Joel Albert McCrea, (November 5, 1905 -
October 20, 1990) was an American film actor.
Film career
Born in South Pasadena, California, McCrea became interested in films
after graduating from Pomona College. He worked as an extra in films from 1927 before
being cast in a major role in The Jazz Age (1929). A
contract with MGM followed, and then another with RKO. He established himself as a handsome leading man who was considered versatile enough to star in both
dramas and comedies.
In the 1930s, McCrea starred in two Cecil B. DeMille large-scale westerns,
Wells Fargo (1937) with wife-to-be Francis Dee and Union Pacific (1939) with Barbara Stanwyck. He reached the peak of his early
career in the early 1940s, in such films as Alfred Hitchcock's Foreign Correspondent (1940), Preston Sturges' Sullivan's Travels (1941), and The Palm Beach Story (1942).
McCrea also starred in two William A. Wellman westerns, The Great Man's Lady (1942), again with Stanwyck, and Buffalo
Bill, with character actor Edgar Buchanan (1944). After the success of The Virginian (1946),
McCrea made westerns exclusively for the rest of his career--with the exception of the British-made Rough Shoot (1953). In 1959, Joel McCrea and his son Jody McCrea starred in the NBC-TV series
Wichita Town, which lasted one season and was produced by the Mirisch Corp. 1962 saw
him united with fellow veteran of westerns Randolph Scott in Ride the High Country (1962), under the direction of Sam
Peckinpah.
McCrea preferred to live the remainder of his life as a rancher. In 1969, 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. They had three
children, David, Peter, and Jody McCrea, who also became an actor. Joel and Frances remained
married until his death in Woodland Hills, California from
pneumonia at the age of 84 in 1990.
According to David Raban'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."
During his lifetime, McCrea and his wife Frances lived, raised their children, and rode their horses on their ranch in what
was then an unincorporated area of eastern Ventura County, California. 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, both of which
celebrated their 40th anniversaries in 2004. Today, the land on which the Conejo Valley YMCA rests
is called "Joel McCrea Park".
Selected filmography
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- Rough Shoot (1953)
- The Lone Hand (1953)
- Border River (1954)
- Black Horse Canyon (1954)
- Stranger on Horseback (1955)
- Wichita (1955)
- The First Texan (1956), featuring son Jody
McCrea
- 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), starring son Jody McCrea
- Mustang Country (1976)
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External links
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