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Hollywood Actors

Collection of Classic Hollywood Actors

Ruth Roman
Ruth Roman

Ruth Roman was a striking, dark-haired strong actress who made many fine films in Hollywood during the 1950’s. She was born in Lynn, Massachusetts in 1922. Shie is perhaps best remembered for her leading role opposite Farley Granger in Alfred Hitchcock’s classic “Strangers On A Train” in 1951. Other films of note include “Beyond the Forest” with Bette Davis, “Three Secrets” with Eleanor Parker and “The Far Country” with James Stewart and Corinne Calvet. She had a recurring role on Angela Lansbury’s “Murder She Wrote” as beauty parlor owner Loretta. Ruth Roman died in 1999.

Tom Vallance’s obituary in “The Independent”:

FEW FILM stars struggled longer and harder for success than Ruth Roman, who spent six years playing bit parts until she achieved stardom in 1949 and won a contract with Warner Bros.

In less than three years the studio had featured her in 10 films, but, although she starred opposite some of the top players of the time, including Gary Cooper, Errol Flynn and James Stewart, Roman was a leading lady rather than a major star, and Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train was the only outstanding film she was to make at the studio. Roman loved her profession, but her long struggle left her with no illusions. She told Hedda Hopper in 1949, “I love everything about show business, even the junk. You can’t change the junk. People have tried. So you might as well accept it along with the good. Acting is my life. The profession can break my heart. In fact, it already has several times. But I love it.” The actress was to experience real-life drama when she and her son, then aged three, were aboard the luxury liner Andrea Doria when it was struck by another ship and wrecked.

Born in Lynn, Massachusetts, in 1923, Roman was the youngest of three daughters of immigrants from Lithuania. Her father, Anthony Roman, was a fairground barker who died when she was a child, which forced her mother to work as a waitress, charlady and laundress. “For a while,” Roman later recounted, “we were moving regularly once a month because we couldn’t pay our rent.” She added that she never felt sorry for herself, stating, “When you start out poor you don’t know what you’re missing.”

She had little formal education – she left high school in her second year – but won a scholarship to the Bishop Lee Dramatic School, after which she worked as a cinema usher to support herself while working at night with the New England Repertory Company, a semi-professional group in Boston. Moving to New York, she tried unsuccessfully to get roles on Broadway, and instead posed for crime magazine stills at $5 an hour. With $200 saved, she next headed for Hollywood, where she lived in a boarding house with six other actresses hoping for film fame (“We called our home `The House of Seven Garbos’ “).

Roman’s combination of dark-haired beauty and wholesomeness won her a small role as a navy girl in Frank Borzage’s all-star Stage Door Canteen (1943), a tribute to New York’s famed canteen for servicemen. The film’s casting director said he chose Roman from dozens of hopefuls because, “I felt right away that here was a girl who would show up on time in the morning with her lines learned and no nonsense.”

The role was the first of many blink-and-you-miss-her bits Roman played over the next few years, including Since You Went Away (1944), Incendiary Blonde (1945), Gilda (1946) and The Big Clock (1948). She also learned to endure disappointments – a prominent role in a Ken Maynard western, Harmony Trail (1944), went unseen when the low-budget film failed to obtain a release, and a showy part in the Marx Brothers vehicle A Night in Casablanca (1946) was left on the cutting-room floor.

Her first leading role was in one of Universal’s weakest serials, Jungle Queen (1945), in which as Lothal, a jungle ruler with the ability to walk through flames, she rescued her co-stars Edward Norris and Eddie Quillan from raging lions or natives with what one critic called “boring regularity”. She played the title role in a minor western, Belle Starr’s Daughter (1947), but her breakthrough was to come when she auditioned for Stanley Kramer, who was producing a film version of Ring Lardner’s story of a ruthless boxer, Champion (1949).

Thinking she would be right for the role of the fighter’s gold-digging girlfriend, she wore a tight-fitting black dress and heavy make-up, but Kramer told her, “Actually, I thought of you for the other girl”, and cast her as the innocent girl the fighter seduces then is forced to marry. Roman said later,

My happiest 26 days in the movies were spent making the picture Champion. For, though you hear a great deal about teamwork in Hollywood, you almost never see as much of it as we did while shooting this film. Whenever there was a question about a scene, we’d hold a group conference, complete with producer, director and cast, to thrash the matter out. Each suggestion was not only considered but also thoroughly discussed. . . All this was immensely helpful to me in playing the role of Emma, for I was very young in pictures then, and this was quite a different type of role from the few I’d played.

She said of her co-star Kirk Douglas,

He surprised me on the second day of shooting by saying, “Do you know that this picture is going to make you?” I couldn’t believe that but Kirk insisted and even offered to make a bet on it. If I had taken the bet I would have lost, for the role of Emma did more for my career than any other role.

Roman’s performance as the victimised wife brought her fine reviews (“Ruth Roman’s wife is hauntingly lovely,” said the Hollywood Reporter) and her beach scene with Douglas attracted particular attention. “The scene I liked best was the one on the beach, and apparently a number of fans agreed with me. About half the letters I received asked for a picture of me in the bathing suit.” Another reason Roman enjoyed working on Champion so much was because of her passion (unrequited) for its producer Kramer, whom she would later describe as “the love of my life”.

Roman consolidated her impact in Champion with her role later that year in the highly praised B movie The Window, based on Cornell Woolrich’s story The Boy Who Cried Wolf, about a boy who constantly fabricates stories of adventure so that when he sees a real murder committed he is not believed. “It is a piece of suspense entertainment rarely equalled,” said Variety, adding that Paul Stewart and Roman were “exceptionally good as the menace, driven to their deeds more by circumstance than sheer badness”.

On the strength of these films, Warners gave Roman a contract and cast her in Beyond the Forest (1949), the last film Bette Davis, once the studio’s greatest star, was making under her contract. Roman was to later speak fondly of the star:

Bette Davis was great. I kept blowing my lines in one scene with her because they were so awful to try to say. I finally told the director that and Bette immediately came to my rescue. “She’s right,” Bette shouted. “This girl is absolutely right.” Later she told me, “Ruthie, never forget what you did today. . . never be afraid to fight for what you know is right.” And I never did forget.

Roman had a sympathetic part as Bert Lahr’s girl-friend in the vaudeville saga Always Leave Them Laughing (1949), notable for preserving some of the classic sketches of Milton Berle and Lahr, then she was given her first starring role at the studio, as a hard-bitten fugitive from justice in Barricade (1950), an undistinguished remake of The Sea Wolf with the setting changed to a western mining camp. Leading roles followed in two westerns, Colt .45 (1950) with Randolph Scott, and Dallas (1950) with Gary Cooper – routine films but popular with audiences of the time.

Three Secrets (1950), directed by Robert Wise, was a good soap opera in which Roman gave one of her most effective performances as a woman who had killed the father of her child and, before serving her prison sentence, had turned the boy over to a foster-home. A newspaper reports that a five-year-old foster-child is the sole survivor of a plane crash and Roman waits with two other women (played by her fellow contract players Eleanor Parker and Patricia Neal) to see if one of them is the child’s real mother. The film’s director Wise said, “I realised Three Secrets was soap opera, but I liked the idea. I hadn’t done a woman’s picture and was intrigued by working with the three actresses who were already cast for it.”

Wise may have been happy with Roman, but Elia Kazan was shocked when the studio chief Jack Warner tried to insist that he cast her in the key role of Stella in A Streetcar Named Desire. Finally, Kazan agreed to test Roman, but he had already made up his mind that the part should be played by Kim Hunter, who had created the role so superbly on Broadway (and was to win an Oscar for the film). Warner then insisted that Hitchcock use Roman in Strangers on a Train (1951) and the great director made it clear that he was unhappy about it.

Roman is indeed somewhat distant in the role of the senator’s daughter engaged to a tennis player (Farley Granger) suspected of murder, but it can be said in her defence that she did not have the most forcible of leading men (Hitchcock had initially wanted William Holden) and she doubtless knew that her director had little faith in her. Granger said, “Hitchcock’s disinterest in Ruth Roman and the role she played led him to be outspokenly critical and harsh with her, as he had been with Edith Evanson on the set of Rope. He had to have one person in each film he could harass.”

In Starlift (1951) Roman was one of many Warner stars playing themselves in a story of troop entertainment, and in this she came across as warm and friendly. The same year, she starred in King Vidor’s thriller Lightning Strikes Twice, helping a suspected killer (the British actor Richard Todd) prove his innocence, and she teamed with Steve Cochran as lovers on the run after an accidental killing in Tomorrow Is Another Day. Neither of the last two films did very well, and the studio’s enthusiasm for their star waned. She was loaned to MGM to take third billing to Dorothy McGuire and Van Johnson in Invitation (1952) – Variety reported, “Ruth Roman gets rather short shrift in the footage and story interest” – and she supported Errol Flynn, coming to the end of his Warner career, in a modest treasure-hunt tale, Mara Maru (1952). In Blowing Wild (1953), she was third-billed to Gary Cooper and Barbara Stanwyck, and this ended her Warner career.

Freelancing, Roman had good roles in Anthony Mann’s western The Far Country (1955) and received some of her best notices for her role as a blackmail victim in Arthur Laven’s thriller Down Three Dark Streets (1954). Throughout her career, Roman would find her physical allure commented on more frequently than her acting. She and her fellow American Paul Douglas came to England in 1956 to film Ken Hughes’s Joe Macbeth – Shakespeare transposed to the world of gangsters in the 1930s.

It was after completing a film in Italy in 1956 that she was returning home with her son on the luxury liner the Andrea Doria when it was struck by another ship. More than 50 people died, though 760 survived. Roman said afterwards that she was dancing in the ship’s ballroom when “we heard a big explosion like a fire-cracker”. She saw smoke coming from the general area of her cabin and rushed there to protect her son. He was fast asleep so she awakened him and told him, “We’re going on a picnic.” When it was clear that the boat was sinking, and passengers began entering lifeboats, a seaman put her son into a boat. Roman was following down a rope ladder when the lifeboat pulled away and she was put on another one, but she and her son were safely reunited later.

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

After filming Nicholas Ray’s Bitter Victory (1956) with Richard Burton, Roman returned to the stage, touring successfully in Two for the Seesaw. One of her last films was Love Has Many Faces (1964), which starred Lana Turner and featured Roman and Virginia Grey as rich ladies seeking romance in Acapulco. Roman had been appearing on television since the early 1950s and as film roles became scarcer her television work became prolific, with guest appearances in over a hundred shows including Naked City, The Defenders, Burke’s Law, Outer Limits, Gunsmoke and, in the 1980s, Knots Landing.

In 1987 Roman made her first appearance on the series Murder, She Wrote, playing the gossipy owner of the town beauty salon, and she occasionally returned to the series to play the same role.

Ruth Roman, actress: born Lynn, Massachusetts 23 December 1923; married 1940 Jack Flaxman (marriage dissolved 1941), 1950 Mortimer Hall (one son; marriage dissolved 1955), 1956 Buddy Moss (marriage dissolved); died Laguna Beach, California 9 September 1999

Joan Lorring
Joan Lorring
Joan Lorring
Joan Lorring
Joan Lorring

Joan Lorring was born in 1926 in Hong Kong. She made her film debut in “Song of Russia” in 1944. She was Oscar nominated for her role in “The Corn Is Green” with Bette Davis and Mildred Dunnock. Other films incliude “The Bridge of San Luis Rey”, “Three Strangers”and “The Lost Moment”.

Her IMDB entry by Gary Brumburgh:

Joan Lorring was born Mary Magdalene Ellis in Hong Kong on April 17, 1926. She was forced to leave her native country after the outbreak of WWII and, along with her family, arrived in America as a teenager in 1939. After finding radio work in Los Angeles, the Anglo-Russian actress worked her way into films making a minor debut at age 18 in the romantic war drama Song of Russia (1944) and subsequently played the small part of Pepita in the ensemble suspenser The Bridge of San Luis Rey (1944).

The following year Joan won the coveted role of the scheming, trampish Bessie oppositeBette Davis in The Corn Is Green (1945), earning a Academy Award nomination for “best supporting actress” in the process. She may have lost the Oscar trophy that year to Anne Revere for National Velvet (1944) but Warner Brothers Studio was more than impressed with the up-and-comer and eagerly signed her up. Joan proved quite able in a number of juicy film noir parts, including Three Strangers (1946) and The Verdict (1946), both opposite the malevolent pairing of Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre.

Unexplicably her film career went into a rapid decline by the end of the decade. As a result she sought work elsewhere and maintained with stage, radio and small screen endeavors into the next decade. On Broadway she made her debut in the prime role of budding college student Marie who sets off the explosive dramatic action in “Come Back, Little Sheba” (1950) starring Shirley Booth and Sidney Blackmer. She continued with strong roles in “The Autumn Garden” (1951), “Dead Pigeon” (1953) and “A Clearing in the Woods” (1957). _Among her many 1950s dramatic showcases on TV was her portrayal of convicted ax-murderess Lizzie Borden’s sister Emma on an Alfred Hitchcock episode. In the 1970s, Joan made a mini comeback in the Burt Lancaster movie The Midnight Man(1974) as Cameron Mitchell‘s wife. She also performed on radio soap operas and appeared for a season on the TV soap Ryan’s Hope (1975) before phasing out her career once again. Long married to New York endocrinologist Dr. Martin Sonenberg, she is the mother of two daughters.

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

“LA Times” obituary from May 2014:

Joan Lorring, 88, who was nominated for an Oscar for her performance in the 1945 Bette Davis film “The Corn Is Green,” died Friday, said her daughter, Andrea Sonenberg. Lorring had been ill and died in a hospital in the New York City suburb of Sleepy Hollow.

Davis chose Lorring for the role of the scheming Bessie Watty in the late-19th century drama after reviewing screen tests of several actresses, according to the website of cable channel Turner Classic Movies. It was only the third film for Lorring.

Although Davis was known to speak her mind forceably on movie sets, Lorring said the star was greatly supportive of her. “I have only had one or two teachers in my life about whom I felt as strongly and positively as I did about Bette Davis,” Lorring said, according to the Turner Classic Movie website. Lorring lost the Academy Award for supporting actress to Anne Revere, who was in “National Velvet.”

Lorring went on to juicy parts in “Three Strangers” (1946) and “The Verdict” (1946), both opposite Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre, and she was in the 1951 film noir “The Big Night” directed by Joseph Losey.

She had numerous roles in early television series while also appearing on stage. In 1950, Lorring made her Broadway debut in the William Inge drama “Come Back, Little Sheba.” “As the blond and self-centered college girl,” New York Times critic Brooks Atkinson wrote in his review, “Joan Lorring gives a genuine and attractive performance.”

Lorring appeared on TV only a few times in the 1960s and 1970s but returned to play a role in the soap opera “Ryan’s Hope” in 1979. Her final credit was for a 1980 episode of “The Love Boat.”

She was born Madeline Ellis on April 17, 1926, in Hong Kong and moved to the U.S. in 1939. She was married to prominent endocrinologist Martin Sonenberg, who preceded her in death in 2011.

In addition to her daughter Andrea Sonenberg, she is survived by daughter Santha Sonenberg and two grandchildren.

Times staff and wire reports

news.obits@latimes.com

Barbara Rush
91 Barbara Rush
Barbara Rush

Barbara Rush was born in 1927 in Denver, Colorado.   She made her screen debut with “The Goldbergs” in 1951.   She starred among the major actors of the 1950’s including Marlon Brando, Paul Newman, James Mason, Rock Hudson and Tony Curtis.   Her film credits include “When Worlds Collide”, “Bigger Than Life” in 1956, “The Bramble Bush” and “Hombre” in 1967.   Recently she appeared as Stephen Collin#s mother in the very popular TV series “7th Heaven”.    Barbara Rush died aged 97 in 2024

Gary Brumburgh’s entry:

The epitome of poise, charm, style and grace, beautiful brunette Barbara Rush was born in Denver, Colorado in 1927 and enrolled at the University of California before working with the University Players and taking acting classes at the Pasadena Playhouse. It didn’t take long for talent scouts to spot her and, following a play performance, Paramount quickly signed her up in 1950, making her debut with The Goldbergs (1950). Just prior to this, she had met fellow actor Jeffrey Hunter, an incredibly handsome newcomer who would later become a “beefcake” bobbysoxer idol over at Fox. The two fell in love quickly and married in December of 1950. Soon, they were on their way to becoming one of Hollywood’s most beautiful and photogenic young couples. Their son Christopher was born in 1952.

While at Paramount, she was decorative in such assembly-line fare as When Worlds Collide (1951), Quebec (1951), The First Legion (1951), Flaming Feather (1952) andPrince of Pirates (1953). Universal picked up her option where she continued to provide love interest angles amid the action and derring-do with It Came from Outer Space(1953), Taza, Son of Cochise (1954) and The Black Shield of Falworth (1954). She finally got her break with the second lead femme role in the popular Jane Wyman tearjerkerMagnificent Obsession (1954), the movie that certified Rock Hudson as a top star. From there, Barbara’s own star began to ascend in more quality pictures. She co-starred opposite some of Hollywood’s top leading males in such glossy dramas as Bigger Than Life (1956) starring James MasonNo Down Payment (1957) with ex-husband Jeffrey Hunter (they had divorced in 1955), The Young Lions (1958) starring Montgomery Clift,Marlon Brando and Dean MartinThe Young Philadelphians (1959) alongside Paul NewmanThe Bramble Bush (1960) with Richard Burton and Strangers When We Meet(1960) with Kirk Douglas. In most cases, she played brittle wives, conniving “other women” or socialite girlfriend types.

Despite the “A” list movies Barbara was piling up, the one single role that could put her over the top never showed its face. By the early 60s, her film career started to decline. She married publicist Warren Cowan in 1959 and bore a second child, Claudia Cowan, in 1964. TV became a viable source of income for Barbara, appearing in scores of guest parts on the more popular shows of the time (Peyton Place (1964), Medical Center(1969), Ironside (1967)) while co-starring in standard mini-movie dramas. She even had a bit of fun playing a “guest villainess” on the Batman (1966) series as temptress “Nora Clavicle”. The stage also became a strong focus for Barbara, earning the Sarah Siddons Award for her starring role in “Forty Carats”. She made her Broadway debut in the one-woman 1980s showcase “A Woman of Independent Means”, which also subsequently earned her the Los Angeles Drama Critics Award during its tour. Other showcases included “Private Lives”, “Same Time, Next Year”, “The Night of the Iguana” and “Steel Magnolias”. The still-beautiful Ms. Rush occasionally graces the big and small screen these days, more recently in a recurring role on TV’s 7th Heaven (1996).

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

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TCM overview:

An attractive leading lady often cast in well-bred roles, Barbara Rush entered films at the tail end of the studio system, making her debut in a small role in “Molly” (1950), based on the popular radio show “The Goldbergs”. She went on to play leading ladies in some top pictures, but appeared in numerous forgettable ones before breaking into TV in the 1960s. Although Rush won her first leading roles in such Paramount films as “The First Legion” (1951), she is probably better remembered as Joan, the woman who loves Paul Newman even after he chooses a job over her hand in marriage, in “The Young Philadelphians” (1959), and opposite Frank Sinatra in “Come Blow Your Horn” (1963). She also had key roles in “The Young Lions” (1958), “The Man” (1972), and an amusing supporting role in “Can’t Stop the Music” (1980).

Rush first worked as a series regular playing a Washington newspaper correspondent in “Saints and Sinners” (NBC, 1962). She garnered some notice for her season-long (1968-69) stint as Marcia Russell on ABC’s primetime soap “Peyton Place”. Rush then tried her hand at comedy, portraying a temperamental soap opera star on “The New Dick Van Dyke Show” (CBS, 1973-74). In the early 80s, it was back to the real thing as the matriarch Eudora Weldon on NBC’s “Flamingo Road” (1981-82) and a brief turn on ABC’s daytime staple “All My Children”.

Approaching the age when actresses find roles difficult to land, Rush stayed active on stage appearing throughout the USA in such fluff as “Forty Carats” and “Same Time, Next Year”. She commissioned and earned rave reviews in the solo theatrical piece “A Woman of Independent Means”, based on the novel by Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey in New York and Los Angeles. More recently, Rush returned to the small screen appearing in the recurring role of Stephen Collins’ mother in “7th Heaven” (The WB

Barbara Rush died aged 97 in 2024

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Ty Hardin

The Times obituary :

Ty Hardin was a big television star playing the title character in the hit western series Bronco and so was not too keen on the idea of appearing in a low-budget Italian movie. Instead, the role went to the star of another TV western series, and while A Fistful of Dollars helped to transform Clint Eastwood into a Hollywood superstar, Hardin gradually slipped into obscurity via a Spanish prison cell and an unfulfilled attempt to become president of the US.

The actor, who was also mixed up in Christian fundamentalism and right-wing politics, had no regrets about turning down the landmark spaghetti western. “I didn’t like the film,” he said. “I’m not much [keen] on promoting the use of bad language, excess violence and total neglect [of] our judicial system of checks and balances — bad images for our kids and my Baptist grandmother would turn over in her grave.”

Ty Hardin appeared with Diana Dors in Berserk! (1967). He was married eight times
Ty Hardin appeared with Diana Dors in Berserk! (1967). He was married eight timesMOVIESTORE/REX/SHUTTERSTOCK

He did eventually jump on the bandwagon, but Savage Pampas (1966) did not exactly replicate the success of Eastwood’s breakthrough movie. And, to make matters worse, filming commitments in Europe meant that Hardin missed out on the chance to play Batman in what became one of the big hits of American television in the 1960s.

A descendant of William Whipple, one of the signatories of the American Declaration of Independence, Hardin was born as Orison Whipple Hungerford Jr in New York City on New Year’s Day 1930. His parents separated when he was an infant and he grew up on his grandparents’ farm in Texas.

He acquired the nickname Ty from his grandmother, who said that he was like “a Texas typhoon coming through the house”. He had behavioural problems and was sent to military school, ran away and was reunited with his mother in Houston.

In a 1958 publicity portrait for BroncoWARNER BROTHERS TELEVISION/ GETTY IMAGES

He went to college on a football scholarship, served in the US army as a pilot in West Germany, studied electrical engineering back in Texas and took a job with Douglas Aircraft in California. He was spotted by a talent scout while shopping for a Hallowe’en costume and invited to take a screen test with Paramount Pictures, which led to a seven-year contract with a starting salary twice that of his engineer’s pay. Over the next few years he appeared in a wide variety of films, including I Married a Monster from Outer Space (1958), under the name Ty Hungerford.

The strong-jawed Hardin looked like a classic Wild West hero: he could rope and ride, and he hoped to get a part in the western Rio Bravo. Although he was unsuccessful, its star John Wayne introduced him to William T Orr at Warner Bros Television. It was the heyday of the television western series, including Cheyenne with Clint Walker. When Walker fell out with Warner Bros over his contract, the studio was left with a hit show with no star.

Orr bought out Hungerford’s contract with Paramount, changed his name to Hardin — after the outlaw John Wesley Hardin — and cast him in Cheyenne as Bronco Layne, a taciturn former Confederate officer drifting through various adventures and jobs, including deputy US marshal, undercover agent, wagon train boss and ranch hand. When Walker returned to Cheyenne, Warners rebranded Layne’s adventures as Bronco. Between 1958 and 1962 Hardin appeared in 68 episodes, rubbing shoulders with Wild West legends such as Jesse James and Billy the Kid.

Hardin appeared with Jeff Chandler in Merrill’s Marauders (1962). He also had roles in Battle of the Bulge (1965) and Berserk! (1967) with Diana Dors before pursuing his career in Europe and Australia, where he took the role of an American running a charter boat operation in the series Riptide (1969).

Irene Tsu
Irene Tsu
Irene Tsu

Irene Tsu was born in 1943 in Shangai in China.   She was raised in San  Francisco.   She was a featured dancer in the film “Flower Drum Song” in 1961.   Her other films include “Take Her, She’s Mine” with James Stewart and Sandra Dee,  “Paradise Hawaiian Style” with Elvis Presley and “The Green Berets” with John Wayne.

TCM Overview:

Irene Tsu was an actress who was no stranger to being featured in numerous film roles throughout her Hollywood career. Early on in her acting career, Irene Tsu landed roles in various films, including the Jack Lemmon comedy adaptation “Under the Yum Yum Tree” (1963), the James Stewart comedic adaptation “Take Her, She’s Mine” (1963) and the Shirley MacLaine comedy “John Goldfarb, Please Come Home” (1964). She also appeared in “Seven Women” (1965), the Annette Funicello comedy “How to Stuff a Wild Bikini” (1965) and the Elvis Presley musical “Paradise Hawaiian Style” (1966). Her film career continued throughout the seventies and the eighties in productions like “Hot Potato” (1975) with Jim Kelly, “Paper Tiger” (1975) and “Down and Out in Beverly Hills” (1986). She held additional roles in television including a part on “The Single Guy” (NBC, 1995-97). She also was featured in the TV movies “Widow’s Kiss” (HBO, 1995-96) and “Tell Me No Secrets” (ABC, 1996-97). Most recently, Irene Tsu acted on “Law & Order: LA” (NBC, 2010-11).

The above TCM Overview can also be accessed online here.

For article on Irene Tsu by in Cinema Retro Tom Lisanti, please click here.

Beatrice Straight
Beatrice Straight
Beatrice Straight

Beatrice Straight obituary in “The Telegraph” in 2001.

Beatrice Straight was born in Old Westbury, New York in 1914 into a wealthy family.   She made her Broadway debut in 1939 in the play “Possessed”.   Most of her career was spent on stage and television with only sporodic  film appearances.   Her film debut was in 1952 in “Phone Call from a Stranger”.   She was excellent as the Mother Superior in “The Nun’s Story” in 1959.   She won an Acadmey Award for her performance opposite William Holden in “Network”.   She is also remembered for her role as Lynda Carter’s mother in “Wonder Woman” on television.   Beatrice Straight was married to the actor Peter Cookson.   She died in 2001 at the age of 86 in Los Angeles.

Her obituary from the “Telegraph”:

BEATRICE STRAIGHT, who has died in Los Angeles aged 86, won an Academy Award for best supporting actress for her portrayal of William Holden’s long suffering wife in Sidney Lumet’s Network (1976).   The film tells the story of a network news commentator who starts to speak his mind on live television, and gave Americans the catchphrase “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take this any more!”.   Beatrice Straight’s role of a wife struggling to keep her sanity after being left for a younger woman was one of her most high-profile Hollywood performances: she later said that “nobody knew from where I came before Network, and afterwards few cared where I went”.   Her other film roles included Dr Lesh, the investigator of the paranormal in Poltergeist (1982) and Mother Christophe in The Nun’s Story (1959), with Audrey Hepburn.

Beatrice Whitney Straight was born on August 2 1914 at Old Westbury, Long Island, New York. Her father was a diplomat, while her mother was a Whitney dynasty heiress and cousin to Gloria Vanderbilt. Beatrice Straight was sent to private schools in England and Scotland, and retained a fondness for Britain.   She decided early on to pursue a career in acting and had a string of excellent teachers, including Michael Chekhov. She made her Broadway debut in 1935 in Bitter Oleander.   Beatrice Straight’s portrayal of Lady Macduff in Macbeth (1945) was described by one critic as “As good as it gets.” After this, she was the lead in The Heiress; her co-star was the actor Peter Cookson, whom she later married.   In 1953, Beatrice Straight was awarded a Tony for best supporting actress for her portrayal of a Puritan accused of witchcraft in the original Broadway production of Arthur Miller’s The Crucible.

But she soon felt that “Hollywood was where it was at” and she and Cookson decided to try their luck there. She later remarked: “Marriage to actors seldom work as one partner often gets jealous of the roles given to the other and vice versa. Neither one of us were big stars so that helped.”   Beatrice Straight’s first part was in Phone Call from a Stranger (1952), which starred Bette Davis. There followed television roles in Love of Life, a long-running soap opera, and as Cynthia Fortman in Special Delivery, part of the Alfred Hitchcock Presents series.   Other roles during the 1950s included Goneril in an ABC adaptation of King Lear (1953) and parts in the 1956 films Patterns and The Silken Affair, with David Niven.   During the 1960s, Beatrice Straight concentrated on her family, but appeared in The Young Lovers (1964) and gave a wonderfully over-the-top performance as Dr Martha Richards in the television series Mission Impossible (1966).   Beatrice Straight won a legion of fans with appearances as the “Queen Mother” in the wildly camp series Wonder Woman in 1976. The next year she helped to found an acting school in New York, where she and Cookson lectured between filming.   Most of Beatrice Straight’s roles during the 1970s were on television; she received an Emmy nomination for her role as the matriarch in the mini-series The Dain Curse (1978).

In 1985, she played Rose Kennedy in Robert Kennedy & His Times, and had a long-running stint in St Elsewhere. Her final role was as Goldie Hawn’s mother in Deceived (1991).   She married, in 1949, Peter Cookson; he died in 1990. They had one son.

The “Telegraph” obituary can be accessed on here.

TCM overview:

A classically trained actress with extensive stage experience, Beatrice Straight made her mark on film late in her career, but did so with indelible performances that made the most of her keen intelligence and aristocratic manner. A member of the now legendary Group Theater from its inception, Straight won a Tony award for Best Actress in 1953 for her performance as Elizabeth Proctor in “The Crucible.” She also worked frequently in television, beginning in the medium’s early live broadcast era and appearing consistently in TV movies and series until the end of the 1980s. She had appeared in just four feature films before she won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance as Louis Schumacher in Sydney Lumet’s “Network” (1975). Straight held the record for the briefest performance to win an Oscar – a scant five minutes and 40 seconds of screen time. Regardless, in a dazzling display of acting prowess, Straight portrayed the full gamut of the devastated Schumacher’s emotions in a single, intense scene in which her husband, (William Holden), confesses to an affair. The Oscar win brought Straight greater recognition, but also typecast the versatile actress for the first time in her career. From that point, she predominantly played severe matriarchal roles, such as the brittle Dr. Lesh in “Poltergeist” (1982). Having honed her craft in a long and celebrated stage career, Beatrice Straight established a remarkable screen presence as a character actress with finely drawn performances that were as powerful as they were rare.

Beatrice Whitney Straight was born on Aug. 2, 1914 in Old Westbury, NY, the daughter of investment banker Willard Dickerman, a business associate of J.P. Morgan who provided the initial financing for the long-running political magazine The New Republic, and Dorothy Payne, whose family was one of New York’s wealthiest and most socially prestigious. When Dickerman died of influenza on the front lines of WWI, her mother married English agronomist Leonard Elmhirst and raised Straight in both London and New York. An early interest in theater led to extensive acting training with legendary teachers including Michael Chekov, and the Group Theater’s Robert Lewis. Straight was a member of the Group Theater from its founding, and her classmates included Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift and Patricia O’Neal. She made her first appearance on Broadway at the age of 21 in the 1935 production of “Bitter Oleander,” and over the following two decades she rose to the top of her profession with a series of critically-acclaimed performances, including Lady MacDuff in Michael Redgrave’s 1948 production of “MacBeth,” and steadfast puritan Elizabeth Proctor in the 1953 production of “The Crucible,” for which she won a Tony award for Best Actress. Straight began acting in television in the medium’s early live days on such series as “Somerset Maugham Theater” (CBS, 1950-51; NBC, 1951) and “Lights Out” (NBC, 1946-1952). In 1952, she also broke into feature films playing a devoted widow mourning Michael Rennie in “Phone Call from a Stranger.”

Straight worked almost constantly on television throughout the 1950s and ’60s in seminal series like “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” (CBS, 1955-1960; NBC, 1960-62), “Route 66” (CBS, 1960-64) and “Mission: Impossible” (CBS, 1966-1973), as well as in the 1953 broadcast of “King Lear” starring Orson Welles (CBS). Her work in film was more sporadic, however. Despite the positive reception of her performance in “Phone Call from a Stranger,” it was four years before she would appear on the big screen again. “Patterns” (1956), starring Van Heflin and written by Rod Serling, featured Straight as young engineer Heflin’s worried wife. That same year, she also appeared in “The Silken Affair” (1956), a lackluster British comedy starring David Niven. It was another three years before she appeared as Mother Christophe in “The Nun’s Story” (1959), starring Audrey Hepburn. The latter film was nominated for eight Academy Awards including Best Picture, but there would be another long absence from the movies before Straight returned in “The Young Lovers” (1964), starring Peter Fonda, and another eight before she won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in “Network” (1976). It was the briefest performance to ever win an Oscar, with just under six minutes of screen time, but the economy of the performance was perhaps its greatest strength, showcasing Straight’s startlingly genuine spectrum of emotions in a single scene in which her husband, played by William Holden, confesses to an affair with a younger woman.

 

By John CryeThe above TCM overview can also be accessed online here.

 

Having garnered popular attention after such a long and varied career, the then 62-year-old Straight found herself typecast for the first time, playing imperious, often emotionally brittle older women. She had embodied that type on television on “The New Adventures of Wonder Woman” (NBC, 1975-79) playing the Queen Mother of the Amazons, and in her first starring role in a television series, playing the matriarch of a wealthy California family on the short-lived “King’s Crossing” (ABC, 1982). She also began to accept more roles in film, though her selection of material was strictly limited by her desire to work solely with producers, directors, and actors of the highest caliber. “The Formula” (1980) starring George C. Scott and Marlon Brando, Franco Zeffirelli’s “Endless Love” (1981) and Sydney Lumet’s “Power” (1981) were among the few to satisfy Straight’s stringent criteria. Easily her best-known role from that later period was the prickly but comforting paranormal investigator Dr. Lesh in the Steven Spielberg-produced horror film “Poltergeist” (1982). In 1985, she delivered a powerful performance as another imperious matriarch, Rose Kennedy, in the miniseries “Robert Kennedy and His Times” (CBS, 1985). After a final feature appearance playing Goldie Hawn’s mother in the psychological thriller “Deceived” (1991), Straight retired from acting at the age of 77. She died on April 7, 2001 in Los Angeles from pneumonia, following a period of declining health due to Alzheimer’s disease.

Pat Boone

Pat Boone. TCM Overview.

Pat Boone
Pat Boone

Pat Boone was in the 1950’s nearly as popular a recording star as Elvis Presley.   He had a string of hits including “Love Letters in the Sand”, “Friendly Persuasion”, “Moody River”and “Ain’t that a Shame”.   He was also groomed by 20th Century Fox as a movie star.   He was born in 1934 in Jacksonville in Florida.   His first film came in 1957 with “Bernadine”.   He went on to make “April Love” with Shirley Jones, “Mardi Gras”, “Journey to the Centre of the Earth”, “State Fair” and “The Main Attraction”.   In 1963 he made “Never Put it in Writing” in Ireland.   He has continued to perform in concerts all over the U.S. and is still very popular.

TCM Overview:

Though frequently dismissed by critics and music cognoscenti as the ultimate whitebread performer, the undeniable fact remained that Pat Boone was one of the most successful pop music performers of the 20th century, with over 30 Top 40 hits to his name, as well as an actor, television host, philanthropist and businessman. The key to Boone’s appeal in the 1950s and early 1960s was his ability to translate R&B and rock songs by black artists into smooth, palatable pop for white audiences, including gently boppy takes on “Tutti Fruitti,” “I Almost Lost My Mind” and “Long Tall Sally.” Though his versions of the songs lacked the intensity and sexual heat of Elvis Presley’s material, both men found their fame from the same material, and though they took completely divergent paths in their careers, both could be ultimately credited for both legitimizing rock and roll for mass audiences and bringing attention to black artists in a period when mainstream radio refused to play their music. Boone’s time in the pop spotlight faded with the arrival of The Beatles, but he remained a fixture of Christian music and secular television for the next four decades. No matter what one thought of Boone, his music or his image, the sheer scope of his work as a singer and entertainer was impossible to deny.

Born Charles Eugene Boone in Jacksonville, FL on June 1, 1934, Pat Boone was the oldest of four children by parents Archie Boone, a contractor, and his wife Margaret, who was a registered nurse. Boone was raised primarily in Nashville, TN, where he moved with his family when he was two years old. After graduating from David Lipscomb High School in 1952, he married Shirley Foley, daughter of famed country star Red Foley, and attended David Lipscomb University before transferring to the University of North Texas and later Columbia University, from which he graduated magna cum laude in 1958. Though he was a devout Christian, he as also an avowed admirer of such crooners as Bing Crosby and Perry Como. However, he never considered pursuing music for a career; instead focusing on teaching high school. But after winning a talent contest while at North Texas, he began a long stint on such popular TV and radio talent programs as “The Ted Mack Amateur Hour” (DuMont/ABC/NBC/CBS, 1948-1954) and “The Arthur Godfrey Show” (CBS, 1949-1959).

Signed to a contract with the micro label Republic Records, he began his singing career in 1954 with the intent of following in the footsteps of Como. However, he was convinced by Randy Wood, owner of Dot Records, to record covers of songs by popular black artists, who at the time, could not get their material played on mainstream, white-owned radio stations. In 1955, Boone recorded a fairly sedate if poppy take on Fats Domino’s “Ain’t That a Shame.” The record shot to the top spot on the U.S. charts and established Boone – always impeccably dressed in tasteful clothes and a pair of spotless white bucks – as a worry-free artist for both teens and parents to enjoy. Over the next half-decade, Boone would record a handful of other R&B and rock hits including Little Richard’s “Tutti Fruitti” and “Long Tall Sally,” The Orioles’ “It’s Too Soon To Know,” and Ivory Joe Hunter’s venerable “I Almost Lost My Mind,” which became his second of many No. 1 hits. Though purists gritted their teeth over his sanitized versions, their popularity was a considerable benefit to the original artists. A famous story about Fats Domino recounted him flashing a massive ring to a concert audience and stating that the royalties from Boone’s cover had bought him the bauble, while Hunter enjoyed a career revival thanks to Boone. The covers also did much to legitimize rock and roll as a viable music genre during a period when it was considered an almost criminal action to play or listen to it.

In addition to his rock material, Boone also recorded dozens of ballads, romantic numbers and pop tracks, including “Love Letters in the Sand” and “April Love.” By the early 1960s, he had 38 Top 40 hits, and was the second most popular artist of the 1950s, with only Elvis Presley ahead of him in terms of sales and fandom. It was only natural that he would segue into a career in front of the camera, which he began in 1957 as the host of “The Pat Boone-Chevy Showroom” (ABC, 1957-1960), a good-natured variety show that began his long association with General Motors and its Chevrolet line.

At the time, he was only 23 – and still a student at Columbia – which made him the youngest person to ever host a weekly primetime variety series until Donny and Marie Osmond broke his record in 1976. The series remained at the top of the Nielsen charts throughout its network tenure before the Boone family moved to Los Angeles, bringing the show to an end.

That same year, he made his acting debut in “Bernadine” (1957), a harmless romantic comedy-musical that also featured Boone’s rendition of the title song. He would go on to play upstanding young men with the purest of intentions in several major films, including “April Love” (1957) and “State Fair” (1962), and held his own opposite James Mason in the science fiction epic, “Journey to the Center of the Earth” (1959).

However, Hollywood and Boone were never a perfect match; Boone refused to participate in romantic scenes, as he felt it would compromise his beliefs about marriage. That stance, when combined with his wholesome offscreen image, made it difficult for him to find substantive parts, despite his campaigns for serious roles like the lead in “The Sand Pebbles” (1962). Only a turn as a cold-hearted father who consigns his son to a draconian military academy on an episode of “Night Gallery” (NBC, 1970-72) broke his typecasting. He ended his film-acting career with a cameo as the angel at the cave where Christ was interred in “The Greatest Story Ever Told” (1967) and as pastor David Wilkerson, who helped reform wayward youth, in the film version of “The Cross and the Switchblade” (1970).

Despite the stalemate in Hollywood, Boone remained an exceptionally popular recording artist and guest star on television series and talk shows. He enjoyed countless Top 40 and 50 hits through 1962, including a massive No. 1 with 1961’s “Moody River,” and penned the lyrics to “The Exodus Song,” Ernest Gold’s emotional theme to the 1960 film “Exodus.”

Boone also found success as a writer, penning numerous self-help books for his young fans, including Twixt Twelve and Twenty (1958), which provided answers for teenage dilemmas.

His pop music career eventually became one of the many casualties of the British Invasion, so he moved successfully into gospel and country songs, while diversifying in a number of directions, including head of the Christian label Lamb and Lion Records, and spokesman for a wide variety of charities, including the March of Dimes and the Easter Seal telethon.

Boone was also the majority owner of the Oakland Oaks, an American Basketball Association team that won the 1969 ABA championship. An ardent supporter of Republican causes, Boone most notably supported Ronald Reagan’s campaign for governor of California in 1966 and 1970.

In the 1970s, Boone toured with his daughters Cheryl Lynn, Linda Lee, Laura Gene and Deborah Ann – the latter of whom later scored a substantial No. 1 pop hit with 1977’s “You Light Up My Life” before segueing into country and gospel.

Her father continued to record throughout the decade and into the 1980s, while adding television station owner and syndicated radio show host to his ever-expanding résumé. Eventually, he moved away from the music business altogether to concentrate on his business and charitable opportunities.

In 1997, Boone displayed a quirky sense of humor by releasing “No More Mr. Nice Guy,” a collection of hard rock and heavy metal tunes done in what could best be described as “Pat Boone style” – ear friendly big band orchestrations. Boone appeared on the American Music Awards that year bedecked in leather, which earned him a dismissal from the Trinity Broadcasting Network’s “Gospel America” program.

The 21st century found Boone reaping the rewards of his long and prolific career.,

The above TCM overview can also be accessed online here.

Elaine Stewart

Elaine Stewart obituary in “The Guardian”.

“Guardian” obituary:

The seductive brunette Elaine Stewart, who has died aged 81, may have lacked that ineffable essence that makes up star quality, but she had enough allure to attract attention in several glossy Hollywood movies in the 1950s, both in leading parts and noteworthy supporting roles. Among the best of the latter were her brief though memorable appearances in two films directed by Vincente Minnelli.

She was both bad and beautiful in The Bad and the Beautiful (1952) as Lila, a wannabe film star, hoping to make it by sleeping with Jonathan Shields (Kirk Douglas), the studio head. When told that Shields is a great man, Lila responds, “There are no great men, buster. There’s only men.” The scene which lingers most in the mind is when Georgia Lorrison (Lana Turner), who has just triumphed in a Shields movie, leaves a party to be with him at his Hollywood mansion. While she is embracing Shields, Lila’s shadow looms over them. Then Georgia notices Lila at the top of the stairs, barefoot, wearing a slinky dress, a martini glass in hand. “I thought you said you were going to get rid of her quick,” says Lila. “The picture’s finished, Georgia. You’re business, I’m company.”

Her sequence in Brigadoon (1954) begins with a violent cut from the picturesque Scottish village in the Highlands to a bustling Manhattan bar where Stewart, as Gene Kelly’s Park Avenue fiancee, is chatting away about the wedding and shopping. Kelly, whose inner ear is listening to the music to which he had danced with a Scottish lass (Cyd Charisse), doesn’t hear a word the self-absorbed Stewart is saying. A stark contrast is created between the two women: the dream girl and the real thing. Ironically, unlike Kelly, Minnelli was pleased to get away from the feyness and painted scenery of the wilds of Scotland to revel in the noisy bar where the metropolitan Stewart is quite at home.

She was born Elsy Steinberg in New Jersey, one of five children of German-Jewish parents. After a few jobs, she was taken on in her late teens by the Conover modelling agency in New York, which worked with the leading magazines of the day. She was soon getting photo layouts, one of which caught the eye of producer Hal B Wallis at Paramount, who cast her as a sexy navy nurse in the Dean Martin-Jerry Lewis comedy Sailor Beware (1952). Stewart made the most of her one scene when she brushes off a pass by Martin, who is told, “When it comes to sailors, she’s colder than a deep freeze.” However, a few minutes later she is seen, to Martin’s astonishment, to be kissing Lewis.

The sequence was enough to land her an MGM contract, and she was offered a few decorative bit parts, culminating in The Bad and the Beautiful. In 1953, she got leading roles opposite Mickey Rooney (A Slight Case of Larceny), Ralph Meeker (Code Two) and Richard Widmark (Take the High Ground!). She is touching in the last of these, her meatiest role, as a neurotic war widow who comes between army sergeants played by Widmark and Karl Malden.

In a very full year, Stewart was also seen losing her head as Anne Boleyn in Young Bess, and was the subject of a Life magazine cover story entitled Budding Starlet Visits the Folks in Jersey. Despite the fact that Stewart had passed the “budding starlet” phase, it was typical of the way she was often characterised.

In 1954, on loan from MGM, she starred in The Adventures of Hajji Baba, a piece of Hollywood exotica, playing, rather more erratically than erotically, an oriental princess being escorted across the desert by John Derek (in the title role) to marry a powerful prince. When told she is extremely innocent, the 24-year-old Stewart replies, “Whose fault is that? Here I am 17 and unwedded. My sisters and cousins were married at 14! I have wasted three years and I will waste no more!”

Having lost a role in The Opposite Sex (1956) to Joan Collins, Stewart left MGM to take on a two-picture deal with Universal, who changed her hair colour to quicksilver blonde. As she told a fan magazine, “To go with my hair, all my jewellery is silver. I have a new silver Mercedes to drive and a silver poodle named Clicquot. I use silver nail polish and eat off silver dishes. And I sleep in a silver bed.”

In the film noir The Tattered Dress (1957), Stewart is seen in the sensational credit sequence having her dress ripped by her lover, then driving home drunk to her jealous husband. The New York Times’s critic, Bosley Crowther, wrote that “Stewart is provocative enough … to distract an avowed misogynist.” She was a little more restrained in Night Passage (1957), in which she tries to stir up past longings in James Stewart on a mission for her wealthy husband. The best of her last few parts was as a treacherous gangster’s moll in The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond (1960), which she made after posing nude for Playboy magazine.

Stewart had a short marriage to the actor Bill Carter and, in 1964, married the television producer Merrill Heatter. She retired for a while to start a family, then made a comeback in the 1970s as a host on two TV gameshows, Gambit and High Rollers, on which her husband was executive producer.

Stewart is survived by Merrill and their son, Stewart, and daughter, Gabrielle.

• Elaine Stewart (Elsy Steinberg), actor; born 31 May 1930; died 27 June 2011

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

Harve Presnell

Harve Presnell obituary in “The Guardian” in 2009.

“Guardian” obituary:

The Hollywood musical has produced several powerful, handsome baritones, the best of them being Nelson Eddy, Howard Keel and Harve Presnell. Unfortunately, Presnell, who has died of pancreatic cancer aged 75, came into the film musical when it was in a rather moribund state. However, he managed to sustain a singing career in stage musicals, where his rich operatic voice could be appreciated, and later, thanks to the Coen brothers’ Fargo (1996), he had a second coming as an imposing character actor on the big screen.

The dramatic strength and beauty of his voice can best be judged in his first film, The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964), in which he played a backwoods prospector who strikes it rich. The 6ft 4in Presnell had created the role of Johnny “Leadville” Brown in Meredith Willson’s musical on Broadway four years previously, opposite Tammy Grimes in the title role of his wife, who survives the sinking of the Titanic. The film version, in which Debbie Reynolds was his buoyant partner, allowed Presnell to open up his lungs and sing I’ll Never Say No and Colorado My Home against the CinemaScope background of Black Canyon National Park in Colorado. According to the Variety critic: “Harve Presnell … makes a generally auspicious screen debut … His fine, booming voice and physical stature make him a valuable commodity for Hollywood.” This was not to be. Presnell was to make only four more feature films during the next three decades, only two of them musicals.

He was born in Modesto, California. After graduating from Modesto high school, he studied voice at the University of Southern California, although he first went there on a sports scholarship. After university, he performed with the Roger Wagner Chorale and can be heard as soloist on their Christmas album Joy to the World, as well as on Folk Songs of the New World and Folk Songs of the Frontier. In 1960, he recorded the baritone part in Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana with the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy.

Willson had heard Presnell singing at a concert in Berlin and immediately suggested him for the part of Johnny Brown on Broadway. The Unsinkable Molly Brown ran for more than 500 performances, with Presnell gaining glowing reviews. After the successful film adaptation, Presnell, his hair dyed blond, was in the misguided swinging 60s version of George Gershwin’s Girl Crazy, retitled When the Girls Meet the Boys (1965), but he got to sing the evergreen Embraceable You. There were no songs in The Glory Guys (1965), a Cavalry vs Indians western that focused mainly on the rivalry between Captain Tom Tryon and scout Presnell over pretty Senta Berger. The two men have a semi-comic fight on a staircase, finally learning mutual respect. Although Presnell lost the girl, his performance won the most plaudits.

Presnell’s last screen musical was Joshua Logan’s elephantine Paint Your Wagon (1969), in which he was the only true singer: his virile rendition of They Call the Wind Maria shows up the inadequate warbling of Lee Marvin, Clint Eastwood and Jean Seberg. After a low-budget horror movie, Blood Bath (1975), Presnell’s film career was on hold until 1996.

In the intervening years, Presnell starred in a number of musicals, including the doomed Gone With the Wind at Drury Lane in 1972, in which he had the dubious privilege of playing Rhett Butler, and a revival of Annie Get Your Gun (1977) in San Francisco opposite Reynolds, formerly his Molly Brown. But his biggest success was as Daddy Warbucks in the long-running Annie, in which he toured from 1979 to 1981, and then took over the role on Broadway for two years. He continued to play Warbucks in Annie 2: Miss Hannigan’s Revenge, which folded during its Washington tryout, and in another version of the story off-Broadway called Annie Warbucks in 1993. Presnell calculated that he played Little Orphan Annie’s millionaire benefactor more than 2,000 times.

For Presnell, 1996 was an annus mirabilis; he appeared in no less than four feature films, and three television shows, including an episode of Star Trek: Voyager. Most significant was his role as Wade Gufstason in Joel and Ethan Coen’s film Fargo. Presnell, who had a dialogue coach to teach him the Minnesotan accent, played William H Macy’s despotic father-in-law. Now bald and with a considerable girth, Presnell was a long way from the handsome young singer of the early 60s. “He actually did a ‘dancin’ in the snow’ musical number but we cut it out for length,” joked Joel Coen.

His other movies of that year were Larger Than Life, The Whole Wide World and The Chamber, in all of which he used his commanding voice playing authoritarian figures. From then on, in marked contrast to the lean years, Presnell was never short of work, whether guest starring in TV series such as Dawson’s Creek (2001) and Andy Barker P.I. (2007), or appearing as General George Marshall in Steven Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan (1998), or as a congressman in his last film, Evan Almighty (2007).

Presnell is survived by his second wife, Veeva, and six children, three from each of his marriages.

• Harve (George Harvey) Presnell, actor and singer, born 14 September 1933; died 30 June 2009