Career Highlights: Who's Minding the Mint?, The Green Berets, Major Dundee
First Major Screen Credit: The Twilight Zone: And When the Sky Was Opened (1959)
Biography
American actor Jim Hutton was performing in a military show in Germany when he was discovered by director Douglas Sirk. Sirk promptly cast Hutton in A Time to Love and a Time to Die (1958), which though released by Universal, led to an MGM contract for the young actor. Evidently MGM had plans to turn Hutton into the new Jimmy Stewart, for the studio insisted upon casting their young star in roles calling for ingenuous clumsiness. Perhaps the quintessential Hutton role was as The Horizontal Lieutenant (1962), in which his constant bumbling eventually transforms him into a war hero. MGM frequently paired Hutton with another player of acute comic skill, Paula Prentiss; they worked so well together that many fans assumed Hutton and Prentiss were married -- which must have been amusing to Paula's longtime husband Richard Benjamin. Hutton was allowed a few non-comedy "outdoors" roles in Major Dundee (1965) and The Green Berets (1969), but for the most part was locked into playing gangling young goofs. Oddly, Hutton's screen persona worked quite well for his TV-series role as Ellery Queen in the mid-1970s. The actor was charming and convincing as the self-effacing, deceptively preoccupied criminologist, especially when he turned to the camera 45 minutes into each Ellery Queen episode and invited the folks at home to help him solve the mystery. Hutton died of cancer at age 46 -- too soon to fully realize the success of his son, actor Timothy Hutton. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Born in Binghamton, New York, Jim Hutton was performing in live theatre in Germany while with the United States Army when he was spotted by American film director Douglas Sirk. In Hollywood, he gained recognition with teen audiences for his role in the 1960 college student film Where the Boys Are, where he appeared with Paula Prentiss, an actress he would be teamed with in several of his early films, in part because they were the tallest contract players of their time (Hutton at 6'5" and Prentiss at 5'10"). He appeared with Prentiss in The Honeymoon Machine Late in 1960, followed by 1961's Bachelor in Paradise starring Bob Hope and Lana Turner, and finally The Horizontal Lieutenant in 1962. In 1966, Hutton gained a wider audience in Walk, Don't Run with Samantha Eggar and (in his last feature-film appearance) Cary Grant. Due to his tall, gangly frame and the absent minded quality of his delivery, Hutton was viewed as a successor to James Stewart.
In addition to being a gifted comedic actor, Hutton also took on dramatic roles such as Sam Peckinpah's 1965 westernMajor Dundee. In 1968 Hutton appeared in the John Wayne acted/directed war drama, The Green Berets, wherein Hutton played "The Scrounger". Also in 1968 Hutton appeared with John Wayne in Hellfighters playing the role of Greg Parker. The movie was loosely based on the career of oil-well firefighter Red Adair.
The move to television
In the early 1970s Hutton began working almost exclusively in television and played the title role of Ellery Queen in the 1975 made-for-television movie that led to the 1975-76 television series Ellery Queen. Hutton's co-star was David Wayne who portrayed his widowed father. In the series (set in 1947), Hutton portrayed an amateur crime solver who worked on murder cases and tried to find out "whodunit."