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Actor:

Richard Widmark

  • Born: Dec 26, 1914 in Sunrise, Minnesota
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '50s-'80s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Western
  • Career Highlights: Night and the City, Mr. Horn, Coma
  • First Major Screen Credit: Kiss of Death (1947)

Biography

The son of a traveling salesman, actor Richard Widmark had lived in six different Midwestern towns by the time he was a teenager. He entered Illinois' Lake Forest College with plans to earn a law degree, but gravitated instead to the college's theater department. He stayed on after graduation as a drama instructor, then headed to New York to find professional work. From 1938 through 1947, Widmark was one of the busiest and most successful actors in radio, appearing in a wide variety of roles from benign to menacing, and starring in the daytime soap opera "Front Page Farrell." He did so well in radio that he'd later quip, "I am the only actor who left a mansion and swimming pool to head to Hollywood."

Widmark's first stage appearance was in Long Island summer stock; in 1943, he starred in the Broadway production of Kiss and Tell, and was subsequently top billed in four other New York shows. When director Henry Hathaway was looking for Broadway-based actors to appear in his melodrama Kiss of Death (1947), Widmark won the role of giggling, psychopathic gangster Tommy Udo. And the moment his character pushed a wheelchair-bound old woman down a staircase, a movie star was born. (Widmark always found it amusing that he'd become an audience favorite by playing a homicidal creep, noting with only slightly less amusement that, after the release of the film, women would stop him on the street and smack his face, yelling, "Take that, you little squirt!") The actor signed a 20th Century Fox contract and moved to Hollywood on the proviso that he not be confined to villainous roles; the first of his many sympathetic, heroic movie parts was in 1949's Down to the Sea in Ships. After his Fox contract ended in 1954, Widmark freelanced in such films as The Cobweb (1955) and Saint Joan (1957), the latter representing one of the few times that the actor was uncomfortably miscast (as the childish Dauphin).

In 1957, Widmark formed his own company, Heath Productions; its first effort was Time Limit, directed by Widmark's old friend Karl Malden. Widmark spent most of the 1960s making films like The Alamo (1960) and Cheyenne Autumn (1964), so that he could afford to appear in movies that put forth a political or sociological message. These included Judgment at Nuremberg (1961) and The Bedford Incident (1965). A longtime television holdout, Widmark made his small-screen debut in Vanished (1970), the first two-part TV movie. He later starred in a 1972 series based upon his 1968 theatrical film Madigan. And, in 1989, he was successfully teamed with Faye Dunaway in the made-for-cable Cold Sassy Tree. Richard Widmark was married for 55 years to Jean Hazelwood, a former actress and occasional screenwriter who wrote the script for her husband's 1961 film The Secret Ways (1961). Their daughter Anne married '60s baseball star Sandy Koufax. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

 
 
Filmography: Richard Widmark

Lincoln: The Making of a President, 1860-1862

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Lincoln: The Pivotal Year, 1863

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Lincoln: I Want to Finish This Job, 1864

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Lincoln: Now He Belongs to the Ages, 1865

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True Colors

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Cold Sassy Tree

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Once Upon a Texas Train

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A Gathering of Old Men

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Wikipedia: Richard Widmark
Richard Widmark
Kissofdeath.jpg
Richard Widmark in Kiss of Death
Born December 26 1914(1914--)
Sunrise Township, Minnesota
Died March 24 2008 (aged 93)
Roxbury, Connecticut
Years active 1947-1992
Spouse(s) Jean Hazlewood (1942-1997)
Susan Blanchard (1999-2008)

Richard Widmark (December 26, 1914 - March 24, 2008) was an Academy Award-nominated American film actor.

For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Widmark has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6800 Hollywood Boulevard. In 2002, he was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

Biography

Widmark grew up in Princeton, Illinois, and attended Lake Forest College, where he studied acting. He taught acting at the college after graduation, before debuting on radio in 1938 in Aunt Jenny's Real Life Stories. He appeared on Broadway in 1943 in Kiss and Tell. He was unable to join the military during World War II because of a perforated eardrum.

Widmark's first movie appearance was in 1947's Kiss of Death, as the giggling, sociopathic villain Tommy Udo. His most notorious scene in the film found Udo pushing an old woman in a wheelchair (played by Mildred Dunnock) down a flight of stairs to her death. Kiss of Death was a commercial and critical success, and started Widmark's seven-year contract with 20th Century Fox. He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor and won the Golden Globe Award for New Star Of The Year - Actor for his performance. Widmark's character was also the inspiration for the song, "The Ballad of Tommy Udo", by the band Kaleidoscope.

In 1950, Widmark co-starred with Paul Douglas, Barbara Bel Geddes, Jack Palance and Zero Mostel in Elia Kazan's Panic in the Streets, and with Gene Tierney in Jules Dassin's Night and the City, which are considered classic examples of film noir. Two years later, in 1952, Widmark had his handprints cast in cement at Grauman's Chinese Theatre. During his stint at Fox, he appeared in The Street with No Name and Don't Bother to Knock with Marilyn Monroe among other projects. He also appeared in Vincente Minnelli's 1955 cult film The Cobweb with Lauren Bacall.

In 1965, he starred in a drama set during the Cold War called The Bedford Incident which he was also an uncredited producer. He was credited with producing his films The Secret Ways and Time Limit. Other notable films in the sixties were Judgment at Nuremberg, How the West was Won and Cheyenne Autumn.

The 1970's brought Widmark to the TV screen reprising his detective from the 1968 film Madigan and movie roles in Murder on the Orient Express and The Swarm.

Although Widmark's last film was a thriller, True Colors in 1991, he continued to appear on TV in the occasional documentary.

Personal life

Widmark was married to his first wife, Jean Hazlewood, a writer, for almost 55 years, from April 5, 1942 until her death on March 2, 1997. Their daughter, Anne Heath Widmark, an artist and author, married baseball legend Sandy Koufax on January 1, 1969 (but divorced in 1982). In September 1999, Widmark married Susan Blanchard, who earlier was Henry Fonda's third wife. From the 1950s until his death on March 24, 2008, Widmark resided in Roxbury, Connecticut.

Widmark died at home after a long illness according to his wife.[1]

Filmography

Features:

Short Subjects:

  • Screen Snapshots: Hopalong in Hoppy Land (1951)
  • Screen Snapshots: Hollywood Night Life (1952)
  • 1955 Motion Picture Theatre Celebration (1955)
  • Shooting the Moonshine War (1970)

References

  1. ^ Aljean Harmetz. "Actor Richard Widmark Dies at 93", New York Times, 2008-03-26. Retrieved on 2008-03-26. 

Cold Sassy Tree with Faye Dunaway, made for TV

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Actor. Copyright © 2006 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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