Hollywood Actors

Collection of Classic Hollywood Actors

Gene Kelly
Gene Kelly
Gene Kelly

 

Tom Vallance & Gilbert Adair’s “Independent” obituary from 1996:

As director and choreographer, dancer and singer, acrobat and actor, Gene Kelly was one of the most vital and indispensable figures in the history of the American film musical.

Paradoxically, it was by assuming and exploiting the ostensibly limited measure of creative freedom afforded by genre movies that Hollywood directors, writers and performers produced their most durable work – more often and more durably, it could be argued, than when scaling the heights of “self- expression” to which a few would eventually graduate. Although scandalously neglected by the Academy Awards, the musical was one of the American cinema’s most glorious indigenous genres, and one which was to offer those who worked within it licence of a kind that was denied them in their “straight” movies: licence in the stylisation of decor and costume, of course, but also in the elaboration of camera movement and the exploration of filmic space.

Most notably in his collaborations with Stanley Donen, Kelly opened up, “aerated”, the performing space of the Hollywood musical of the early Fifties, whose fundamentally theatrical origins still tended to show through, and created for the cinema what might be termed an “impossible stage”, whose spatial parameters would be ceaselessly redefined before our dazzled and discombobulated eyes. With Donen he co-directed a trio of musicals of paramount importance and almost infinite charm, one of which, Singin’ in the Rain (1952), is widely regarded as the finest of all.

To most moviegoers, however, Gene Kelly was familiar only as a performer, as a face, as a great, grinning, apparently indelible smile – one that recalled both the devil-may-care nonchalance of a Douglas Fairbanks (it was not by chance that in 1948 Kelly played d’Artagnan in one of the umpteen screen adaptations of The Three Musketeers) and the unquenchably breezy optimism of a Harold Lloyd – a smile around which his trim, athletic figure would indefatigably circle and spin. The most peerlessly debonair dancer of the 1930s (and, indeed, of the entire history of the cinema) was Fred Astaire. But if Astaire made one think of an angel momentarily come to rest on earth, then Kelly was a dancer who, in a wholly unpejorative sense, had his two feet firmly on the ground.

From out of the bijou white-walled penthouse suites in which Astaire and Rogers would rotate like figurines on a music box Kelly took dancing down into streets and squares and parks; and to the silken white-tie strait- jackets that set his predecessor off to such dashing advantage he preferred, in movies like Anchors Aweigh (1945) and On the Town (1949), the more robust and homely white of a sailor’s bell-bottoms, investing them with the fantastical charm of those decorative races, clowns, Pierrots and Harlequins. The choreographic language that Kelly introduced into the American musical carried the very first hint of the vernacular, of slang.

Kelly had been a dancer – or “hoofer”, a term that might have been coined for him – since his childhood. He became a professional in 1938 as a male chorine in the Broadway musical Leave It to Me and in 1940, one of several anni mirabiles in his career, he choreographed “Billy Rose’s Diamond Horseshoe” and was cast in the title role of Pal Joey, Rodgers and Hart’s groundbreaking musical version of John O’Hara’s short story. Then, only one year later, he was offered the male lead opposite Judy Garland in Busby Berkeley’s For Me and My Gal, the first of his appearances in a long series of MGM musicals, which later included four by Vincente Minnelli: Ziegfeld Follies (1946), a portmanteau homage to one of the most flamboyant of Broadway’s showmen, in which he would perform a droll, self-debunking song-and-dance routine, “The Babbitt and the Bromide”, with Fred Astaire; The Pirate (1948), in which his neo- Fairbanksian panache was ideally suited to the role of a ham actor mistaken for a buccaneer; most memorably, perhaps, An American in Paris (1951), which concluded with his celebrated “Ecole de Paris” ballet; and, finally, Brigadoon (1954, with Cyd Charisse and Van Johnson).

It was also in 1949 that Kelly was teamed with Stanley Donen to direct On the Town, usually credited as the first modern film musical. In fact, much of it was in a traditionalist MGM mould, and only its opening sequence could claim to be genuinely innovatory. Filmed completely and (for the period) adventurously on location, it presented Kelly, Frank Sinatra and Jules Munshin (the one whom everyone tends to forget) as three sailors released at dawn from the Brooklyn Navy Yard on a 24-hour pass and gawpingly absorbing the sights and sounds of the big city. The remainder of the film, though far more dance- oriented than most previous musicals, was conventionally studio-bound.

But, as Kelly himself said, “The fact that make-believe sailors got off a real ship in a real dockyard and danced through a real New York was a turning-point in itself.”

On the Town was followed by Singin’ in the Rain, which wears its unrivalled and by now ultra-familiar perfection as lightly as ever. And that in turn by It’s Always Fair Weather (1955), a bizarrely sour and disillusioned musical filmed not merely in but for CinemaScope, its dance numbers so inventively filling out the pillar-box format that the film is virtually impossible to screen on television.

Unaided, Kelly directed two subsequent musicals: Invitation to the Dance (1956), an uneasily self-conscious three-part essay in pure ballet, whose most amusing episode found him dancing with “Tom” of Tom and Jerry, and, for 20th Century-Fox, Hello, Dolly! (1969, with Barbra Streisand and Walter Matthau), a totally misguided endeavour to recapture the euphoric buoyancy of his earlier work but whose top-heavy imagery reminded one of nothing so much as the elephants’ lumbering slow-motion cancan in Saint-Saens’s The Carnival of the Animals. His non-musical work as a director (i.e. The Happy Road, 1957, Tunnel of Love, 1958, Gigot, 1962, A Guide for the Married Man, 1967) was utterly unmemorable; that as actor (Christmas Holiday, 1944, Black Hand, 1950, Inherit the Wind, 1960), a little less so.

But none of his failures will ever efface the memory of the modest production number that gave his masterpiece, Singin’ in the Rain, its title; and one has only to hear its introductory bars – tum-te-tum-tum tum-te-tum- te-tum-tum – to see him again, in a dance as negligent and somehow as instinctive as a shrug of the shoulders, effortlessly sashay down that rain-streaked street on the MGM back lot. No one but Gene Kelly could have made rain seem so very sunny.

Gilbert Adair

Singin’ in the Rain came at the very peak of Gene Kelly’s career and was the last of his masterpieces, so how fitting that it should include his best-loved routine – filmed in just a day and a half, so thorough was his preparation, writes Tom Vallance.

Kelly’s role in the film as Don Lockwood, a swashbuckling star of the silent cinema, is reminiscent of the character he parodied so hilariously with Judy Garland in The Pirate, while the title number’s street setting is a reminder of earlier triumphs – the “Alter Ego” dance in Cover Girl, the joyous opening gambol through the streets of New York in On the Town and the celebration of love and youth, “Wonderful”, on the Parisian boulevard of An American in Paris. The street in Singin’ in the Rain is in California where his sweetheart warns him that the “dew is just a little heavier than usual tonight”, but Kelly doesn’t care. He and his friends have discovered a way to turn the silent action star into a song-and-dance man for the talkies. He is on the brink of a new career and he is in love and what follows is a joyous celebration of these facts.

“Moses Supposes” in the same film may be a finer display of pure tap, but the title number is uniquely Kelly’s, a summation of his style which not only features child-like splashing through puddles – that element of the eternal child in us all and a reminder of Kelly’s earlier brilliant work with children – but even includes the line “Come on with the rain, I’ve a smile on my face,” so appropriate for a star whose broad Irish grin was such an indelible part of his charm.

Taking no heed of his girl’s warning (“Where I’m standing the sun is shining”), he waves away his taxi and and as he strolls off begins to hum the counter-melody before launching into full song, his euphoria mounting as he leaps on to a lamppost and embraces it, gaily waving to a couple who hurry by with a newspaper over their heads. Arms outstretched, he beams as the camera swiftly tracks in for the famous grinning close-up, then he strolls, insouciantly twirling his umbrella, before starting a second chorus with “Dancin’ in the rain . . .”, the sound of his taps on the wet pavement having a beguiling sonority.

Throughout the number Kelly uses his umbrella as a prop, twirling or kicking it, juggling with it, using it as a banjo or a partner, running it along railings and, as he does a jaunty sideways step to the left, twirling it to the right above his head. Standing under a pouring drain- pipe, he abandons its protection completely before joyously whirling full- circle in the street as the orchestra’s brass sweeps into the main melody before strings take over as Kelly delicately trips on and off the sidewalk as if on a tightrope (the magnificent orchestration was the work of MGM’s ace arranger Conrad Salinger). Finally, Kelly splashes with gay abandon through the puddles before the reproving gaze of the law curtails this transport of delight and, giving his umbrella to a passer-by, he disappears happily into the night.

Eugene Curran Kelly, actor, dancer, director: born Pittsburgh 23 August 1912; married 1941 Betsy Blair (one daughter; marriage dissolved 1957), 1960 Jeanne Coyne (died 1973; one son, one daughter); died Los Angeles 1 February 1996.

The above “Independent” obituary can also be accessed online here.

 

Gene Kelly
Gene Kelly
Janet Blair
Janet Blair
Janet Blair

Ronald Bergan’s obituary of Janet Blair from the “Guardian” in 2007:

Audiences familiar with Janet Blair’s neurotically charged performance as a woman who uses voodoo and witchcraft to further her professor husband’s career in the British occult classic, Burn, Witch, Burn aka Night of the Eagle (1962), may not realise that until then her parts had been almost all sweetness and light.

In fact, in a film, stage and television career stretching back to 1941, that was the first time Blair, who has died aged 85, had had a chance to get her teeth into a dramatic role. An attractive blonde, she had first made a name for herself as an energetic, cheerful lead in comedies and musicals, mostly at Columbia Pictures, where her first contract paid $100 a week.

Born Martha Jean Lafferty in Altoona, Pennsylvania, she took her name from the Pennsylvania county called Blair. She took ballet lessons as a child until she discovered, while singing in the local church choir, that she had a fine voice. Aged 18, she auditioned for the bandleader Hal Kemp, and became vocalist with a band celebrated for its sweet sound, touring with it for nearly two years and making recordings. A few years later, in 1943, she married one of the band’s arrangers and pianist, Louis Busch, later known as Joe “Fingers” Carr.

It was while Blair was appearing at the Cocoanut Grove in Los Angeles that she was spotted by a Columbia talent scout, just a few weeks before Kemp was killed in a car accident. The scout, who said “I could not reconcile myself to so much talent being confined to band work”, got her a screen test.

Her debut film at the studio was the comedy-thriller Three Girls About Town (1941) playing Charity, the young sister of Hope (Joan Blondell) and Faith (Binnie Barnes). The following year, Blair appeared in four films: as a flirtatious co-ed after Dagwood (Arthur Lake) in Blondie Goes to College; in Two Yanks in Trinidad – in which she was, according to the New York Times, “wholesomely sexy” as a cafe entertainer over whom gangsters Pat O’Brien and Brian Donlevy have a falling out; as hoofer George Raft’s dancing partner in Broadway (for Universal); and in the title role in My Sister Eileen.

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Although Rosalind Russell dominated the last film as the older sister and aspiring writer, Blair, as the flighty would-be actor, was pretty enough to make audiences believe she could attract dozens of men, including what seemed like the entire Portuguese navy.

After this run, Blair was finally given a chance to display her vocal talent in three musicals: Something to Shout About (1943), in which, as a girl from Altoona, she sings seven Cole Porter numbers, including You’d Be So Nice to Come Home To (with Don Ameche); Tonight and Every Night (1945), set in London during the Blitz, gave her a chance to sing Jule Styne-Sammy Cahn’s Anywhere and The Boy I Left Behind (with a dubbed Rita Hayworth) before her character is killed in a bomb raid; and the tepid but tuneful The Fabulous Dorseys (1947), with bandleader brothers Tommy and Jimmy playing themselves.

In between, Blair co-starred with Cary Grant in Once Upon a Time (1944), a whimsical comedy about a caterpillar that dances to Yes, Sir, That’s My Baby. In 1948, after three movies – I Love Trouble, in which she played an ambivalent woman seeking the help of private eye Franchot Tone; The Fuller Brush Man, playing straight opposite Red Skelton’s clowning; and the swashbuckler Black Arrow – Blair decided to quit films for the stage and television. She felt she was not being given the roles she deserved.

She went straight into the touring company of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific, playing Nellie Forbush (I’m Gonna Wash that Man Right Outa My Hair) 1,200 times in three years – “and I never missed a performance,” she claimed proudly. During the tour, she married the stage manager, Nick Mayo.

In 1953, on Broadway, she starred in the comedy The Girl Can Tell, and appeared in several television specials, including two adaptations of Broadway musicals – A Connecticut Yankee and One Touch of Venus (both 1955). In 1956, she took over from Nanette Fabray as Sid Caesar’s wife in the last season of the comedy television series Caesar’s Hour.

In 1957, Blair starred in the Jule Styne musical Bells Are Ringing at the London Coliseum, though it was hard to find favour with critics who compared her to Judy Holliday, creator of the role on Broadway. She continued in many television series, one of which was as detective Henry Fonda’s wife in The Smith Family (1971-72), and a few films.

Blair, who is survived by two children from her second marriage, once said: “I love performing. If I weren’t working, I’d be performing free for friends.”

· Janet Blair (Martha Jean Lafferty), singer and actor, born April 23 1921; died February 19 2007

Gary Brumburgh’s entry:

When it came to bright and polished, they didn’t get much spiffier than singer/actress Janet Blair — perhaps to her detriment in the long haul. At Columbia, she was usually overlooked for the roles that might have tested her dramatic mettle. Nevertheless, she pleased audiences as a pert and perky co-star to a number of bigger stars, ranging fromGeorge Raft and Cary Grant to Red Skelton and The Dorsey Brothers.

Of Irish descent, she was born Martha Janet Lafferty in Altoona, Pennsylvania, in 1921. Raised there in the public school system, she sang in the church choir during her youth and adolescence. The inspiration and talent was evident enough for her to pursue singing as a career by the time she graduated. At age 18, she was a lead vocalist with Hal Kemp‘s band at the Cocoanut Grove in Los Angeles. While with Kemp’s outfit, Janet met and, subsequently, married the band’s pianist, Lou Busch, a respected musician, songwriter and, later, ragtime recording artist.

A Columbia Pictures talent scout caught her behind the microphone and spotted fine potential in the pretty-as-a-picture songstress. The death of Kemp in a car accident in December of 1940 and the band’s eventual break-up signaled a life-changing course of events. She signed up with Columbia, for up to $100 a week, and moved to Los Angeles while her husband found work as a studio musician. Janet made an immediate impression in her debut film as the feisty kid sister of Joan Blondell and Binnie Barnes in Three Girls About Town (1941) and also dallied about in the movies, Two Yanks in Trinidad (1942) and Blondie Goes to College (1942), until her big break in the movies arrived. StarRosalind Russell made a pitch for Janet to play her co-lead in My Sister Eileen (1942) as her naive, starry-eyed younger sister (Eileen), who carried aspirations of being a big-time actress. The film became an instant hit and Janet abruptly moved up into the “love interest” ranks. Usually appearing in a frothy musical or light comedy, she was seeded second, however, to another redhead, Rita Hayworth, when it came to Columbia dispensing out musical leads. Janet, nevertheless, continued promisingly paired up withGeorge Raft in the mob-oriented tunefest, Broadway (1942); alongside Don Ameche in the musical, Something to Shout About (1943), and opposite Cary Grant in the comedy-fantasy, Once Upon a Time (1944), one of his lesser-known films. She played second lead to Ms. Hayworth in Tonight and Every Night (1945) and was right in her element when asked to co-star with bandleaders Jimmy Dorsey and Tommy Dorsey in their biopic,The Fabulous Dorseys (1947). A rare dramatic role came her way in the Glenn Fordstarrer, Gallant Journey (1946), but again she was relegated to playing the stereotyped altruistic wife. In retrospect, the importance of her roles, although performed quite capably, were more supportive and decorative in nature, and lacked real bite. By the time the daring-do “B” swashbuckler The Black Arrow (1948) rolled out, Columbia had lost interest in their fair maiden and Janet had lost interest in Hollywood.

A new decade brought about a new career direction. Putting together a successful nightclub act, she was spotted by composer Richard Rodgers, and made a sparkling name for herself within a short time. Rodgers & Hammerstein’s “South Pacific”, starring Mary Martin, was the hit of the Broadway season and Janet dutifully took on the lead role of “Ensign Nellie Forbush” when the show went on tour in 1950. She gave a yeoman performance – over 1,200 in all — within a three-year period. Following this success, she made her Broadway debut in the musical, “A Girl Can Tell”, in 1953. She went on for decades, appearing in such tuneful vehicles as “Anything Goes”, “Bells Are Ringing”, “Annie Get Your Gun”, “Mame” and “Follies”.

Her career, however, took second place after marrying second husband, producer/directorNick Mayo in 1953, and raising their two children, Amanda and Andrew. The couple met when he stage-managed “South Pacific” and went on to co-own and operate Valley Music Theatre in Woodland Hills, California during the mid-1960s. There, she played “Maria” in “The Sound of Music” and “Peter Pan” opposite Vincent Price‘s “Dr. Hook”, among others. Her second marriage lasted until the late 60s. TV’s “Golden Age” proved to be a viable medium for her. A promising series role came to her in 1956 when she replaced Emmy-winning Nanette Fabray as Sid Caesar‘s femme co-star on Caesar’s Hour (1954) but she left the sketch-based comedy show after only one season because she felt stifled and underused. She also returned to films on occasion, appearing opposite her The Fuller Brush Man (1948) co-star, Red Skelton, in another of his slapstick vehicles, Public Pigeon No. One (1957); as Tony Randall‘s wife in the domestic comedy, Boys’ Night Out (1962), starring Kim Novak; in the excellent cult British horror, Burn, Witch, Burn (1962) (aka Burn, Witch, Burn); and was fresh as a daisy, once again, in the antiseptic Disney musical, The One and Only, Genuine, Original Family Band (1968). After her second divorce, Janet laid off touring in musicals and settled in Hollywood to raise her two teenage children while looking for TV work. She found a steady paycheck paired up withHenry Fonda on the sitcom, The Smith Family (1971), playing another of her patented loyal wives. She also found scattered work on such TV shows as Marcus Welby, M.D.(1969), Switch (1975), Fantasy Island (1977) and The Love Boat (1977). Her last guest showing was on the Murder, She Wrote (1984) episode, Murder, She Wrote: Who Killed J.B. Fletcher? (1991). Janet died at age 85 in Santa Monica, California, after developing pneumonia.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net

Bruce Davison
Bruce Davison
Bruce Davison

Gary Brumburgh’s entry:

With his blond, clean-cut, Ivy League handsomeness and ready-whipped smile reminiscent of Kennedyesque times, actor Bruce Davison fits the prototype of today’s more current crop of fresh-faced, likable blonds such as Brian Kerwin and Aaron Eckhart. While it proved difficult at times for the actor to get past those perfect features and find meatier roles, his talent certainly overcame the “handicap”. Extremely winning and versatile, the award-worthy actor, now enjoying an over four decade career, has included everything from Shakespeare to Seinfeld. He has also served as a writer, producer and director on an infrequent basis.

Born on June 28, 1946, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvanis, the son of Clair, an architect and musician, and Marian (Holman) Davison, a secretary, Bruce’s parents divorced when he was just three. He developed a burgeoning interest in acting while majoring in art at Penn State and after accompanying a friend to a college theater audition. Making his professional stage debut in 1966 as Jonathan in “Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama’s Hung You in the Closet and I’m Feelin’ So Bad” at the Pennsylvania Festival Theatre, he had made it to Broadway within just a couple of years (1968) in the role of Troilus in “Tiger at the Gates” at the Vivian Beaumont Theatre. The year after that he was seen off-Broadway in “A Home Away from Home” and appeared at the Lincoln Center in the cast of “King Lear”.

Success in the movies came immediately for the perennially youthful-looking actor after he and a trio of up-and-coming talents (Barbara Hershey [then known as Barbara Seagull], Richard Thomas and Catherine Burns) starred together in the poignant but disturbing coming-of-age film Last Summer (1969). From this he was awarded a starring role opposite Kim Darby in The Strawberry Statement (1970), an offbeat social commentary about 60s college radicalism, and in the cult horror flick Willard (1971) in which he bonded notoriously with a herd of rats.

Moving further into the 70s decade, his film load did not increase significantly as expected and the ones he did appear in were no great shakes. With the exception of his co-starring role alongside Burt Lancaster in the well-made cavalry item Ulzana’s Raid(1972) and the powerful low-budget Short Eyes (1977) in which he played a child molester, Bruce was surprisingly ill-used or underused. Insignificant as the elder Patrick Dennis in the inferior Lucille Ball musical film version of Mame (1974), he was just as overlooked in such movies as The Jerusalem File (1972), Mother, Jugs & Speed (1976),Grand Jury (1976) and Brass Target (1978). Bruce wisely looked elsewhere for rewarding work and found it on the stage and on the smaller screen. Earning strong theatrical roles in “The Skin of Our Teeth,” “The Little Foxes” and “A Life in the Theatre,” he won the Los Angeles Drama Critics Award for his work in “Streamers” in 1977. On TV, he scored in mini-movie productions of Mourning Becomes Electra (1978), Deadman’s Curve (1978) (portraying Dean Torrence of the surf-era pop duo Jan and Dean) and, most of all,Summer of My German Soldier (1978) co-starring Kristy McNichol as a German prisoner of war in the American South who falls for a lonely Jewish-American girl. In 1972 Bruce married actress Jess Walton who appeared briefly as a college student in The Strawberry Statement (1970) and later became a daytime soap opera fixture. The marriage was quickly annulled the following year.

The 1980s was also dominated by strong theater performances. Bruce took over the role of the severely deformed John Merrick as “The Elephant Man” on Broadway; portrayed Clarence in “Richard III” at the New York Shakespeare Festival; was directed by Henry Fonda in “The Caine Mutiny Court Martial”; played a moving Tom Wingfield oppositeJessica Tandy‘s Amanda in “The Glass Menagerie”; received a second Los Angeles Drama Critics Award for his work in the AIDS play “The Normal Heart”; and finished off the decade gathering up fine reviews in the amusing A.R. Gurney period piece “The Cocktail Hour”. While hardly lacking for work on film (Kiss My Grits (1982), Crimes of Passion(1984), Spies Like Us (1985), and The Ladies Club (1986)), few of them made use of his talents and range. It was not until he was cast in the ground-breaking gay dramaLongtime Companion (1989) that his film career revitalized. Giving a quiet, finely nuanced, painfully tender performance as the middle-aged lover and caretaker of a life partner ravaged by AIDS, Bruce managed to stand out amid the strong ensemble cast and earn himself an Oscar nomination for “Best Supporting Actor”. Although he lost out to the flashier antics of Joe Pesci in the mob drama Goodfellas (1990) that year, Bruce was not overlooked — copping Golden Globe, Independent Spirit, New York Film Critics and National Society of Film Critics awards. Other gay-themed films also welcomed his presence, including The Cure (1995) and It’s My Party (1996). The actor eventually served as a spokesperson for a host of AIDS-related organizations, including Hollywood Supports, and, elsewhere, is active with foundations that help children who are abused.

Bruce has been all over the screen since his success in Longtime Companion (1989). Predominantly seen as mature, morally responsible dads and politicians, his genial good looks and likability have on occasion belied a weak or corrupt heart. Bruce married actress Lisa Pelikan in 1986 (well over a decade after his first marriage ended) and they have one son, Ethan, born in 1996. The handsome couple became well known around town and worked frequently together on stage (“The Downside,” “Love Letters,” “Breaking the Silence,” “To Kill a Mockingbird”) and in TV movies (Color of Justice (1997)). Bruce’s more popular films these days have included Six Degrees of Separation (1993) starringWill Smith, the family adventure film Far from Home: The Adventures of Yellow Dog(1995) and the box-office hit X-Men (2000) and its sequel in the role of Senator Kelly. More controversial art-house showcases include Dahmer (2002), as serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer’s father, and Hate Crime (2005), as a bigoted, murderous pastor.

Bruce has attempted TV series leads in later years. With Harry and the Hendersons(1991), he ably directed a number of the show’s episodes. He has also been tapped for recurring parts on The Practice (1997) and The L Word (2004), and is fondly remembered for his comedy episodes on Seinfeld (1989) as an attorney who goes for George’s (Jason Alexander) throat when George’s fiancée dies inexplicably of toxic poisoning. The actor recently completed a TV series revival of Knight Rider (2008).

Divorced from Lisa Pelikan, Bruce is married these days to third wife Michele Correy and has a daughter by her, Sophia, born in 2006. They live in the Los Angeles area.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net

Mickey Shaughnessy
Mickey Shaughnessy
Mickey Shaughnessy

IMDB entry:

Mickey Shaugnessy, the Irish-American character actor best known for his portrayal of Elvis Presley’s musical mentor in the rock n’ roll classic “Jailhouse Rock” (1957), was born Joseph Michael Shaughnessy on August 5, 1920 in New York City. As a performer, the young Mickey made his bones on the Catskill Mountains tourist resort circuit.

During a stint in the Army during World War II, Mickey appeared in a service revue. After being demobilized, he made his living making the rounds of the nightclub circuit with a comedy act. His breakthrough as an actor came with his debut in support of the legendary Judy Holliday and great meat n’ potatoes character actor Aldo Ray in George Cukor‘s The Marrying Kind (1952).

Shaughnessy signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, which typecast him as dumb but likable lugs in such pictures as Vincente Minnelli‘s Designing Woman (1957). He was memorable as “the Duke” in ‘Michael Curtiz”s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1960) for MGM and even acted Jerry Lewis off of the silver screen as Jerry’s wrassler-pal inDon’t Give Up the Ship (1959). Other major pictures he appeared in were Fred Zinnemann‘s Academy Award-winning From Here to Eternity (1953), Robert Wise‘s Until They Sail (1957) in support of up-and-coming Paul NewmanFrank Capra‘s disappointing final film Pocketful of Miracles (1961), and Henry Hathaway‘s comedic potboiler North to Alaska (1960) with John Wayne.

In 1960 alone, the Mick appeared in two exploitation classics for Albert Zugsmith, “College Confidential” with professional marrieds Steve Allen and Jayne Meadows, andSex Kittens Go to College (1960) with a young Tuesday Weld. In “The Clown,” Mickey had the honor of playing a mute clown who avenges the honor of another young lovely,Yvette Mimieux, in an episode during the second season of the classic TV chiller series, “One Step Beyond.”

In the early ’60s, Mickey revived his nightclub act, which was always a “clean” act, even into the 1980s, despite his success as the foul-mouthed sailor whose obscenities were beeped-out on the soundtrack of “Don’t Go Near the Water (1955). In 1965, Mickey had the dubious honor of appearing as Jack Mulligan in “Kelly,” an original Broadway musical about a Tammany Hall-like Irish gang set in the 1880s that starred Wilfrid Brambell as the eponymous Dan Kelly and Maytag repairman extraordinaire Jesse White as “Stickpin” Sidney Crane. Produced by David Susskind and Daniel Melnick in association with Joseph E. Levine, directed and choreographed by future Academy Award nominee Herbert Ross, and boasting music by Moose Charlap and a book and lyrics by Eddie Lawrence, “Kelly” opened and closed on February 6th, 1965, after all of one one performance. Mickey never performed on the Great White Way again.

In all, Mickey starred in almost two score movies and a score of TV shows before winding up the bulk of his career in the early ’70s with a role in the short-lived TV series “The Chicago Teddybears” (1971) in support of Dean Jones and John Banner. Despite many memorable performances, he will best be remembered as the imprisoned con Hunk Houghton in “Jailhouse Rock.” Mickey’s con befriends Elvis, in his best-starring vehicle, as a young man thrown into the pokey for killing another man to defend a woman’s honor. It is Mickey’s Hunk who has the insight and wisdom to realize that Elvis is a natural and should perform in the upcoming prison show.

Wowing the incarcerated crowd like the Man in Black Johnny Cash would a decade later at Folsom, Elvis finds his true calling and becomes a pop star after vamoosing the hoosegow. With true love Judy Tyler, the once and future King establishes a record company to flog his hot wax, but success spoils him, and soon Elvis decides to ditch his best gal and their company to sign with some slick Hollywood recording industry types. Former best pal-from-the-slammer Mickey shows up and bangs some sense into Elvis’ vaselined head, but unfortunately, the blow to The King’s noggin damages his vocal chords. No longer able to sing, Elvis is given up on by the slick Hollywood boys and all those who had been exploiting him.

Hollywood in that era, and particularly MGM, were nothing if not dutifully didactic, and a humbled Elvis learns the true meaning of love, friendship and fidelity when Miss Tyler and the Hunk stick out the bad times with him. In true Hollywood fashion, The King’s voice is miraculously restored and he once again storms the charts. A landmark in the rock n’ roll film with almost as much impact as “A Hard Day’s Night” (1964) had on a later generation, Jailhouse Rock (1957) was added to the Library of Congress’ Film Registry in 2004.

Sadly, Mickey Shaughnessy would not live to see that honor, nor the release of his final film. He died from lung cancer just two weeks shy of his 65th birthday on July 23, 1985.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Jon C. Hopwood

Vickery Turner
Vickery Turner
Vickery Turner

Vickery Turner was born in 1945 in Sunbury-on-Thames.   Her breakthrough role came in the UK stage production of “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie” which starred Vanessa Redgrave.  While filming “Crooks and Coronets” with Edith Evans, she met and married the U.S. actor Warren Oates and went to live and work in the U.S.   She was also a published novelist.   She died in 2007.

“The Stage” obituary:

A distinguished stage and screen actress, Vickery Turner also enjoyed a successful career as a novelist and a celebrated screenwriter.Ê   She created the role of the schoolgirl Sandy in the original stage production of Muriel Spark’s The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (Wyndham’s 1966) for which she won the London Critics’ Award and the Clarence Derwent Award. She was best known to television viewers for her role as Charlotte Bronte in Yorkshire Television’s The Brontes of Haworth.   Born in London on April 3, 1945, she was educated at Selhurst School for Girls and trained for the stage at RADA. After leaving she worked briefly as a journalist on a south London newspaper     After her awarding-winning performance in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, she starred in Ken Loach’s adaptation of Nell Dunn’s gritty novel Up The Junction (1967). In 1968 she appeared opposite Edith Evans in the film comedy Prudence and the Pill.   She went on to play Olivia in Twelfth Night (Royal Court) with Malcolm McDowell and played a leading role in the play Mr. Pim Passes By (Hampstead Theatre). She also appeared in many major television dramas including Dennis Potter’s award-winning Stand Up, Nigel Barton (1965), Ibsen’s Ghosts, with Tom Courtney (1968,) Hay Fever, with Ian McKellen (1968) and The Year of the Sex Olympics (1968) with Brian Cox.   Later, notable stage roles included appearing opposite Richard Chamberlain in Jonathan Miller’s production of Richard II at the Ahmanson Theater, Los Angeles and she played Celimene in The Misanthrope (Oxford Playhouse). She also starred in The Day After the Fair, which toured the USA.

In 1981 she starred in the Granada Television production of The Good Soldier. Turner wrote many widely acclaimed television and film scripts. Her first, Keep on Running, appeared as part of the BBC’s Thirty-Minute Theatre series.   Other credits included Magnolia Summer, Kippers and Curtains and The Children’s Teeth Are Set on Edge, which dealt with drug addicts on the streets of London. She also wrote the screenplay for A Lady’s Life in the Rocky Mountains, based on the letters of Isabella Bird, an English woman who rode through the Colorado mountains in 1873. Recently she adapted her novel The Testimony of Daniel Pagels for the screen.   Her other novels included Lovers of Africa, Delicate Matters and Lost Heir.  She died at her home is Los Angeles on April 4, 2006. She is survived by her husband, Michael J Shannon and her daughter, Caitlin.

Patrick Newley

The above “Stage” obituary can also be accessed online here.

Sam Shepard
Sam Shepard
Sam Shepard

Obituary: Sam Shepard

Playwright, actor, writer, drummer and haunter of Dublin late at night

 
FUSING BECKETT: Playwright Sam Shepard — a restless, roaming man of talents
FUSING BECKETT: Playwright Sam Shepard — a restless, roaming man of talents
 

I was very flattered when Sam Shepard asked a friend could he be introduced to me on Wexford Street one night some years back.

He was tall, handsome, taciturn, cowboy-esque and he was impressed by my sartorial choices and wanted to know where I was from. It was 2am, and I just finished hosting my karaoke night in the Village – a long-running event which attracted stragglers on rollovers, musicians, artists and some mad punters around town.

Patrick Bergin, The Darkness, Kiefer Sutherland, Ryan Tubridy, GreenDay and Daft Punk frequented it over the years. I insisted he come the following week and he did.

You wouldn’t think a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, Oscar-nominated actor, author, and self-styled “rock ‘n’roll Jesus with the cowboy mouth” described as a “poet laureate of America’s emotional badlands,” who died peacefully in his home in Kentucky from complications related to Lou Gehrig’s disease, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, would be into karaoke, but he visited a few times during that period in early 2007 when he directed his play, Kicking a Dead Horse, with Stephen Rea in the Abbey.

It was an amazing time in Dublin -the Tiger was yet to eat itself, people were spilling onto the street each night talking loudly and he was immersed in it. He asked me to come to his play. I never did. What an idiot.

One night I brought him to a party after my gig. There were musicians sitting in a badly lit dive above a shop playing bluegrass at 3am – that was when musicians could still afford to live in town. I left after a while. He stayed behind. Sitting silently, without pretension, happy in the dinge and fag smoke, absorbed in the music.

When I read Shepard’s ‘Buddy’ Patti Smith’s beautifully articulated tribute to her friend and collaborator in The New Yorker after he died, last Saturday, aged 73, I reminisced about that night. She described, how, during a trip to Dublin in 2012 to receive an Honorary Doctorate of Letters from Trinity College, the pair joined musicians in his favourite local pub, the Cobblestone. “As we playfully staggered across the bridge, he recited reams of Beckett off the top of his head,” she recalled.

It encapsulated everything beautiful and poetic about a disappearing Ireland that a middle-American man, who transversed the bridge between the prairies and the big city, and who had Beckett’s original writings hanging on his kitchen walls, would hold in his heart.

 

Jimmy Fay, who directed Shepard’s plays True West twice (once for the Lyric in Belfast, and once for the Abbey), Ages of the Moon and Curse of the Starving Class, also in the Abbey in 2011, described him as “generous, razor sharp, experimental, strange, iconic, Elvis-like”, while also being “utterly engaging, interested in people, an outdoors man, a great poet who always had to write”.

He could fuse Samuel Beckett and Little Richard. He could combine pop rock with existentialist angst. He was able to make really odd, strange, beautiful plays. He gave a voice to the drama of the heartland. He was a horseman, who raised thoroughbreds, and loved jazz and read Proust. He was gloriously paradoxical.

“He was an extraordinary artist with a brain bigger than anyone else around him,” Fay said. “And I was in awe of him.”

Born Samuel Shepard Rogers VII in Fort Sheridan, Illinois on November 5, 1943, the eldest of three children, his early years were nomadic. His father was a bomber pilot in World War II, so the family moved from one military base to another, taking in South Dakota, Guam and Florida before settling in an avocado ranch in Duarte, California.

His father’s experiences of war deeply affected him and he became an alcoholic, which later inspired Shepard’s finest semi-autobiographical plays featuring dysfunctionality and darkness.

After abandoning an agricultural degree, he arrived in New York in 1963, a counter-cultural cauldron with “a cowboy mouth with matinee-idol looks”, a mid-western drawl and vague aspirations to act, make music and write. After securing a job as a busboy at the Village Gate nightclub, he became part of the underground avant-garde movement.

His first Gestalt pieces, Cowboy and The Rock Garden, caused confusion and some uproar when they were first shown Off Off Broadway. New York, it seemed, wasn’t ready for such a raw injection of profane language and psychodrama.

He won OBIEs (Off-Broadway Theater Awards) for Chicago, Icarus Mother and Red Cross. In 1967, he wrote his first full length play, La Turista, an allegory on the Vietnam war about an American couple in Mexico and won his fourth OBIE. He won 13 in total.

His early science-fiction play, The Unseen Hand (1969), influenced Richard O’Brien’s The Rocky Horror Show, while Operation Sidewinder featured a computerised snake, hopi Indians, black panthers, and his rock group, the Holy Modal Rounders, for which he played drums.

John Lahr, a former theatre critic at The Nation and the Village Voice, described it in The New Yorker. “He didn’t conform to the manners of the day; he’d lived a life outside the classroom and conventional book-learning. He was rogue energy with rock riffs. In his coded stories of family abuse and addiction, he brought to the stage a different idiom and a druggy, surreal lens,” Lahr wrote.

In 1979 he won a Pulitzer Prize for his play Buried Child, which was part of a quintet of family tragedies including Curse of the Starving Glass, (1977), and True West (1980), which depicted the rivalry between two estranged brothers, later to be played by actors including Philip Seymour Hoffman, Gary Sinese and John Malkovich. Fool For Love (1983) and A Lie of the Mind, (1985) established him as one of the visionaries of US theatre. By the age of 40, he had become the second most widely performed US playwright after Tennessee Williams.

When Curse of the Starving Class was performed in The Abbey theatre, in 2011, Shepard became the Abbey’s most frequently staged playwright. Joe Hanley, who played the role of the explosive alcoholic father Weston in the semi-autobiographical play, said of Shepard: “He was the last of the great American writers. A theatrical and gifted man without ego.”

At the time his playwriting was beginning to peak, with predictable oddity he became a romantic movie lead in movies such as Baby Boom. “The shift was so unexpected that many of his fans in the theatre thought it had to be somebody else when his name appeared with Richard Gere and Brooke Adams in Days of Heaven, but his on-screen magnetism was powerful enough to match, if not overpower Gere’s own,” film critic Gene Seymour said.

In 1983, Shepard was nominated for an academy award for Best Supporting Actor as his portrayal of pilot Chuck Yeager in The Right Stuff. He also starred in Steel Magnolias, Terrence Malick’s Days of Heaven, Frances with his partner-to-be Jessica Lange, The Notebook, Black Hawk Down, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford and The Pelican Brief, with Julia Roberts amongst others. Recently, he starred as in Bloodline on Netflix.

Despite his many acting credentials, Shepard humbly insisted that his performances were ‘hit and miss’.

In February of this year, his book, The One Inside – a collection of short stories – was hailed by actor Ed Harris. “The most intimate thing he wrote. Read that and it’s like you’re holding the essence of Sam in your hands,” he said in an obituary in the Guardian. “Exploring his characters is like a bottomless pit. We just did 125 performances of Buried Child in London and we’re still discovering things about these people at the end of the run.”

Shepard was constantly working on something. Once one thing finished, he would move onto the next, be it a poem or a screenplay, but he also had a great impulse to hit the open road, as his ex-lover Patti Smith wrote in her evocative piece: “Sam liked being on the move. He’d throw a fishing rod or an old acoustic guitar in the back seat of his truck, maybe take a dog, but for sure a notebook, and a pen, and a pile of books.”

Unlike modern stars, who court attention, Shepard was very private. He didn’t like flying or the internet, used a typewriter and liked to roam the streets freely.

He married actress O-Lan Jones with whom he had a son, Jesse Mojo Shepard, in 1969. He met Jessica Lange while making the movie Frances in 1982. They were together for almost 30 years until 2009. They had two children, Hannah Jane and Samuel Walker. All three of his children were with him when he passed away.

He was cowboy, a badass and an enigma, who, according to Lange, wasn’t easy going. “But no man I’ve ever met compares to Sam in terms of maleness,” she said. She was probably wrong though.

She probably meant to say that no one ever compares to Sam

IMDB entry:

As the eldest son of a US Army officer (and WWII bomber pilot), Sam Shepard spent his early childhood moving from base to base around the US until finally settling in Duarte, California. While at high school he began acting and writing and worked as a ranch hand in Chino. He graduated high school in 1961 and then spent a year studying agriculture at Mount San Antonio Junior College, intending to become a vet.

In 1962, though, a touring theater company, the Bishop’s Company Repertory Players, visited the town and he joined up and left home to tour with them. He spent nearly two years with the company and eventually settled in New York where he began writing plays, first performing with an obscure off-off-Broadway group but eventually gaining recognition for his writing and winning prestigious OBIE awards (Off-Broadway ) three years running.

He flirted with the world of rock, playing drums for the Holy Modal Rounders, then moved to London in 1971 where he continued writing.

Back in the US by 1974, he became playwright in residence at San Francisco’s Magic Theater and continued to work as an increasingly well respected playwright throughout the 1970s and into the ’80s.

Throughout this time he had been dabbling with Hollywood having, most notably in the early days, worked as one of the writers on _”Zabriski Point” (1970)_, but it was his role as Chuck Yeager in 1983’s The Right Stuff (1983) that brought him fully to the attention of the wider, non-theater audience.

Since then he has continued to write, act and direct, both on screen and in the theater.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Anonymous 

Betty Hutton
Betty Hutton
Betty Hutton
Betty Hutton
Betty Hutton

Betty Hutton’s “Guardian” obituary by Ronald Bergan:

Among the frenetic, ear-splitting female vocalists of the 1940s, the most popular was the blonde bombshell Betty Hutton, who has died aged 86. She worked almost exclusively at Paramount, for whom she knocked herself out in explosive numbers in such musicals as The Fleet’s In (1942) and The Stork Club (1945). She also remained very much herself as Texas Guinan, a 1920s nightclub hostess in Incendiary Blonde (1945); silent screen queen Pearl White in The Perils of Pauline (1947) and vaudeville star Blossom Seely in Somebody Loves Me (1952), all rags-to-riches Technicolor biopics. But her greatest triumph came in MGM’s Annie Get Your Gun (1950), also based on a real person, Annie Oakley.

Hutton’s life could be the subject of one of her Hollywood biopics, but with more pathos than most. She was born in Battle Creek, Michigan, the daughter of a railway worker, Lum Thornburg, who abandoned his wife and daughters (four-year-old Marion and two-year-old Betty) in 1923. In order to support them, their mother opened a speakeasy in their home, where Betty sang for the customers. The police kept the family on the move, and eventually they ended up destitute in Detroit. There, young Betty sang in bars for a few dollars to keep her mother in drink.

At 13, she started singing with big bands, her big break coming with Vincent Lopez and his Orchestra. On stage, she had changed her name from Elizabeth Thornburg to Betty Darling, but soon took on the name of Hutton, as did her sister, who went on to sing with Glenn Miller. In 1939, Variety encapsulated Betty’s persona thus: “Miss Hutton is a petite and somewhat unusual type who puts great poundage into her singing, screwing her face up into poses at times that are very different and effective. Even if vocally she’s far from the doors of the Met, [she] employs slightly wild, rowdy techniques that really sell her songs.”

The following year Hutton landed a role in the Broadway revue Two for the Show, and was introduced to producer Buddy DeSylva, who signed her for the part of the dizzy maid Florrie in his musical Panama Hattie, in which she made a hit. When DeSylva took over the production reins at Paramount studios in late 1941, he got her a contract and a leading role in The Fleet’s In. Co-starred with her antithesis, Dorothy Lamour – dark, sultry and languorous – Hutton sang the two best numbers in the movie, Build a Better Mousetrap and Arthur Murray Taught Me Dancing in a Hurry.

In 1942, she became one of the first artists to sign with the newly formed Capitol Records. Over the years, she recorded several hits for the label, but soon became unhappy with the company because every song they gave her was from one of her films. What she wanted was a broader range of tunes, including more romantic numbers.

In her movies, Hutton was mostly called upon to throw herself about in numbers like Murder He Says (in Happy Go Lucky, 1943). That same year, however, she had one of her few straight roles, in Preston Sturges’ The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek as a woman who cannot recall the father of her sextuplets. In this sharp satire on American motherhood and small-town values, she turned herself, according to the Herald Tribune, from “a bumptious hoyden into a sweet and amusing comic actress”.

Hutton was teamed up again with Lamour in And the Angels Sing (1944), and played two sisters after Bing Crosby in Here Come the Waves (1944). She continued to make similar toned musicals for Paramount throughout the 1940s, until MGM borrowed her for Annie Get Your Gun after Judy Garland was suspended for unprofessional behaviour. “Frankly, I knew a lot of people didn’t want me to play Annie,” Hutton remarked, knowing she had gained a reputation for being too egotistic. Her co-star Howard Keel admitted finding her too impetuous and demanding, but Betty gave one of her best ever screen performances as the sharp-shooting girl who realised she “can’t get a man with a gun”.

She returned to Paramount with Let’s Dance (1950), opposite Fred Astaire. Her rough comedy clashed with Astaire’s smooth sophistication, but Fred said, “Working with Betty Hutton keeps anybody moving. She’s so talented and conscientious that if you don’t watch yourself you feel you’re standing still and letting her do all the work.” Hutton then played the trapeze artist in Cecil B DeMille’s The Greatest Show on Earth (1952), torn between fellow artiste Cornel Wilde and circus manager Charlton Heston.

She left Paramount shortly afterwards, when the studio refused her demand that her second husband, choreographer Charles O’Curran, direct all her movies. She made only one more film, Spring Reunion (1957), in which she was more subdued than her usual raucous self.

In 1967, Hutton was signed to star in Red Tomahawk, a low-budget Paramount western with her Annie Get Your Gun screen partner, Keel. But soon after starting work, she was fired and replaced by Joan Caulfield. After that, her emotional state began to deteriorate; her fourth marriage ended, and her mother died.

In June 1967, in spite of having made enormous salaries in the past, Hutton declared bankruptcy, listing debts of $150,000. There followed years of drug abuse and alcoholism. A falling out with her children and a suicide attempt eventually resulted in a nervous breakdown. In an interview at the time, she said: “I’m so mixed-up and blue. I just can’t take any more setbacks … I don’t even have many friends any more because I backed away from them. I think things are going to go right for me again. I’m not old. I’m old enough, but I photograph young, thank God, and I still get fan mail. I don’t know where it’s all going to lead.”

It led to Hutton befriending Father Peter Maguire, a priest at St Anthony’s parish in Portsmouth, Rhode Island. With his help, she regained her strength and began working as a rectory cook and housekeeper, leaving only once in five years to undergo treatment in a mental hospital. She returned to the rectory in 1975, when Maguire helped her enrol in Salve Regina University, Rhode Island, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in 1986 and, two years later, an MA. In the 1980s, she worked as a hostess at a Connecticut sports centre, where she still displayed remnants of the bouncy personality that had cheered up filmgoers in dark times. The four times married and divorced Hutton, who returned to California after Maguire’s death in 1996, is survived by three daughters.

· Betty June Hutton (Thornburg), actor, born February 26 1921; died March 11 2007

 The above “Guardian” obituary can also be accessed online here.
Louis Hayward
Louis Hayward
Louis Hayward

Louis Hayward

 

TCM Overview:

Suavely handsome, often tongue-in-cheek leading man of the 1930s and 40s who began his career with a provincial theater company in England. Hayward came to Hollywood in the mid-30s and quickly established a second-rank level of stardom which lasted until the mid-50s. He more than held his own in a wide variety of films; his light touch with cynical, witty banter suited him well in drawing room comedies and romantic dramas (“The Flame Within” 1935, “The Rage of Paris” 1938, “Dance Girl Dance” 1940), but he regularly appeared in detective films and adventures as well. Often cast as somewhat roguish playboys, Hayward played the leading role in Rene Clair’s sterling adaptation of Agatha Christie’s mystery “And Then There Were None” (1945) and was fine in dual roles James Whale’s stylish version of “The Man in the Iron Mask” (1939).

The latter film prefigured the later contours of Hayward’s film career, as his athletic, romantic dash led him to be cast in many medium-budgeted swashbucklers, four of which (including “Fortunes of Captain Blood” 1950 and “The Lady in the Iron Mask” 1952, recalling his earlier triumph) teamed him with Patricia Medina. Hayward was married for a time to Ida Lupino, with whom he co-starred in the Gothic melodrama “Ladies in Retirement” (1941).

Los Angeles Times obituary in 1985:

TIMES STAFF WRITER 

Louis Hayward, whose debonair charm and athletic good looks made him one of Hollywood’s most successful swashbuckling heroes of the 1930s and ‘40s, died Thursday at Desert Hospital in Palm Springs.

He was 75 and had spent the last year of his life in a battle against cancer, which he attributed to having smoked three packs of cigarettes a day for more than half a century.

A lifelong performer (“I did a Charlie Chaplin imitation for my mother when I was 6 and never really got over it,” he told friends), Hayward scored his first major screen success with the 1939 film, “The Man in the Iron Mask,” and spent the next decade starring in such adventure films as “The Son of Monte Cristo,” “The Saint in New York,” “The Black Arrow” and “Fortunes of Captain Blood.”

“I also did rather creditable acting jobs as the rotten seed in ‘My Son, My Son,’ and the villainous charmer in ‘Ladies in Retirement,’ ” he said ruefully. “But nobody really cared. They just handed me another sword and doublet and said ‘Smile!’ ”

Born March 19, 1909, in Johannesburg, South Africa, a few weeks after his mining engineer father was killed in an accident, Hayward was taken first to England and then to France, where he attended a number of schools under his real name, Seafield Grant.

He received early training in legitimate theater, appeared for a time with a touring company playing the provinces in England and then took over a small nightclub in London.

“Which is where my career really began,” he said. “Noel Coward came in one night; I managed to talk to him for a time and wound up wriggling into a small part in a West End company doing ‘Dracula.’ ”

He followed with roles in “The Vinegar Tree,” “Another Language” and “Conversation Piece” before going to New York, where a chance acquaintance with Alfred Lunt led to a role in the Broadway play, “Point Valaine,” for which he won the 1934 New York Critics Award.

His first Hollywood efforts in “The Flame Within” and “A Feather in Her Hat” were moderately successful, moderately well-received and almost instantly forgotten.

But then came the 1936 role of Denis Moore in “Anthony Adverse,” and studio officials began talking about stardom.

The dual role of Louis XIV and Philippe in “The Man in the Iron Mask” established Hayward as a swashbuckler and was followed by major roles in “And Then There Were None,” “The Duke of West Point” and similar vehicles.

Hayward, who had become a naturalized U.S. citizen the day before the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, served three years in the Marine Corps during World War II, winning the Bronze Star for filming the battle of Tarawa under fire.

Formed Own Company

Returning to films after the war, he formed his own film company and was one of the first stars to demand and get a percentage of the profits from his pictures, which included “Repeat Performance,” “The Son of Dr. Jekyll,” “Lady in the Iron Mask,” “The Saint’s Girl Friday,” “Duffy of San Quentin” and “The Lone Wolf,” which he subsequently turned into a television series, playing the starring role in 78 episodes in the 1960s.

Hayward left Hollywood in the late 1950s to appear in a British television series, “The Pursuers,” returning for television appearances in “Studio One” and “Climax” anthology shows and returning to the stage as King Arthur, opposite Kathryn Grayson, in a Los Angeles Civic Light Opera production of “Camelot” in 1963.

His first two marriages, to actress Ida Lupino and to socialite Margaret Morrow, ended in divorce.

Hayward, who had lived in Palm Springs for the last 15 years, is survived by his wife, June, and a son, Dana. At his request, a family spokesman said, no funeral was planned.

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