The actor, who was born William West Anderson, won the role of the masked crime fighter from Gotham City after appearing in a televised ad for Nestle's Quick products as a secret agent. The three years that he spent alternating between the superhero and his alter ego, Bruce Wayne, brought the actor international and long-lasting recognition. Following the series' cancellation, West continued to act on television and in films, and he also did voice-over work on a number of other productions. For a long stretch, however, he was typecast as Batman and his ability to get work suffered, as did his marriage. He published -Back to the Batcave, an autobiography, in 1994.
The actor married for the first time while he was still a college student in 1950. West worked for a time in radio before becoming a graduate student at Stanford University. Induction into the U.S. Army followed, thanks to the Draft. West was sent from coast to coast for the purpose of launching a string of television stations for the Army. Later, he traveled to Europe with his wife before settling in Hawaii and finding work on #The Kini Popo Show, a children's series. He and his spouse, Billie Lou Yeager, divorced in 1956. He wed a Tahitian native that same year. Some sources list his bride's name as Ngahra Frisbie, while others list it as Ngatokoruaimatauaia Frisbie Dawson. The couple had two children before settling down in 1959 in Hollywood, where he began to appear in Westerns. The actor wed his third wife, Marcelle Tagand Lear, in 1972. West fathered two more children and also helped raise two stepdaughters. ~ Linda Seida, Rovi