Joel McCrea
Joel McCrea | |
---|---|
in Four Faces West (1948) | |
Born |
Joel Albert McCrea November 5, 1905 South Pasadena, California, U.S. |
Died |
October 20, 1990 84) Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, U.S. | (aged
Resting place | Cremains scattered into the Pacific Ocean |
Years active | 1927-1976 |
Spouse(s) |
Frances Dee (m.1933-1990; his death) |
Children |
Jody McCrea (b. 1934-2009) David McCrea (b. 1935) Peter McCrea (b. 1955) |
Joel Albert McCrea (November 5, 1905 – October 20, 1990) was an American actor whose career spanned 50 years and appearances in over 90 films.
Early life
McCrea was born in South Pasadena, California, the son of Thomas McCrea, who was an executive with the L.A. Gas & Electric Company.[1] As a boy, he had a paper route, and delivered the Los Angeles Times to Cecil B. DeMille and other people in the film industry. He also had the opportunity to watch D. W. Griffith filming Intolerance, and was an extra in a serial starring Ruth Roland.[1][2]
McCrea graduated from Hollywood High School and then Pomona College (class of 1928[3]), where he had acted on stage and took courses in drama and public speaking, while appearing regularly at the Pasadena Playhouse,[1][2] Even as a high school student, he was working as a stunt double[2] and held horses for cowboy stars William S. Hart and Tom Mix.[1] He worked as an extra, stunt man and bit player from 1927 to 1928, when he signed a contract with MGM, where he was cast in a major role in The Jazz Age (1929), and got his first leading role that same year in The Silver Horde.[1] He moved to RKO in 1930, where he established himself as a handsome leading man who was considered versatile enough to star in both dramas and comedies.
Career
In the 1930s, McCrea starred in Bird of Paradise (1932), directed by King Vidor, causing controversy for his nude scenes with Dolores del Río. In RKO's The Sport Parade (1932), McCrea and William Gargan are friends on the Dartmouth football team, who are shown snapping towels at each other in the locker room, while other players are taking a shower. In 1932 he starred with Fay Wray in The Most Dangerous Game - which used some of the same jungle sets built for King Kong as well as cast members Wray and Robert Armstrong.
In 1934, he made his first appearances with two leading ladies he would be paired with often: with Miriam Hopkins he made The Richest Girl in the World, the first of their five films together,[4] and with Barbara Stanwyck he appeared in Gambling Lady, the first of their six films.[5] Later in the decade, he was the first actor to play "Dr. Kildare", in the film Internes Can't Take Money (1937), and he starred in two large-scale Westerns, Wells Fargo (1937) with his wife Frances Dee, and Cecil B. DeMille's Union Pacific (1939).
McCrea reached the peak of his early career in the early 1940s, in Alfred Hitchcock's Foreign Correspondent (1940), The More the Merrier (1943) directed by George Stevens, and two by Preston Sturges: Sullivan's Travels (1941) and The Palm Beach Story (1942).[6]
McCrea also starred in two William A. Wellman westerns, The Great Man's Lady (1942), again with Stanwyck, and Buffalo Bill (1944), with character actor Edgar Buchanan and a young Maureen O'Hara. After the success of The Virginian in 1946, McCrea made Westerns exclusively for the rest of his career, with the exception of the British-made Rough Shoot (1953).
Performing in Westerns was a return to what he had done earlier in his career, and McCrea enjoyed the genre. In a 1978 interview, he said:
I liked doing comedies, but as I got older I was better suited to do Westerns. Because I think it becomes unattractive for an older fellow trying to look young, falling in love with attractive girls in those kinds of situations...Anyway, I always felt so much more comfortable in the Western. The minute I got a horse and a hat and a pair of boots on, I felt easier. I didn't feel like I was an actor anymore. I felt like I was the guy out there doing it.[1]
In the early 1950s, McCrea starred as Jayce Pearson on the radio series western, Tales of the Texas Rangers.
Later career
In 1959, Joel McCrea and his son Jody McCrea starred in the NBC-TV series Wichita Town, which lasted only one season. A few years later, McCrea united with fellow veteran of westerns Randolph Scott in Ride the High Country (1962), directed by Sam Peckinpah, after which he did not make another feature film until The Young Rounders (1966). Four more years were to pass before his next film, but 1970 saw the release of two films: Cry Blood, Apache, again with his son Jody, and Sioux Nation. McCrea made his final film appearance in 1976, in Mustang Country.
In 1968, McCrea received a career achievement award from the L.A. Film Critics Association,[7] and the following year he was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Joel McCrea has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6901 Hollywood Blvd. and another star at 6241 Hollywood Blvd. for his contribution to radio.
Personal life
McCrea married actress Frances Dee in 1933, after they met while filming The Silver Cord.[1][8] The couple had three sons, David, who became a rancher; Peter, who became a real estate developer; and Jody, who became an actor.[1] Joel and Frances remained married until his death — spending 57 years together.
According to David Ragan's Stars of the '30s, the McCreas were prodigious savers, accumulating a large estate, which included working-ranch properties. Joel McCrea's work ethic was in part attributed to his Scottish heritage and it also may have stemmed from his friendship in the 1930s with fellow personality and sometime actor, Will Rogers. McCrea recounted that "the Oklahoma Sage" gave him a profound piece of advice: "Save half of what you make, and live on just the other half."[9]
McCrea – who was an outdoorsman who had once listed his occupation as "rancher" and his hobby as "acting" – had begun buying property as early as 1933, when he purchased his first 1,000 acres (4.0 km2) in a then-unincorporated area of eastern Ventura County, California, which later became Thousand Oaks, California. This was the beginning of what became a 3,000-acre (12 km2) spread on which McCrea and his wife Frances lived, raised their sons, and rode their horses.[1]
By the end of the 1940s, McCrea was a multi-millionaire, as much from his real-estate dealings as from his movie stardom. In the late 1960s, he sold 1,200 acres (4.9 km2) of land to an oil company, on the condition that they would not drill within sight of his home.[2]
The McCreas ultimately donated several hundred acres of their personal property to the newly formed Conejo Valley YMCA for the city of Thousand Oaks, California. Today, the Conejo Valley YMCA is located in "Joel McCrea Park".
Joel McCrea made his final public appearance on October 3, 1990, at a fundraiser for Republican gubernatorial candidate Pete Wilson in Beverly Hills.[1] He died less than three weeks later, on October 20, at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, California from pneumonia, at the age of 84.[10]
Partial filmography
- Torrent (1926) stunts
- The Enemy (1927) extra
- The Fair Co-Ed (1927) extra
- The Jazz Age (1929)
- Dynamite (1929)
- Framed (1930)
- The Silver Horde (1930)
- Born to Love (1931)
- Girls About Town (1931)
- Kept Husbands (1931)
- Business and Pleasure (1932)
- The Lost Squadron (1932)
- Bird of Paradise (1932)
- The Most Dangerous Game (1932)
- The Sport Parade (1932)
- Rockabye (1932)
- Bed of Roses (1933)
- Chance at Heaven (1933)
- The Silver Cord (1933)
- One Man's Journey (1933)
- Gambling Lady (1934)
- Half a Sinner (1934)
- The Richest Girl in the World (1934)
- Private Worlds (1935)
- Barbary Coast (1935)
- Our Little Girl (1935)
- Woman Wanted (1935)
- Banjo on My Knee (1936)
- These Three (1936)
- Two in a Crowd (1936)
- Adventure in Manhattan (1936)
- Come and Get It (1936)
- Internes Can't Take Money (1937)
- Dead End (1937)
- Wells Fargo (1937)
- Youth Takes a Fling (1938)
- Three Blind Mice (1938)
- Union Pacific (1939)
- They Shall Have Music (1939)
- Espionage Agent (1939)
- He Married His Wife (1940)
- Primrose Path (1940)
- Foreign Correspondent (1940)
- Sullivan's Travels (1941)
- The Great Man's Lady (1942)
- The Palm Beach Story (1942)
- The More the Merrier (1943)
- Buffalo Bill (1944)
- The Great Moment (1944)
- The Unseen (1945)
- The Virginian (1946)
- Ramrod (1947)
- Four Faces West (1948)
- South of St. Louis (1949)
- Colorado Territory (1949)
- The Outriders (1950)
- Stars in My Crown (1950)
- Saddle Tramp (1950)
- Frenchie (1950)
- Cattle Drive (1951)
- Hollywood Story (1951)
- The San Francisco Story (1952)
- Rough Shoot (1953)
- The Lone Hand (1953)
- Border River (1954)
- Black Horse Canyon (1954)
- Stranger on Horseback (1955)
- Wichita (1955)
- The First Texan (1956)
- Gunsight Ridge (1957)
- The Oklahoman (1957)
- Trooper Hook (1957)
- The Tall Stranger (1957)
- Cattle Empire (1958)
- Fort Massacre (1958)
- The Gunfight at Dodge City (1959)
- Ride the High Country (1962)
- The Young Rounders (1966)
- Sioux Nation (1970)
- Cry Blood, Apache (1970)
- Mustang Country (1976)
Radio appearances
- This Is Hollywood – "Along Came Jones" (1946)[11]
- Tales of the Texas Rangers - 1950 to 1952
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Joel McCrea at the TCM Movie Database
- 1 2 3 4 Erickson, Hal Biography (Allmovie)
- ↑ Pomona College Alumni Directory, 2000, p. 294.
- ↑ McCrea and Hopkins appeared together in The Richest Girl in the World (1934), Barbary Coast (1935), Splendor (1935), These Three (1936) and Woman Chases Man (1937).
- ↑ McCrea and Stanwyck appeared together in Gambling Lady (1934), Banjo on My Knee (1936), Internes Can't Take Money (1937), Union Pacific (1939), The Great Man's Lady (1942) and Trooper Hook (1957).
- ↑ McCrea also appeared in Sturges' The Great Moment, which was filmed in 1942 but not released until 1944 because of studio interference. The film was not a success, and marked a decline in Sturges' career.
- ↑ Allmovie Awards
- ↑ McCrea and Dee appeared together in six films: The Silver Cord (1933), One Man's Journey (1933), Come and Get It (1936), Wells Fargo (1937), Four Faces West (1948) and Cattle Drive (1951).
- ↑ Raban, David Stars of the '30s
- ↑ Flint, Peter B. (1990-10-21). "Joel McCrea, Actor, Dies at 84; A Casual, Amiable Leading Man". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-01-09.
- ↑ "'Hollywood' Star". Harrisburg Telegraph. December 21, 1946. p. 17. Retrieved September 7, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
Further reading
- Nott, Robert Last of the Cowboy Heroes: The Westerns of Randolph Scott, Joel McCrea, and Audie Murphy, 2000, McFarland & Company, Inc., ISBN 0-7864-2261-0
- Ragan, David Movie stars of the '30s: A complete reference guide for the film historian or trivia buffStars of the '30s, 1985, Prentice-Hall, ISBN 0-13-604901-X
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joel McCrea. |
- Joel McCrea at the Internet Movie Database
- Joel McCrea at AllMovie
- Joel McCrea at the TCM Movie Database
- Joel McCrea at Find a Grave
- Photographs and literature
- Joel McCrea Wildlife Preserve
- McCrea Ranch