After a highly successful professional football career, Grier went on to have further successes in diverse fields. This ranged from acting as a bodyguard, television acting, and writing, speaking, and being a minister.
Television (left) in 1967 After his retirement, Grier hosted the
Rosey Grier Show for three seasons from 1968 to 1970 on
KABC-TV, a weekly half-hour television show discussing community affairs in Los Angeles.
Bodyguard Grier served as a bodyguard for his friend,
United States senator and presidential candidate
Robert F. Kennedy. He was guarding
Ethel Kennedy, the Senator's wife, who was then expecting a child, the night that Kennedy was
assassinated in Los Angeles in 1968. Grier and Olympic
decathlon gold medalist Rafer Johnson heard shots fired ahead of them; Johnson rushed ahead to see what had happened. As Grier caught up he saw Johnson and sports-writer
George Plimpton wrestling with gunman
Sirhan Sirhan; Grier immediately jumped into the fray and Sirhan was overpowered, disarmed and subdued. Grier states, "So I see George Plimpton has the gun pointed at his face, and I'm concerned that it is going to go off, so I put my hand under the trigger housing and I pulled back the hammer so it couldn't strike. I wrench the gun from Sirhan. I find the pin and I ripped it out and held it. Now I have the gun in my hand, so I shove it in my pocket." Grier later said, "I grabbed the man's legs and dragged him onto a table. There was a guy angrily twisting the killer's legs and other angry faces coming towards him, as though they were going to tear him to pieces. I fought them off. I would not allow more violence."
Acting in a
Kraft Music Hall skit, 1968 Grier has appeared in a number of films and television shows. One of the first football stars to successfully make the transition to acting, he made about 70 television guest appearances. They include a role as one of the security contingent in "The Brain Killer Affair" episode of
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964), as well as a
cameo playing an athletic trainer in an episode of
I Dream of Jeannie. He became a regular cast member, starting in 1969, on the series
Daniel Boone,
Make Room for Granddaddy, and
The White Shadow. In one
White Shadow appearance, he donned his No. 76 Los Angeles Rams jersey from his NFL playing days. Grier appeared as a panelist on the television game show
Match Game 74. Grier starred in television shows and films including
The Wild, Wild West (1967),
The Desperate Mission (1969), ''
Carter's Army (1970), Skyjacked (1972), The Thing with Two Heads (1972), McMillan & Wife (1974), Sesame Street (1975), The Treasure of Jamaica Reef (1975), The Love Boat (1979), The Glove (1979), Roots: The Next Generations (1979) and The Seekers (1979). Grier appeared in the 1974–1976 NBC TV series Movin' On'' with
Claude Akins, which was filmed in Grier's home state of Georgia. He appeared in a third-season episode of
Quincy, M.E. titled "Crib Job" in which he played himself as the director of a group called Giant Step. He appeared in two episodes of
Kojak, one in the third season and one in the fourth season, as a bounty hunter named Salathiel Harms. He also appeared on a 1977 episode of
CHiPs as a distraught motorist who, during a routine traffic stop, proceeds to destroy his car in frustration by pulling it apart piece by piece. He appeared as a celebrity contestant on
Celebrity Bullseye during that program's 1981–82 season. In 1983 he also appeared in the series
The Jeffersons, (episode 10x8 titled 'The List') as the owner of a pool hall in Harlem, who in the past had been a bully to George Jefferson at school. He made a guest appearance as himself on
HBO's hit series,
The Larry Sanders Show with
Gary Shandling in 1998. Grier also guest-voiced a 1999 episode of
The Simpsons titled "
Sunday, Cruddy Sunday". His recording of a tribute to Robert Kennedy, "People Make the World" (written by
Bobby Womack), was his only chart single, peaking at No. 128 in 1968. Grier sang "It's All Right to Cry" for the children's album and TV program
Free to Be… You and Me.
Politics Grier spent his early life campaigning for Democrats before becoming a Republican in the early 80s. He appeared in the Democratic fundraiser "America Goes Public" on September 15, 1973 and regularly attended the Democratic National Convention, including the conventions at the International Amphitheatre in Chicago on August 28, 1968 and at Madison Square Garden in New York City on August 11, 1980. Grier was a featured speaker at the
1984 Republican National Convention; during its evening session on August 20, 1984, he endorsed President
Ronald Reagan for re-election.
O.J. Simpson trial In 1994, Grier visited
O. J. Simpson in jail, who allegedly yelled out a confession to the crime.
2018 gubernatorial bid On January 5, 2017, Grier announced his intention to run for governor of California as a Republican in the
2018 California gubernatorial election. He ended his candidacy in July 2017.
Author and speaker Grier has written a number of books: • • • • • • Grier also works as a motivational speaker. ==Community service==