Hollywood Actors

Collection of Classic Hollywood Actors

John Lone
John Lone

John Lone

John Lone

John Lone

John LoneJohn Lone was born in 1952 in Hong Kong.   He trained at the Peking Opera.   He continued his studies in the performing arts in California

TCM overview:

A strikingly handsome, lithe and somewhat androgynous Hong Kong-born actor of film and stage, John Lone became established on stage initially via several collaborations with playwright David Henry Hwang. On film, he is probably best recalled for his portrayal of Emperor Pu Yi in Bernardo Bertolucci’s lavish, Oscar-winning epic “The Last Emperor” (1987). Orphaned as a young boy, Lone began rigorously training as an actor at the Chin Ciu Academy of the Peking Opera in Hong Kong at age 10. He resided at the school for eight years, undergoing all day training in acting, singing, dance, mime, poetry, weaponry, acrobatics, and martial arts.

At age 18, Lone moved to America and settled in Los Angeles where he quickly snared small roles on film and TV, as well as joined the East-West Players. After earning attention for his performance in David Henry Hwang’s “F.O.B.” in L.A., he headed to NYC to recreate the role Off-Broadway in 1981, netting an OBIE Award. The playwright then wrote “Dance and the Railroad” specifically for Lone who starred in, directed, choreographed and scored the production at the Public Theatre.

The movies soon beckoned and Lone made an impact with an impressive nonverbal performance as a defrosted caveman in “Iceman” (1984), following up with “Year of the Dragon” (1985), playing a ruthless Chinese Mafia boss. Here, without mounds of obscuring makeup, he displayed his glamorous movie-star looks to the American public for the first time.

Lone has not had a prolific feature career, apparently by choice. He shifts back-and-forth from stage to screen, directing to acting. He has a successful pop singing career in Asia as well as and his own lines of cosmetics and apparel. The actor has made quirky film choices opting for roles in foreign and small independent films (e.g., Alan Rudolph’s “The Moderns” 1988) rather than standard commercial Hollywood fare. Lone continued in this vein with David Cronenberg’s film version of Hwang’s “M. Butterfly” (1993), where he played the Asian object of desire of a French diplomat (Jeremy Irons). Subsequent high profile feature roles have cast the handsome player as nefarious types. In 1994’s “The Shadow”, Lone was the descendent of Genghis Khan battling Alec Baldwin’s Lamont Cranston, while “The Hunted” (1995) saw him portray a cold-blooded assassin. After a long absence, Lone graced US audiences with his charismatic presence playing yet another suave ganglord in “Rush Hour 2” (2001).

The above TCM overview can also be accessed online here.

Cathy O’Donnell
Cathy O'Donnell
Cathy O’Donnell
Cathy O'Donnell
Cathy O’Donnell

Cathy O’Donnell was born in 1923 in Alabama.   Although she did not make many movies, she has an unusually high number of great calibre of film among her credts – “The Best Years of Our Lives” in 1946, “They Live By Night” and “Side Street”, both opposite Farley Granger, “Detective Story” , “The Man From Laramie” with James Stewart and “Ben-Hur” in 1959.    She died at the age of 46 in 1970.

IMDB entry:

She was in Alabama until age 12, Ann Steely attended high school and college in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, then worked as a stenographer to finance a trip to Hollywood, where fortune favored her with a contract at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer under Samuel Goldwyn. Recognizing her talent and appeal through a thick Southern accent, Goldwyn arranged rigorous voice & theatrical training at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and elsewhere, gave her an Irish-sounding stage name & cast her in The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). This film’s success boded well for Cathy’s career, and soon she was starred in the now-classic They Live by Night (1948). However, her rise in films was checked when, on Sunday, April 11th, 1948, at age 23, she married 48-year-old Robert Wyler, older brother of famous M-G-M director, William Wyler, with whom Goldwyn was feuding. The irate Goldwyn abruptly canceled her contract; thereafter she had no lasting association with any studio or producer. Her most memorable roles of the 1950s were in classic film-noir such as Detective Story (1951), which typifies her sincere, believable performances as a sweet girl-next-door whose radiant inner beauty shone through an exterior not quite fitting the Hollywood glamor mold. Her last film and most famous, wasBen-Hur (1959), and then she worked in TV until 1961. Belying Goldwyn’s opinion, her marriage to Wyler proved happy though childless. Her death on their 22nd wedding anniversary, on Saturday, April 11th, 1970 followed a long struggle with cancer.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Rod Crawford <puffinus@u.washington.edu>

The above IMDB entry can also be accessed online here.

Sharon Hugheny
Sharon Hugheny

Sharon Hugueny.

Sharon Hugheny was a beautiful young actress who starred in a few movies in the early 1960’s.   At  17 she starred with Troy Donahue in “Parrish” and went on to star in “The Young Lovers” with Peter Fonda  and “The Caretakers” in 1963 with Joan Crawford.   She died in 1996 at the age of 52.

IMDB entry:

Sharon Elizabeth Hugueny was a leap-year baby, born February 29, 1944, in Los Angeles, California. She was an intelligent, introspective, and sensitive child that preferred serious reading, writing, and music to the “more frivolous” interests of her peers. Sharon’s parents – a World War II Navy veteran and his wife – were loving-but notoriously strict with their three children (Sharon, a younger brother, born in 1950, and a sister born, in 1957). Any boy interested in dating teen-aged Sharon was reportedly required to pass two interviews plus a car inspection before being allowed to take her out. However, when famous talent-scout, Warner Bros.’ Solly Biano, spotted Sharon in a theatrical production of “Blue Denim” when she was fifteen, her parents did allow her to meet producer/director Delmer Daves and to accept the contract offered to her by Mr. Jack Warner. Sharon signed that seven-year contract on her 16th birthday. Under Warner’s personal guidance, she quickly began a performing guest-star on appearances in all of Warners’ television programs, such as “Lawman” (1958), and “Maverick”(1957), where she received her first on-screen-kiss from star Roger Moore (and off-screen kisses from Peter Brown of Lawman, and Wilderness Family’s Robert Logan}.

While filming Parrish in 1961, actor (later, Producer-and-President of Paramount, Mr. Robert Evans) visited her set and was immediately bedazzled by breathtaking Sharon, whose dark beauty earned frequent comparisons by Hedda Hopper and Louella Parsons to Elizabeth Taylor. Evans’ feeling for Sharon was reciprocated; and so, seventeen-year-old Sharon began dating the thirty-one-year-old Evans, much to the dismay of her parents, friends, and studio. Within weeks the two became engaged and then, on May 28, 1961, married. Unfortunately, their union was doomed from the start. Sharon was, by all accounts, extremely mature for her age; yet Evans seemed to regard her as a child, not as a wife. Their relationship deteriorated. At one time, Mr. Evans abandoned California for his clothing business, Evan Picone, located in New York, which effectively broke her motion picture- and -television contract with Warner’s. This uprooting had taken Sharon thousands of miles from her family, work, and friends; furthermore, Warner Brothers placed her on suspension. (Evans later said that “taking Sharon to New York was like forcing a Persian cat into the Amazon.”) In Mexico, less than six months after they married, he arranged for a quick, no alimony, divorce, which confused his naive wife.

Sharon’s career, unfortunately, never recovered. She would become one of many fine actresses of the 1960s that possessed great beauty and tremendous talent but were not provided with good-quality material to showcase their assets. From 1965 to the mid 1970s, Sharon virtually disappeared from public view, other than for a number of television guest-starring spots, such as “Mannix.”

There followed a marriage to photographer Raymond Ross in 1968 to his death in 1974), a divorced, and a child. By 1976 she was under new management and married to Gordon Cornell Layne, founder of Mid America Pictures.

Sharon was en route to ABC to sign two contracts when a new tragedy intervened: Sharon was struck by careering police car doing 90 mph in pursuit of a fleeing drug addict. Not only did this end Sharon’s career, it very nearly ended her life. Still seeking recovery, she and Mr. Layne left Santa Monica for Lake Arrowhead, in 1987. After nineteen years under Gordon’s personal around-the-clock care, on July 3,1996, Sharon Elizabeth Hugueny Layne died at home, from misdiagnosed cancer. The “Sharon Elizabeth Hugueny Performance Arts Scholarship” has been projected to honor her memory.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Jennifer E. Williams <JenVLO123@aol.com> and Gordon Cornell Layne (her loving husband)

The above IMDB entry can also be accessed online here.

Joanna Shimkus
Joanna Shimkus
Joanna Shimkus

Joanna Shimkus.

Joanna Shimkus is a retired Canadian actress. She is the wife of Bahamian-American actor and diplomat Sir Sidney Poitier, and mother of actress Sydney Tamiia Poitier.

Joanna Smimkus.. & Sidney Poitier
Joanna Smimkus.. & Sidney Poitier

Shimkus was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, to a Lithuanian-Jewish fatherand a mother of Irish descent.

Her father worked for the Royal Canadian Navy.[5] She attended a convent schoo and was brought up in MontrealQuebec.

She went to Paris at age nineteen, where she worked as a fashion model and soon attracted the attention of movie people on the lookout for new talent.

She made her debut in 1964, in Jean Aurel‘s film De l’amour. She was then noticed by film director Robert Enrico, who selected her to appear in three of his films; Les aventuriers (1967), opposite Alain Delon and Lino VenturaTante Zita (1968) and Ho! (1968).

She also appeared in Joseph Losey‘s film Boom! (1968), opposite Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, and The Lost Man (1969), opposite Sidney Poitier. Her film career continued until the early 1970s, including roles in L’Invitée (1969), The Virgin and the Gypsy(1970), The Marriage of a Young Stockbroker (1971) and A Time for Loving (1972).

She married Sir Sidney Poitier in 1976, and they have two daughters: Anika and Sydney Tamiia, who is also an actress. Shimkus has three grandchildren; two from Anika and one from Sydney Tamiia.

Jeff Chandler

“Jeff Chandler looked as though he had been dreamed up by one of those artists who specialize in male physique studies or a little further up the artistic scale.   He might have been plucked bodily from some modern mural on a biblical subject.   For that he had the requisite Jewishness (of which he was very proud) – and he was not quite real.   Above all, he was impossibly handsome.   He would never have been lost in a crowd with that big square, sculpted 20th century face and his prematurely gray wavy hair.   If the movies had not found him the advertising agencies would have done – whenever you saw a still of him you looked at his wrist-watch or his pipe before realising that he was not promoting something.   In the coloured stills and on posters, his studios showed his hair as blue, heightening the unreality.   His real name was Ira Grossel, his film-name was exactly right.” – David Shipman in “The Great Movie Stars – The International years”.   (1972).

Jeff Chandler was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1918.   He had a major movie career with Universal Studios in the 1950’s.   His movies include “Broken Arrow”, “The Lady Takes A Flier”, “Flame of Araby”, “Return to Peyton Place” and “The Plunderer’s”.   He died after undergoing surgery in 1961.

TCM overview:|

Tough, virile lead with prematurely steel grey, wavy hair and a muscular physique who starred in action films of the late 1940s and 50s, often as American Indians (three times as Cochise), gangsters, cavalrymen and “natives”. Not a docile star, Chandler rebelled against Universal’s mediocre action projects and was suspended several times. Chandler’s career was cut short by his premature death–due to blood poisoning after routine spinal surgery for a slipped disc–at age 42.

IMDB entry:

Jeff was born in Brooklyn and attended Erasmus High School. After high school, he took a drama course and worked in stock companies for two years. His next role would be that of an officer in World War II. After he was discharged from the service, he became busy acting in radio drama’s and comedies until he was signed by Universal. It would be in the fifties that Jeff would become a star making westerns and action pictures. He would be nominated for an Academy Award for his role as Cochise in Broken Arrow (1950). He would follow this by playing the role of Cochise in two sequels: The Battle at Apache Pass (1952) and Taza, Son of Cochise (1954). While his premature gray hair and tanned features served him well in his westerns and action pictures, the studio would put him into soaps and costume movies. In his films, his leading ladies would include Maureen O’HaraRhonda FlemingJane RussellJoan Crawford, and June Allyson. Shortly after his last film Merrill’s Marauders (1962), Jeff died, at 42, from blood poisoning after an operation for a slipped disc.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Tony Fontana <tony.fontana@spacebbs.com>

The above IMDB entry can be accessed online here.

The above TCM overview can  be accessed online here.

TCM

Bobby Vee
Bobby Vee
Bobby Vee

One of the better teen idols of the late ’50s and early ’60s, with a voice that many have compared to that of Buddy Holly. He had a sizable string of hits between 1960 and 1967 for Liberty Records, including “Take Good Care of My Baby”, “Run to Him” (both co-written by Carole King), “Rubber Ball”, “Devil or Angel”, “The Night Has a Thousand Eyes”, “Stayin’ In”, “More Than I Can Say” and “Come Back When You Grow U

Andrew Dice Clay
Andrew Dice Clay
Andrew Dice Clay

 

Andrew Dice Clay September 29, 1957) is an American comedian and actor.[1] He played the lead role in the 1990 film The Adventures of Ford Fairlane.  Clay has been in several movies and has released a number of stand-up comedy albums. He is the only comedian in history to sell out Madison Square Garden two nights in a row

IMDB entry:

Andrew Dice Clay was born on September 29, 1957 in Brooklyn, New York, USA as Andrew Clay Silverstein. He is an actor and writer, known for Blue Jasmine (2013), The Adventures of Ford Fairlane (1990) and Dice Rules (1991). He has been married to Valerie Silverstein since February 14, 2010. He was previously married to Kathleen Monica and Kathleen Swanson.  Hi shows  include his catch phrases “Dat’s what I think”, “Unbelievable”, and  a sharp “Ooh!”.  Begins all of his comedy acts with about a minute of just standing on stage, smoking a cigarette, before starting into his material.   Often wears a black leather jacket. For his on-stage act, his jacket is usually covered in gold studs, with the word ‘Dice’ spelled out on across his back.Heavy Brooklyn accent.   Often wears large, dark sunglasses   Has been managed by his father, Fred Silverstein, for most of his career.   Even after he made enormous amounts of money with his “Diceman” act he decided to live in his hometown borough of Brooklyn for a number of years.   He now resides somewhere in New Jersey, the hometown of his current wife.   His trademark “Ooh!” is sampled in the popular dance club song, “Unbelievable”, by EMF.   Biography in: “Who’s Who in Comedy” by Ronald L. Smith. Pg. 106-108. New York: Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 0816023387   Perhaps the only stand-up comic ever to sell out Madison Square Garden two nights in a row.

 

Andrew Dice Clay
Fay Spain
Fay Spain
Fay Spain
Fay Spain
Fay Spain

Fay Spain had a very prolific US television career especially in the major series of the 1950’s and 60’s.   Her movies include “Al Capone” in 1959 and “Black Gold” in 1962.   She died at the age of 49 in 1983.

Gary Brumburgh’s entry:

She was your typical B-movie drive-in bad girl – sometimes blonde, sometimes brunette, always bodacious. A tease, a taunter and a temptress throughout most her career, Fay Spain was born in Phoenix, Arizona, in 1932. She headed to New York where she initially found summer stock work and a bit of television exposure. One of her earliest TV appearances was not as an actress but as a contestant on the TV game show You Bet Your Life (1950) starring Groucho Marx. By 1956, this fetching starlet was winning episodic roles on the more popular shows of the day, including Perry Mason (1957),Cheyenne (1955) and Gunsmoke (1955). She was also gaining notice on the covers of magazines. This cheesecake attention led directly to her juvenile delinquent debut inDragstrip Girl (1957) with John Ashley and Steven Terrell, where she immediately established herself as the party girl boys are willing to race cars and fight over. Other equally cheap-jack films followed with Teenage Doll (1957), The Crooked Circle (1957), and The Abductors (1957). Fay made an aggressive move into higher quality films withErskine Caldwell‘s best-seller God’s Little Acre (1958), where she played “Darlin’ Jill”, another amoral sexpot, and as Rod Steiger‘s moll in Al Capone (1959), but then it was right back to Grade Z level work with The Beat Generation (1959) co-starring Mamie Van DorenThe Private Lives of Adam and Eve (1960) in which she tempts Martin Milner with the old forbidden fruit routine, and a 1962 Italian spectacle as an evil queen trying to thwart the actions of Hercules. Although Fay made some efforts to return to TV work, her career was pretty much over by the mid-60s. One of her last roles was a bit part as a mafioso matriarch in The Godfather: Part II (1974). Fay died of cancer at age 49 in 1983.

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

James Donald
James Donald
James Donald

James Donald was born in Scotland in 1917.   Tall and thin, he specialised in military figures or those in authority such as doctors and solicitors.   His major roles include “The Bridge oin the River Kwai”, “King Rat” and “The Great Escape”.   He died in 1993.

Adam Benedick’s obituary of James Donald in “The Independent”

 
 
James Robert MacGeorge Donald, actor: born Aberdeen 18 May 1917; married; died West Tytherley, Wiltshire 3 August 1993.

BEFORE the post-war cinema took him under its wing, James Donald had been flying as high in the West End theatre as any young actor of his generation. Tall, lean, dark, intelligent-looking, he seemed to have a care for language and a sharp-edged humour which might lead him to the top in a theatrical era ruled by Gielgud, Olivier, Redgrave and Co.

Could he be one of tomorrow’s men? He had sensitivity and elegance. In some quarters his appeal was rated in the same breath as Scofield’s, Burton’s, Alan Badel’s. There was something Byronic, thoughtful, unpredictable and refreshing in this churchman’s son who had quit Scotland and a flirtation with academia (McGill and Edinburgh universities) for that least-known of theatrical quantities, the London Theatre Studio run for the Old Vic by that intellectual offshoot of the avant-garde French theatre, Michel Saint-Denis.

Saint-Denis was a sort of saint to intelligent young theatrical aspirants: a purist, an inspiration and utterly indifferent to the needs of the ‘commercial’ theatre. Very few of his students ever came to anything. In the days before subsidy and angry young men and social realism, it was Hugh (Binkie) Beaumont who ruled the British stage; but there was still the Old Vic.

After appearing in two of Saint-Denis’ pre-war productions, Bulgakov’s The White Guard, and Twelfth Night (with Michael Redgrave and Peggy Ashcroft) at the Phoenix, Donald found himself with a small part in Granville-Barker’s 1940 production of Lear for Gielgud at the Old Vic and the not exactly onerous but surely honourable task of understudying Gielgud.

When the Old Vic was bombed out of the Waterloo Road, Donald toured as the supercilious young servant Yasha to Athene Seyler’s Ranevska in The Cherry Orchard and, after the Old Vic’s London seasons at the New, in St Martin’s Lane, moved over to the Haymarket Theatre to join Noel Coward’s company in 1943.

There Donald’s success as the comically sanctimonious playwright in Present Laughter put him on the map. Some said he upstaged the self-indulgent Coward himself (as the matinee idol) by remaining so intensely serious as the indignant young writer with the endearing, grating voice.

It was his baptism as a Haymarket actor, and though the bright young men of the next generation might sneer at the label, not all the Haymarket plays in the 1940s and 1950s were ‘safe’ or ‘cosy’ or ‘elegant’. Indeed, Cocteau’s The Eagle Has Two Heads, in which Donald played the lover-assassin of Eileen Herlie’s Ruritanian queen was a test of everybody’s patience, with her record-breaking first-act speech judged by the stop-watches rather than dramatic interest; but Donald, a good listener, knew how to share the romantic limelight tactfully.

His next West End performance came ‘by kind permission of Metro- Goldwyn Mayer’ in Shaw’s You Never Can Tell (Wyndham’s) before his greatest break of all a few months later at – where else? – the Haymarket. In Henry James’s sad story he was the cad who, having courted the ‘plain’ young spinster (Peggy Ashcroft) for her fortune, jilts her. When he comes calling again she turns him down flat. She too has learnt how to be cruel.

It was one of Ashcroft’s greatest nights, but somehow Donald found a touch of pathos for the worthless lover; and so Laurence Olivier gave him the title-role opposite the adored Diana Wynyard in his next production as actor-manager at the St James’s, a new play by a new playwright, Denis Cannan’s Captain Carvallo. It was a high comedy of verbal exuberance and Shavian fancy, and it clinched Donald’s reputation as one of the West End’s most fashionable actors.

If there was no limelight left for him (or anybody else) to share with Edith Evans in Christopher Fry’s The Dark is Light Enough (Aldwych, 1954), his career in films as men of conscience rather than action – The Small Voice (1948), Trottie True (1949), White Corridors (1951), The Gift Horse (1952), Beau Brummell (1954) – was by then going strong.

He also ventured into theatrical management with his wife while continuing as an occasional Haymarket actor (The Doctor’s Dilemma, The Wings of the Dove) in an era of sharply changing theatrical tastes. Firing from the West End at Sloane Square and the East End at Stratford East, the enemy of elegant dialogue and elegant acting was at the gates.

James Donald was not the only player of his kind to find an outlet in the cinema in the coming decades, as one of its most familiar, reliable and agreeable actors whose character stood for decency and common sense – The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), King Rat (1965), The Jokers (1967), David Copperfield (1969), The Royal Hunt of the Sun (1969), Conduct Unbecoming (1975). But it was a long way in more ways than one from the theatrical dreams and schemes provoked by Saint-Denis at the London Theatre Studio in the late 1930s.

James Donald “Independent” obituary can be accessed here.

Gary Brumburgh’s entry:

Scottish-born actor James Donald was born in Aberdeen on May 18, 1917, and took his first professional stage bow some time in the late 30s. He finally attained a degree of stardom in 1943 for his sterling performance in Noel Coward‘s “Present Laughter”, which starred Coward himself. Subsequent post-war theatre work included “The Eagle with Two Heads” (1947), “You Never Can Tell” (1948) and “The Heiress” (1949) with Ralph RichardsonPeggy Ashcroft and Donald Sinden.

Rather humorless in character with a gaunt, intent-looking face and no-nonsense demeanor, James made his debut in British films in 1942, fitting quite comfortably into the stoic war-era mold with roles in such noteworthy military sagas as In Which We Serve (1942) and The Way Ahead (1944). Ably supporting such top-notch actors asSpencer Tracy and Deborah Kerr in Edward, My Son (1949) and Elizabeth Taylor andStewart Granger in Beau Brummell (1954), he also managed to head up a number of films including White Corridors (1951) in which he and Googie Withers play husband and wife doctors who try to balance career and marriage; Charles Dickens’ The Pickwick Papers(1952) as “Nathaniel Winkle”, and Project M7 (1953) as a scientist obsessed with his work. In addition, he earned superb marks for a number of quality films in the 1950s and 1960s. His portrayal of painter ‘Vincent Van Gogh”s brother “Theo” in Lust for Life (1956) with Kirk Douglas, was quite memorable, as was his trenchant work in the WWII POW dramas The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), The Great Escape (1963), and King Rat(1965). Most of the men he played were intelligent, moral-minded and honorable. While continuing to perform on stage, he also gained TV exposure. James received an Emmy nomination for his role as “Prince Albert” opposite Julie Harris in Victoria Regina (1961), and performed the part of the cruel-eyed stepfather “Mr. Murdstone” in the period remake of David Copperfield (1969) toward the end of his career. Off the screen for a number of years, he died of stomach cancer on August 3, 1993 in England. He was 76.

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