Hometown Phipps grew up in
St. Francisville, Illinois. His parents divorced when he was six years old. By the time he was in high school, he was using his stepfather's last name of Couch. He developed a love of acting at a young age and performed in several plays in grade school and high school. One of the plays in which he performed, during his junior year of high school in 1937, was
Before Morning, a 1933 play made into a film that same year.
College After graduating from high school in 1939, he attended
Eastern Illinois University in
Charleston, Illinois, where he majored in accounting, was elected freshman class president and served as head cheerleader. After two years of college, he moved to Hollywood, to pursue a career in acting and resumed his original last name of Phipps.
World War II During that same year, the United States entered into
World War II, and Phipps enlisted in the
United States Navy, serving as a radio operator on several ships all across the
Pacific. He served three years, then settled in Los Angeles to begin his career. He enrolled in the
Actors' Laboratory Theatre in Hollywood, alongside fellow actor
Russell Johnson.
Hollywood Phipps' big break came when he and Johnson were double-cast, sharing the same role in a play at the Actors Lab. They drew straws to see which actor would perform in the
matinée, and which would take the evening show. Phipps drew the evening show, which was attended that same evening by actor
Charles Laughton. Laughton was impressed by Phipps' performance and came backstage afterwards to ask Phipps to perform in Laughton's own play. Phipps' career took off, and he was soon in his first feature film,
Crossfire (1947). In 1949, Phipps auditioned for the speaking voice of
Prince Charming in the upcoming
Disney film
Cinderella. The studio was pleased with his performance and Phipps was offered the part by
Walt Disney himself. In 1959, he guest-starred as "Ken Wills" a cheated card player in
Bat Masterson, teaming up with the star to clean out a town of crooked poker dealers in the episode "License To Cheat" (S1E17). In 1962, he guest-starred on the TV Western
Gunsmoke as weak husband “Ham” in S7E33's “The Prisoner”. ==Hawaii==