Hollywood Actors

Collection of Classic Hollywood Actors

Machiko Kyo
Machiko Kyo
Machiko Kyo

Machiko Kyo obituary in “The Guardian” in 2019.

When Rashomon won the Golden Lion award for best film at the Venice film festival in 1951, and was shown widely in the west, the floodgates were opened for more Japanese films to be released worldwide.

This allowed cinephiles in the west to follow the masterful career of Rashomon’s director, Akira Kurosawa, and to discover the two forceful leads Toshiro Mifune and Machiko Kyo. Although Kyo, who has died aged 95, had appeared in a number of films previously, it was Rashōmon that enabled her to work with other greats of Japanese cinema such as Kenji Mizoguchi and Yasujiro Ozu.

In Rashomon, which is set in feudal Japan, Kyo played the wife of a samurai warrior. While the couple are travelling through the woods, they are accosted by a dangerous bandit (Mifune), who rapes the wife and kills the husband. Or does he? At the trial of the bandit, the incident is described in four conflicting, yet equally credible versions – by the bandit, the wife, the dead samurai (communicating through a medium) and a woodcutter – thus demonstrating the subjective nature of truth.

Through the four conflicting narratives, we see different aspects of the character of the wife, brilliantly played by Kyo – passionate, emotional, devious, weak and strong. Noticing the look of revulsion in her husband’s eyes, she incites the bandit to kill him; or, wielding a dagger, she kills him herself. Western audiences were not used to this kind of stylised screen acting but, as Orson Welles once said about great film performances, they were “not necessarily realistic but true”.

Nobu McCarthy
Machiko Kyo

Early on, Kyo found herself mostly in jidai-geki (period films set in the era before the opening of Japan to western influence). For these roles, she sometimes used hikimayu, the practice of removing the natural eyebrows and painting larger and higher eyebrows on the forehead. This was most effective in Ugetsu (1953), one of Mizoguchi’s most acclaimed films.

In it, Kyo was eerily beautiful as Lady Masaka, a mysterious noblewoman who seduces a poor married potter. He later finds out that she was a ghost who had died before she could find true love.Advertisement

Machiko Kyo
Machiko Kyo

In one scene, Kyo showed her versatility by singing and dancing. This gave a hint of her background in the dancing troupe she had joined as a teenager. Most reports claim that she was born Motoko Yano in Osaka. However, in a Rashomonesque manner, there were a few dubious claims that she was born in Mexico, while her father was working there as an engineer, and was brought up by her mother, a geisha, after her parents split up.

While working as a dancer, Kyo was discovered by Masaichi Nagata, head of the Daiei studios in Tokyo, with whom she became romantically involved, and for whom she made Love for an Idiot (1949). This local hit, in which she played a teenage bride, gave no indication of the direction her career would take with the success of Rashomon a year later.

In Teinosuke Kinugasa’s Gate of Hell (1953), the first Japanese picture to use a western colour process (Eastmancolor), Kyo was poignant as a married lady-in-waiting who commits hara-kiri rather than submit to a 12th-century feudal warlord who desires her. The exquisite colour, costumes and decor were used almost as leitmotifs to counterpoint the emotions of the characters, especially the glowing Kyo in the title role of Mizoguchi’s The Empress Yang Kwei Fei (1955), a scullery maid who becomes empress of China.

Kyo was almost unrecognisable in Street of Shame (1956), as a Americanised gum-chewing young woman who has become a sex worker in a brothel called Dreamland to spite her tyrannical father. Mizoguchi’s last completed film saw him return to an earlier contemporary subject to illustrate his major theme, the exploitation of women throughout the ages, helped to a certain degree by Kyo.

By this time, Kyo’s fame had spread worldwide, and she was invited to co-star with Marlon Brando, epically miscast as a Japanese translator, and Glenn Ford, as a bumbling officer, in the Hollywood production The Teahouse of the August Moon (1956). In this satire on American cultural imperialism in post-second world war Japan, Kyo retained her dignity as Lotus Blossom, a geisha, trying to keep GIs happy on the island of Okinawa.

Towards the end of the 1950s, considered the golden age of Japanese cinema, Kyo shifted partly and easily to gendai-geki (films in a contemporary setting), notably Ozu’s Floating Weeds and Kon Ichikawa’s Odd Obsession (both 1959). In the former, she played the scheming and jealous mistress of the leading actor of a touring kabuki theatre group, and in the latter, the young wife of an elderly man frightened by his growing impotence.

Among her films of the 60s, only The Face of Another (1966), stands out. This bizarre drama, directed by Hiroshi Teshigahara, saw Kyo deceived by her facially disfigured husband, disguised behind a handsome mask, into sleeping with him, then being accused by him of adultery. 

When Daiei studios went into bankruptcy in 1971, Kyo entered semi-retirement, although she worked in television series from time to time and appeared in several commercial films into her 80s.

• Machiko Kyo (Motoko Yano), actor, born 25 March 1924; died 12 May 2019

John Hodiak
 

John Hodiak was born in 1914 in Pittsburgh.   He came to fame with Alfred Hitchcock cast in “Lifeboat” in 1944.   He starred opposite Gene Tierney in “A Bel for Adano”, opposite Judy Garland and Angela Lansbury in “The Harvey Girls” and “Battleground”.   He died suddenly at the age of 41 in Tarzana, California in 1955.

Gary Brumburgh’s entry:

Pittsburgh-born John Hodiak was one of several up-and-coming male talents who managed to take advantage of the dearth of WWII-era superstars (MGM’s Clark Gable,Van JohnsonRobert Taylor and James Stewart, among others) who were off serving their country. John’s early death at age 41, however, robbed Hollywood of a strong player and promising character star.

Born on April 16, 1914, the eldest of four (one daughter was adopted), John was eight years old when his middle-class family moved to a thriving Polish community in a suburb of Detroit, Michigan. His father, Walter, was born in the Ukraine and his mother, Anna, was Polish. Expressing interest in music and drama at an early age, he was encouraged by his father who had appeared in amateur shows. He found roles in school plays (done in Hungarian or Polish), sang in the Ukranian church choir, played the clarinet, and even took diction lessons. Not to be outdone, his athletic skills were also put on display. At one point, he was considered by the St. Louis Cardinals for their farm league but he declined the offer in favor of pursuing an acting career.

Following high school, John found work as a golf caddy and stockroom clerk (at a Chevrolet company) before breaking into radio (WXYZ) in Detroit and (later) Chicago. His more notable roles was as the title figure in “L’il Abner” (a role created on radio) and in the serials “Ma Perkins” and “Wings of Destiny”. While in Chicago he was noticed by MGM talent agent Marvin Schenck and signed. Proud of his heritage, he refused to change his name to a more marquee-friendly moniker despite mogul Louis B. Mayer‘s concerns. Hodiak made his debut as a walk-on in A Stranger in Town (1943), and had a bit part in one of Ann Sothern‘s “Maisie” series Swing Shift Maisie (1943) before becoming her leading man in a subsequent entry (Maisie Goes to Reno (1944)) the following year.

His inability to sign up for military duty due to his high blood pressure ended up giving him a starring career. Attention started being paid after he played Lana Turner‘s soldier husband in Marriage Is a Private Affair (1944). An interested Alfred Hitchcock then borrowed John for the role of Kovac, the torpedoed ship’s crew member, in one of his classic war dramas Lifeboat (1944) starring the irrepressible Tallulah Bankhead at 20th Century-Fox. The studio was so impressed with John’s work in this that it cast him in two other quality films: Sunday Dinner for a Soldier (1944) and A Bell for Adano (1945), both of which showed off his quiet but rugged charm.

In the former he played the patriotic title role and co-starred with Anne Baxter. No sparks as of yet between these two, but a year or so later they reconnected at a party and started dating. They married on July 6, 1946. The second film, the exquisitely sensitive and moving war picture A Bell for Adano (1945) made him a star by Hollywood standards. Co-starring a rather miscast Gene Tierney (as a blonde Italian village girl) andWilliam Bendix, John was more than up to the challenge of playing the role of U.S. Major Joppolo, originally created on Broadway by Fredric March. The irony of it all is that the actor never found better roles (at MGM) than the ones he filmed while lent out to Fox.

Back at MGM, John went through the usual paces. He was overlooked in the rousing Judy Garland vehicle The Harvey Girls (1946), but seemed much more at home in the film noirSomewhere in the Night (1946) and in the WWII drama Homecoming (1948) that starredClark Gable and Lana Turner, with John and wife Anne Baxter serving as second leads.

With MGM’s male roster of talent back home now from the war, John was unceremoniously relegated to second leads that supported the top-tier actors, including Gable, Spencer TracyRobert WalkerJames Stewart and Robert Taylor. While several of his subsequent post-war films drew desultory reviews, notably the Greer Garson “Miniver” sequel The Miniver Story (1950), Hedy Lamarr‘s so-called tale of intrigue A Lady Without Passport (1950), and the Clark Gable western Across the Wide Missouri (1951), John did manage to co-star in two of MGM’s more stirring war pictures — Command Decision(1948) and Battleground (1949). Occasionally deemed “glum” and “wooden” by his harsher critics, John’s MGM contract expired in 1951 and he began to freelance. Most of the work that followed were starring roles in low-budget entries. Battle Zone (1952) had John and Stephen McNally as two Korean war photographers distracted by the lovelyLinda Christian, and Conquest of Cochise (1953) featured a miscast John as the famed Indian warrior.

John reaped better rewards on the stage during this time. Receiving excellent reviews following his 1952 Broadway debut as the sheriff in “The Chase” (he received the Donaldson Award), the actor returned to Broadway as Lieutenant Maryk in “The Caine Mutiny Court Martial (1954) co-starring Henry Fonda. He was extremely disappointed when former fellow MGM player Van Johnson was cast as the lieutenant in the acclaimed film version starring Humphrey Bogart as Captain Queeg.

The father of daughter Katrina Baxter Hodiak, who was born in 1951, John and Anne’s varied backgrounds (he was middle class and she more high society — her grandfather being the renowned Frank Lloyd Wright) and their busy film careers created significant problems. They divorced on January 27, 1953. John later built a home for his parents and younger brother in Tarzana, California and eventually lived there with them. His later years grew difficult and were plagued by self-doubt, a diminishing career and an equally diminishing social life.

John’s key Broadway success in “Mutiny” led to a fine comeback role on screen as a prosecuting attorney in Trial (1955), finding “guest artist” work on dramatic TV as well. What might have led to a strong resurgence, however, was sadly cut short. On the morning of October 19, 1955, 41-year-old John suffered a coronary thrombosis and died instantly while shaving in the bathroom of his home. He was on his way to the 20th Century-Fox lot to complete final work on his last film, On the Threshold of Space (1956), when he was stricken.

The movie was released posthumously with John’s role left intact. No previous record of a heart ailment was ever uncovered. It was an extreme shock to lose someone so relatively young, and even sadder for those he loved and left behind, including his 4-year-old daughter. Katrina Hodiak later became a composer, an actress and a theater director). John was interred at the Calvary Cemetery in Los Angeles.

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

John Agar
John Agar
John Agar

John Agar was born in 1921 in Chicago, Illinois.   He starred with John Wayne in six movies, “Sanda of Iwo Jima” and John Ford’s “She Wore a Yellow Ribbon”, “Big Jake”, “Chisum”, “Ford Apache with Shirley Temple to whom he was married for a time and “The Undefeated”.   He died in 2002 at the age of 81.

Ronald Bergan’s obituary in “The Guardian”:

The American film actor John Agar, who has died aged 81, was famous in different quarters for different things; his well-publicised marriage to Shirley Temple and his subsequent alcoholism; his appearance in two of John Ford’s best westerns – Fort Apache and She Wore A Yellow Ribbon – and, later, as the star of dozens of cheesy but cultish science-fiction B-movies.

Agar was a tall, handsome, 24-year-old US Army Air Corps sergeant and physical education instructor, when, in early 1944, a friend arranged for him to escort the 16-year-old Temple to a Hollywood party given by her boss, David O Selznick. They married a few months later in front of gossip columnists from all over the world and thousands of screaming fans.

For the next few years, the glamorous couple – he was the scion of an old Chicago meat-packing family – were seldom out of the screen magazines, which included pictures of them posing blissfully with their baby daughter Linda Susan, born in January 1948. By the end of the following year, however, troubled by her husband’s excessive drinking – he had been arrested for drunken driving – and his philandering, Temple filed for divorce.

With his career on the skids, Agar joined Alcoholics Anonymous, remarried and tried to remake himself by keeping a straight face amid campy situations in films such as The Revenge Of The Creature, Tarantula (both 1955), The Mole People (1956), The Brain From Planet Arous (1957) and The Attack Of The Puppet People (1958).

These enjoyably ridiculous low-budget pictures contrasted greatly with the films he made in the 1940s. Before Selznick signed him for a five-year contract at $150 a week, with acting lessons thrown in, Agar had made his screen debut opposite his young wife in Fort Apache (1948), in which Henry Fonda’s martinet colonel refuses to allow his daughter (Temple) to marry the non commissioned Lieutenant O’Rouke (Agar). Nonetheless, the on-screen love affair blossoms, reflecting what audiences wanted to believe was the pair’s true-life romance.

The following year, they co-starred in an anti-feminist comedy, Adventure In Baltimore. Agar then appeared as another naive but brave young officer in She Wore A Yellow Ribbon (1949), vying humorously with Harry Carey Jr for the hand of Joanne Dru, under the fatherly eye of John Wayne.

He was with Wayne again in The Sands Of Iwo Jima (1949), as a cocky recruit with an axe to grind; when Wayne dies, Agar grimly leads his men forward. Two decades later, Wayne gave him small roles in The Undefeated (1969), Chisum (1970) and Big Jake (1971).

Among Agar’s other westerns were Along The Great Divide (1951), giving good support to Kirk Douglas, and Star In The Dust (1956), in which he got top billing as a sheriff battling to convince the townsfolk of his methods. Many more movies followed until his last appearance, in Miracle Mile (1989). He then became a popular guest at US science-fiction conventions.

Agar is survived by his daughter, and the two sons of his second marriage, to former model Loretta Combs, who died in 2000.

John Agar, film actor, born January 31 1921; died April 7 2002

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

Nancy Kelly
Nancy Kelly
Nancy Kelly

Nancy Kelly was born in 1921 in Lowell, Massachusetts.   She was the sister of Jack Kelly who starred with James Garner in “Maverick”.   Her films include “Jesse James” with Tyrone Power in 1939, “Murder in the Music Hall” with Vera Ralston in 1945 and repeated her Broadway success in “The Bad Seed” in 1956.   She died in 1995 aged 73.

Dick Vosburgh’s obituary in “The Independent”:

Although she made more than 30 films and received an Academy Award Best Actress nomination, Nancy Kelly’s greatest triumphs were in the theatre.

One of New York’s most successful child models from infancy, she made her first appearance on the Broadway stage at the age of 10 in Give Me Yesterday (1931). A role in Rachel Crothers’s Susan and God (1937), which ran for two seasons on Broadway with Gertrude Lawrence heading the cast, led to a 20th-Century Fox screen-test for Kelly, swiftly followed by a long-term contract and a leading role in John Ford’s Submarine Patrol (1938). Frank S. Nugent wrote in the New York Times: “Here’s a morning g un forNancy Kelly, who has the responsibility of being the only girl in the cast, not merely by being as decorative as she is, but with a charming and assured performance. Miss Kelly bears watching; in fact, it will be a pleasure.”

A year later, the same paper’s Bosley Crowther was equally enamoured of Kelly, to the extent that he actually forgave Fox for crowbarring her into Stanley and Livingstone as the patently fictitious object of Henry Morton Stanley’s affection. “We don’t see,” he wrote, “how any one could be so officious as to demand that the presence of an actress so charming must also be supported by documents.”

Despite effusions from critics, Fox assigned Kelly a pallid “Outlaw’s Noble Wife” role in Jesse James (1939), put her into minor fluff like He Married His Wife and Sailor’s Lady (both 1940), and loaned her out for the likes of One Night in the Tropics and Parachute Battalion (both 1941). Her last film for 20th Century-Fox was To the Shores of Tripoli (1942) in which the studio showed its indifference by letting her lose John Payne to Maureen O’Hara.

A return to Broadway to play Alec Guinness’s wife in Terence Rattigan’s London success Flare Path (1942) was a disappointment; the play ran only three weeks. In Tarzan’s Desert Mystery (1943), Kelly was cast as a wisecracking vaudeville magician in a plot that also found room for Nazis, giant spiders, sinister Arabs and dinosaurs. In Show Business (1944) she played a scheming burlesque performer, hell-bent on breaking up the marriage of George Murphy and Constance Moore. Such was the skill of her actingthat she actually managed to simulate convincing lust for Murphy.

After a handful of films in which she was paired with such fading leading men as William Gargan, Lee Tracy and Chester Morris, Kelly returned to Broadway. Her experience with the studios could only have helped her performance as John Garfield’s Hollywood-hating wife in Clifford Odets’s searing play The Big Knife (1949). Four years later she played another tortured Odets wife in a tour of The Country Girl. Her performance as the agonised mother of an eight-year-old murderess in Maxwell Anderson’s Broadwa y hit The Bad Seed (1954-55) won her a Tony Award. Two years later Kelly and other key members of the New York cast journeyed west to make the screen version. She received her Oscar nomination for her work in the film.

Kelly twice received the Sarah Siddons Actress of the Year Award in a theatre career that embraced such disparate playwrights as Shakespeare, Neil Simon and Edward Albee. Her television work included Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Climax and The Pilot (1956), a TV biography of Sister Mary Aquinas, a noted educator and the first nun to be granted a pilot’s licence. Variety reported: “Miss Kelly humanised Sister Mary and made a colourful, interesting and touching character out of her.” For this performance, Nancy Kelly added an Emmy Award to her crowded mantelpiece.

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

Julie Harris
Julie Harris

“Probably the only people who have not minded the infrequency of Julie Harris’s film appearances are New York theatregoers.   In that city one is likely to find her on the boards gratifyingly often.   She is not perhaps a great actress but she is perhaps a witch, a skinny Lorelei calling to the smitten with a giggle and a coo like a love-sick dove.   She casts a spell in films as well but her parts have been uneven.” – David Shipman in “The Great Movie Stars – The International Years”. (1972)

Julie Harris was born in 1925 in Grosse Pointe, Michigan.   She is regarded as one of Broadway’s greatest stars having won five Tonys, a tie with Angela Lansbury.   Her screen debut in 1932 was a repeat of her stage triumph in “Member of the Wedding” with Esther Waters and Brandon de Wilde and based on Carson McCuller’s novella.   She played opposite James Dean in “East of Eden” in 1955, “Harper” with Paul Newman in 1966 and “Reflections in a Golden Eye” with Marlon Brando in 1967. She was part of the regular cast of “Knot’s Landing” for a few years.   She died in 2013.

“The Guardian” obituary by Brian Baxter:

Unable to make sufficient money from her novels, the great American writer Carson McCullers took advice from Tennessee Williams and allowed one of her masterpieces to be adapted for the theatre. The resultant success of The Member of the Wedding (1950) widened her fame, and made a Broadway star of Julie Harris, who has died aged 87.

The play’s main character is Frankie Addams, a gawky 12-year-old who longs for companionship and the “we of me”. Although the second juvenile role, in what is essentially a three-hander, went to a child actor, Brandon de Wilde, the complex part of Frankie fell to Harris, who was then 24. Born in Grosse Pointe Park, Michigan, and trained at the Yale School of Drama, Harris had made her Broadway debut in It’s a Gift in 1945, but enjoyed only modest success until she made Frankie her own vulnerable creation.

In 1952 Fred Zinnemann directed the film version of the play, in which, once again, Harris was supported by the incomparable De Wilde and Ethel Waters. She received an Oscar nomination as best actress and it mattered little when she lost out to Shirley Booth, since in the interim between play and film, she had triumphed again on Broadway, as the nightclub singer Sally Bowles in I Am a Camera (1951), based on Christopher Isherwood’s Goodbye to Berlin. Harris won a Tony award for best actress (the first of a record five) and was lauded by the critic Brooks Atkinson as an “actress of genius”.

In 1955 that play too graduated to the screen with Harris as the outlandish heroine. Although the rest of the film proved a dismal affair, Harris had shown that she could adapt to the more intimate demands of cinema. Her brilliance led the director Elia Kazan to cast her as Abra, opposite James Dean, in East of Eden (1955), but much of the screen work that followed immediately afterwards was feeble, including a British comedy, The Truth About Women (1957) and Sally’s Irish Rogue (1958).

Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962) was an inferior film version of Rod Serling’s TV drama and Harris seemed adrift in the part originally played by Kim Hunter. She fared slightly better on television in an adaptation of Graham Greene’s The Power and the Glory (1961), playing the priest’s mistress, and as Ophelia in Hamlet (1964).

Happily, the 1960s yielded three more enduring screen roles, includingRobert Wise‘s classic horror film The Haunting (1963), shot in Britain. Harris was perfectly cast as the timid Eleanor, prey to the terrors of the haunted mansion. In 1966 she played Miss Thing in Francis Ford Coppola’s inspired comedy You’re a Big Boy Now and the following year was reunited with the genius of McCullers in the best film of her career.

In Reflections in a Golden Eye she played the vulnerable Alison, tended by a fey Filipino house-boy, while neglected by her adulterous husband. In the hothouse atmosphere of a southern army camp, Alison is a highly strung instrument playing as part of a discordant quartet, comprising also Brian Keith, Elizabeth Taylor and Marlon Brando, giving his greatest performance as the Major. Harris held her own in this illustrious company, but never again encountered such a heady cocktail of the director John Huston, a superb screenplay and three such co-stars.

Not that she remained idle, making dozens more films, innumerable television appearances and always returning to her first love, the theatre. Stage roles of note included Joan of Arc in The Lark (1955, for which she won another Tony); a musical, Skyscraper (1966); the comedy Forty Carats (1969, a third Tony); The Last of Mrs Lincoln (1972), which although it was not a success won her a fourth Tony; and in 1976 the one-woman show The Belle of Amherst (her fifth Tony), based on the poems and secluded life of Emily Dickinson. She toured extensively in this production, including a trip to London. I vividly recall her command of the inner strength and beauty both of the character and the poetry. A filmed version of the show was seen on British television in 1978.

Harris was also well-suited to the role of the wife in On Golden Pond, in which she starred on stage during 1980, although Katharine Hepburn took the role in the film the following year. During the 1990s she enjoyed success in a stage version of Driving Miss Daisy, a tour of Lettice and Lovage and a New York revival of The Glass Menagerie. While appearing in a production of Fossils in 2001 in Chicago, she suffered a stroke.

On screen she was proud of her Mrs Greenwood in the adaptation of Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar (1979). Although not a commercial success, it was more to her taste than Harper (1966), in which she was tortured by Robert Webber, or The People Next Door (1970), where she suffered at the hands of a drug-addicted daughter. She faced an even worse fate in two factually based features. In The Hiding Place (1975) she played, with great commitment, Betsie ten Boom, one of two Dutch sisters who gave refuge to Jewish people and suffered the consequences in a concentration camp. A year later in Voyage of the Damned she was a member of an all-star cast playing German Jewish refugees on a ship seeking sanctuary in 1939 but refused a port of call and eventually sent back to Germany.

These films and television dramas, notably House on Greenapple Road (1970), a Columbo feature, Any Old Port in a Storm (1973), the lead in a film version of The Last of Mrs Lincoln (1976) and in 1979 The Gift and then Backstairs at the White House, playing Helen Taft, kept her busy. But the temptation of complete security led to the longest stint of her career. In 1980, having appeared in an early episode of the TV soap opera Knots Landing, she accepted the role of a singer, Lilimae Clements, and stayed for the next seven years of its run, moving from her home in Massachusetts to take temporary residence in Los Angeles. Apart from an uncredited cameo in Crimewave (1985) and the voice of Claire in the ballet film Nutcracker (1986) she was absent from the big screen until 1988, when she returned as the third lead as Roz Carr in Gorillas in the Mist.

She worked non-stop for the next decade, with three TV films in 1988 and an average of one a year after that, from miniseries such as Scarlett (1994) to features such as Ellen Foster (1997) in which she played Grandmother Leonora. She had an enjoyable big screen role in the comedy HouseSitter (1992), and went to Rome to star in a tranquil two-hander, Gentle into the Night (1998), declaring the director Antonio Baiocco the “nicest” of her career. She played Dennis Hopper‘s dying mother in Carried Away (1996), then a doctor in Bad Manners (1997) and the key role of Carlotta in The First of May (1999).

One of her great attributes was a distinctive, silvery voice, an almost musical intonation and impeccable diction. Combined with sharp intelligence and an interest in the arts, this led to voiceover and documentary work. She appeared in works about her famous co-star, James Dean, including The First American Teenager (1976) and James Dean, a Portrait (1996). She was her favourite poet in Emily Dickinson: A Certain Slant of Light (1978). Her interest in literature (she researched historical characters such as Mrs Lincoln thoroughly) led her to make recordings of plays, the poems and letters of Dickinson and readings of Out of Africa and Frankenstein, among others. She also found time to co-author a book, Julie Harris Talks to Young Actors (1971). In 2002 she received a special lifetime achievement Tony award.

Harris was married and divorced three times. She is survived by a son, Peter.

• Julie Harris (Julia Ann Harris), actor, born 2 December 1925; died 24 August 2013

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

Peter Weller
Peter Weller
Peter Weller

TCM Overview:

A contemplative, blue-eyed lead with classically sculpted features, Peter Weller gained stage experience with notable performances in David Rabe’s “Streamers” and David Mamet’s “The Woods.” He entered film in 1979 and, though best known for his roles in the deadpan cult favorite “The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai” (1984) and as the armor-clad title character of “RoboCop” (1987) and its first sequel, “RoboCop 2” (1990), Weller has also been effective in more character-driven dramas such as “Shoot the Moon” (1981) and David Cronenberg’s fascinatingly bizarre “Naked Lunch” (1991).

Weller followed up his success in “Naked Lunch” with several lackluster projects: the action adventure “Fifty-Fifty” (1991); a French romantic comedy “Road to Ruin” (1992); and the thriller “Sunset Grill” (1993), all of which moved quickly to home video. Career matters started looking up with the release of Michael Tolkin’s “The New Age” (1994), where he was paired once again with “Naked Lunch” co-star Judy Davis. Weller got to demonstrate his flair for comedy playing a jobless Hollywood ad man whose marriage is crumbling. Although the film and Weller both received rave reviews, the actor’s profile dimmed through the late 1990s; while he worked steadily, only a few films stood out, such as Woody Allen’s “Mighty Aphrodite” (1995) and director Linda Yellen’s “End of Summer” (1996). He resurfaced in the admired Showtime science-fiction series “Odyssey 5” (2002-03) playing Chuck Taggart, part of a team of space shuttle astronauts who witness the end of the world and travel back in time to prevent the disaster from occurring. Weller was seen on the big screen again in 2003, playing Cardinal Driscoll, a high-ranking church official given to ungodly actions in the secret-sect thriller “The Order.”

Stepping behind the camera as a director, Weller helmed episodes of “Homicide: Life on the Street” (NBC, 1993-99) and “Odyssey 5,” as well as the Elmore Leonard telepic “Gold Coast” (1997), but, for the most part, he stuck to acting. In 2006, he returned to high-profile productions with a recurring stint as a treacherous character on the popular action show “24” (Fox, 2001-2010) and, later, the dark thriller series “Dexter” (Showtime, 2006-2013). Before long, he took up directing again, helming episodes of the tense biker drama “Sons of Anarchy” (FX, 2008- ) and the crime series “Longmire” (A&E, 2012- ), while also appearing on both shows. After voicing Batman in the two-part animated comic-book adaptation “Batman: The Dark Knight Returns” (2012-13), Weller revisited the big screen prominently with a significant role in the hit sci-fi sequel “Star Trek Into Darkness” (2013).

The above TCM Overview can also be accessed online here.

James Ellison
James Ellison
James Ellison

James Ellison was born in 1910 in Iowa.   He made man Bmovie westerns in the 1930’s including a stint as the sidekick of Hopolang Cassidy.   In 1936 he starred in “The Plainsman” with Jean Arthur and Gary Cooper.   He starred opposite Frances Dee in the Val Lewton classic “I Walked with a ZXombie”.   He also starred with Maureen O’Hara in “They Met in Argentina”.   He ceased acting in 1962 and worked in real estate.   He died in 1993 at the age of 83.

“Independent” obituary by Dick Vosburgh:

James Ellison Smith, actor: born Guthrie Center, Iowa 1910; twice married (one son, two stepdaughters); died Montecito, California 23 December 1993.

ALTHOUGH James Ellison appeared in nearly 70 films over 20 years, his place in cinema history rests on eight low-budget westerns he made early in his career; from 1935 to 1937 he played the hotblooded young Johnny Nelson in the phenomenally successful Hopalong Cassidy series.   After studying acting at the Pasadena Playhouse, Ellison was forced to take a job in the printing laboratories at Warner Bros. One day he was spotted on the lot and offered a screen test, which he had the unique experience of developing himself. The test led to a small role in the Warners tearjerker Play Girl (1932), but no studio contract.

Eventually MGM did sign him, but used him in only three films. When the contract ended, Ellison had little confidence in his acting ability, and applied to the National Parks Service for training as a forest ranger. Just as in a bad movie, fate suddenly took a hand: the producer Henry Sherman, who was about to bring the ‘Hopalong Cassidy’ novels to the screen, put him under contract. The role of Johnny Nelson brought him instant popularity, and he was borrowed by Cecil B. De Mille to play Buffalo Bill Cody in The Plainsman (1937), the romanticised story of Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane, co-starring Gary Cooper and Jean Arthur.   After leaving the Cassidy series, Ellison made a dozen films under contract to RKO, including Next Time I Marry (1939) and You Can’t Fool Your Wife (1940) – both with Lucille Ball – and two with Ginger Rogers: Vivacious Lady (1938) and Fifth Avenue Girl (1940), a reactionary comedy in which Super Patriot Ginger sorted out the problems besetting a tycoon, one of which was Ellison, his rantingly communistic chauffeur. ‘You haven’t the courage to be a capitalist yourself,’ Ginger shouts, ‘So you try to drag everyone down to where you are]’

He also played Jack Chesney in the Jack Benny version of Charley’s Aunt (1941), appeared in such horror films as The Undying Monster (1942) and I Walked with a Zombie (1943), and even made musicals; in The Gang’s All Here (1944), when Alice Faye sang ‘No love, no nothin’ / Until my baby comes home . . .’, Ellison played the soldier for whom she was saving herself.   At the time he was chosen for the Cassidy series, his room-mate at the Los Angeles YMCA was a young film-cutter named Pate Lucid. When Ellison left the series in 1937, he was replaced by Lucid, now using the less Surrealist acting name of Russell Hayden. By 1950, the enormous success of the old Cassidy films on television had made both actors familiar to a new generation, and they capitalised on it by producing and starring in a series of six westerns which, although pretty dire, established some sort of record; they were made simultaneously, using the same supporting actors and settings. With the help of library footage, all six films were completed in a single month.

Two years later Ellison retired from the screen and devoted himself to real-estate development and a fuller family life.

Lois Chiles
Lois Chiles
Lois Chiles
Lois Chiles
Lois Chiles

Lois Chiles was born in 1947 in Houston, Texas.   In the 1970’s she had some strong leading lady parts beginning in “The Way We Were” with Robert Redford and Barbra Streisand.   She played Jordan Baker in the 1974 film of “The Great Gatsby, was part of the all star cast of “Death on the Nile” and was Roger Moore’s leading lady in “Moonraker”.

IMDB entry:

Lois Chiles was born April 15, 1947 in Houston Texas to Barbara Wayne Kirkland and Marion Clay Chiles. She was raised in Alice, Texas, and received higher education at the University of Texas at Austin, and Finch College in New York City. While modeling, she made her film debut appearance as Robert Redford‘s on-screen college sweetheart in The Way We Were (1973), and reunited with Redford in The Great Gatsby (1974). She played the role of the attractive, cynical young golfer Jordan Baker. Four years later, she appeared in the film adaptation of Agatha Christie‘s Death on the Nile (1978) as the murder victim Linnet Ridgeway Doyle. Lois’s most memorable role to date is Bond Girl, Dr. Holly Goodhead opposite Roger Moore as James Bond in Moonraker (1979).

– IMDb Mini Biography By: tony.r.vario@gmail.com

Constance Collier
Constance Collier
Constance Collier
Constance Collier
Constance Collier

Constance Collier was born in 1878 in Windsor.   She made her stage debut at the age of 3 in “A Midsummer’s Night Dream”.   In 1905 she married Irish actor Julian Boyles and they performed on the stage until his death in 1918.   In the 1940’s she was a stalwart character actress in Hollywood films such as “Kitty” with Paulette Goddard and Ray Milland, “The Perils of Pauline” in 1947 with Betty Hutton and Alfred Hitchcock’s “Rope” with James Stewart and Farley Granger.   Constance Collier died in 1955 in New York.

Gary Brumburgh’s entry:

In a career that covered six decades, Constance Collier evolved into one of Broadway and London’s finest tragediennes during the first half of the 1900s. While the regal, dark-featured beauty who bore classic Romanesque features enjoyed a transcontinental career like a number of her contemporaries, her theatre success did not encourage an enviable film career. It wasn’t until her senior years that Constance engaged in a number of well-regarded supporting performances on screen. Later respect also came as one of Hollywood’s premiere drama and voice coaches.

She was born Laura Constance Hardie in Windsor, Berkshire on January 22, 1878, the only child of Auguste Cheetham and Eliza Georgina (nee Collier) Hardie, who were both minor professional actors. Young Constance made her stage debut at the age of three as a fairy in a production of “A Midsummer Nights Dream” and the die was cast. By age 6 she was appearing with famed actor/manager Wilson Barrett in “The Silver King”. An early break occurred in her teens (1893) when the tall, under-aged beauty was given consent by her parents to become a member of the famed George Edwardes-Hall “Gaiety Girls” dance troupe. Groomed extensively in singing, dancing and elocution, she managed to stand out among those others in the chorus line and went on to featured status in two of Edwardes-Hall’s biggest hits, “A Gaiety Girl” and “The Shop Girl” (both 1894).

Legit ingénue roles in “Her Advocate”, “Tommy Atkins” and “The Sign of the Cross” followed. Just after the turn of the century (1901) she was invited to join the theatre company of the esteemed Herbert Beerbohm Tree, who had been searching for a comparably tall leading lady to play opposite him. She remained with his company at His Majesty’s Theatre for six years where she built up a formidable classical resumé. Alongside Sir Herbert in such plays as “Ulysses”, “The Eternal City” and “Nero”, Constance also proved a fine Shakespearean with her Olivia, Viola, Portia, Mistress Ford and Cleopatra at the top of the list. She also made a noteworthy Nancy Sykes in “Oliver Twist” which she toured extensively both here and abroad. During this time (1905), she married British-born actor ‘Julian L’Estrange’.

Ms. Collier made a successful American stage debut in 1908 with “Samson” at the Garrick Theatre in New York opposite well-known American actor/playwright William Gillette, thereby placing herself solidly among the most popular and respected actresses of the day. Among her subsequent Broadway offerings were “Israel” (1909), “Trelawney of the Wells” (1911), “Oliver Twist” (1912), “Othello” (1915) and “The Merry Wives of Windsor” (1917).

Sir Herbert and Constance both appeared as extras in the silent D.W. Griffith classicIntolerance: Love’s Struggle Throughout the Ages (1916). While still in the U.S., he filmed Macbeth (1916) with Constance as his Lady Macbeth. Not only was the Shakespearean film poorly received but her starring appearances in two other silents released earlier that year, The Tongues of Men (1916) and The Code of Marcia Gray(1916), were also overlooked.

Tragedy struck in October of 1918. She and husband L’Estrange had begun a Broadway run together of “The Ideal Husband” only a month earlier. During the run he contracted the deadly Spanish influenza which had spread worldwide and died of pneumonia at the untimely age of 40. The grief-stricken actress finished the play’s run into November then returned to England where she appeared in the films The Impossible Woman (1919),Bleak House (1920) and The Bohemian Girl (1922). Among her London theatre successes were “Our Betters” (1923) at the Globe Theatre, which ran for over twelve months, and “Hamlet” wherein she played Queen Gertrude opposite John Barrymore‘s Great Dane (1925) at the Haymarket Theatre. Constance also moved into writing and penned her own play “Forever”, which was based on the Daphne Du Maurier novel “Peter Ibbetson”. She then co-wrote with actor/friend Ivor Novello the play “The Rat” (1924) in which Novello starred and Constance produced.

The advent of sound provided the exciting opportunity for the eloquent Collier to work in the U.S., but not necessarily as an actress. By helping established silent film stars transition into talkies, she became Hollywood’s foremost drama and voice coach. Finding less and less time for stage work, she directed a Broadway production of “Camille” in 1931. She did, however, manage to appear in productions of “Peter Ibbetson” (1931), which she also staged, “Dinner at Eight (1932) and “Hay Fever” (1933) all in New York. Her final Broadway curtain call was taken as Madame Bernardi in “Aries Is Rising” (1939) at New York’s Golden Theatre.

In later years, she continued to coach (among her students were Marilyn Monroe) and write, but she also found time to return to the large screen in a dozen or so films, usually providing stately support. She appeared in a range of movies from the Shirley Temple vehicle Wee Willie Winkie (1937) to the film noir piece The Dark Corner (1946). Better known roles during this period include those in Stage Door (1937), playing, quite appropriately and amusingly, the resident drama coach, An Ideal Husband (1947), excellent as Lady Markby, and Alfred Hitchcock‘s Rope (1948). Her last film was Whirlpool(1949).

Constance died of natural causes in New York on April 25, 1955, and left behind her 1929 memoirs “Harlequinade”. She had no children.

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