters. His performance as the kindly sheriff Andy Taylor of the idyllic fictional town of Mayberry in The Andy Griffith Show helped make the show a huge success; he reprised the role in Return to Mayberry, which was the highest-rated program of 1986. Griffith later starred as a genial but wily defense attorney in the popular series Matlock. Although much of his later acting was for television, he periodically appeared in films, including Daddy and Them (2001), Waitress (2007), and Play the Game (2009), his last movie. In 1997 Griffith won a Grammy Award for best Southern gospel, country gospel, or bluegrass gospel album for I Love to Tell the Story—25 Timeless Hymns (1996), and in 2005 he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.