- Sullivan saw Colpo secco (1977) for the first time decades after its release. He was reportedly so upset he had portrayed such a nasty character that he regretted taking the part.
- A reliable player of stoic, military types on stage, he was best remembered, however, for his despicable bad guys on film, his standout roles included a hired killer in La stangata (1973), as crude and vulgar hockey player Mo Wanchuck in Colpo secco (1977) and as Nick Nolte's terrifying monster of a father seen in flashbacks in Il principe delle maree (1991).
- A Korean War veteran who saw action in the early 1950s, Sullivan attended the University of Maine in the mid-1950s. He had originally planned to study agriculture but once there discovered his love of acting.
- Suffered from severe hearing loss in later years.
- Made his off-Broadway debut in "Red Roses for Me" in 1961, and went on to appear in the London, England company of the musical "South Pacific".
- Born in Chicago but raised in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, Sullivan was the youngest of three siblings. He had one sister, Mrs. Marcia Tuttle, and one brother, Winthrop Sullivan.
- Buried at Cummaquid Cemetery, Cummaquid, Barnstable County, Massachusetts. Plot Section 6, Lot 53, Grave 011.
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