Showing posts with label Raymond Burr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Raymond Burr. Show all posts

April 2, 2019

Jack Webb ~ More than a Friday

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Today is the birthday of John Randolph Webb aka Jack Webb or Sgt. Joe Friday, who created the phenomenal television series, Dragnet and founder of his own production company, Mark VII Limited. However, his talents ran deeper than the Dragnet character.     

He was born in Santa Monica, California, on April 2, 1920, and grew up in the Bunker Hill section of Los Angeles. He was raised a Roman Catholic by his mother, who was of Irish and Native American descent, and served as an altar boy. Webb attended St. John's University, Minnesota, where he studied art.


date & photographer unknown 


Webb moved to San Francisco, where a wartime shortage of announcers led to a temporary appointment to his own radio show on ABC's KGO Radio. The Jack Webb Show was a half-hour comedy that had a limited run on ABC radio in 1946. Prior to that, he had a one-man program, One Out of Seven, on KGO in which he dramatized a news story from the previous week.


Jack Webb - 1946 
photographer unknown

By 1949, he had abandoned comedy for drama, and starred in Pat Novak for Hire, a radio show originating from KFRC about a man who worked as an unlicensed private detective. The program co-starred Raymond Burr. Pat Novak was notable for writing that imitated the hard-boiled style of such writers as Raymond Chandler, with lines such as: "She drifted into the room like 98 pounds of warm smoke. Her voice was hot and sticky--like a furnace full of marshmallows."


Jack Webb - 1950
photographer unknown


His radio shows included Johnny Madero, Pier 23, Jeff Regan, Investigator, Murder and Mr. Malone, Pete Kelly's Blues and One Out of Seven. Webb provided all of the voices on One Out of Seven.  


Jack Webb - 1950
photographer unknown


In 1951, Webb introduced a short-lived radio series, Pete Kelly's Blues, in an attempt to bring the music he loved to a broader audience. That show became the basis for a 1955 movie of the same name. The film featured major stars such as Janet Leigh, Edmond O'Brien, Peggy Lee, Lee Marvin, Martin Milner, and Jayne Mansfield. Ella Fitzgerald makes a cameo as singer Maggie Jackson.



 photographer unknown



In 1959, a television version was made. Neither was very successful. Pete Kelly was a cornet player who supplemented his income from playing in a nightclub band by working as a private investigator.


Jack Webb & Ray Anthony on trumpets 
photographer unknown


Webb's most famous motion-picture role was as the combat-hardened Marine Corps drill instructor at Parris Island in the 1957 film The D.I., with Don Dubbins as a callow Marine private. Webb's hard-nosed approach to this role, that of Drill Instructor Technical Sergeant James Moore, would be reflected in much of his later acting. But The D.I. was a box-office failure.


Jack Webb - 1957 






Jack Webb - 1957 


     
Webb was approached to play the role of Vernon Wormer, Dean of Faber College, in National Lampoon's Animal House, but he turned it down, saying "the movie didn't make any damn sense".


photographer unknown 

       
Webb had a featured role as a crime-lab technician in the 1948 film He Walked by Night, based on the real-life murder of a California Highway Patrolman by Erwin Walker. The film was produced in semidocumentary style with technical assistance provided by Detective Sergeant Marty Wynn of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD). The film's thinly veiled fictionalized recounting of the 1946 Walker crime spree gave Webb the idea for Dragnet: a recurring series based on real cases from LAPD police files, featuring authentic depictions of the modern police detective, including methods, mannerisms, and technical language.  


Jack Webb - Los Angeles, 1952 
photo by John Vachon

       
Dragnet premiered on NBC Radio in 1949 and ran till 1957. It was also picked up as a television series by NBC, which aired episodes each season from 1952 to 1959. Webb played Sgt. Joe Friday and Barton Yarborough co-starred as Sgt. Ben Romero. After Yarborough's death, Ben Alexander joined the cast. In his vision of Dragnet, Webb said he intended to perform a service for the police by showing them as low-key working-class heroes.    

In 1951 the television series, Dragnet, based on the radio series, made its debut. The ominous, four-note introduction to the brass and tympani theme music (titled Danger Ahead), composed by Walter Schumann, is instantly recognizable. It is derived from the Miklós Rózsa score for the 1946 film The Killers.     

On  July 31, 1955, the film, Pete Kelly's Blues, was released. It was directed by and starred Jack Webb in the title role of a bandleader and musician. It featured Janet Leigh, Edmond O'Brien and Peggy Lee, with Ella Fitzgerald, Lee Marvin, Martin Milner, and Jayne Mansfield in cameo roles.    


John Glen & Jack Webb -1962 
photographer unknown 
           
In 1963, Webb teamed with actor Jeffrey Hunter to form Apollo Productions. They produced a failed television series, Temple Houston, with Hunter in the title role. In the summer of 1963, Webb pushed Temple Houston to production. The series was loosely based on the life of the frontier lawyer Temple Lea Houston, the youngest son of the legendary Texan Sam Houston.       


Time magazine - March 1, 1954  
illustration by Boris Chaliapin
       

Webb's personal life was defined by his love of jazz. He had a collection of more than 6,000 jazz recordings. His lifelong interest in the cornet allowed him to move easily in the jazz culture, where he met singer and actress Julie London. They married in 1947 and had daughters Stacy (1950–1996) and Lisa, born 1952. They divorced in 1954.


photographer unknown


He was married three more times after that, to actress Dorothy Towne for two years beginning in 1955 . . . 


Jack Webb & Dorothy Towne - 1955
photographer unknown


. . . to former Miss USA Jackie Loughery for six years beginning in 1958,



and to his longtime associate, Opal Wright, for the last two years of his life.     

Webb died on December 23, 1982, of an apparent heart attack at age 62. He is interred at Sheltering Hills Plot 1999, Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles, and was given a funeral with full Los Angeles police honors. On Webb's death, Chief Daryl Gates announced that badge number 714, which was used by Joe Friday in Dragnet, would be retired. Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley ordered all flags lowered to half staff in Webb's honor for a day, and Webb was buried with a replica LAPD badge bearing the rank of sergeant and the number 714.


Dragnet logo 


Jack Webb has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, one for radio (at 7040 Hollywood Boulevard) and the other for television (at 6728 Hollywood Boulevard).


6728 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles


Jack Webb was posthumously inducted into the Television Hall of Fame in 1993 (link to video of the induction ceremony below).               
        
      

Viewfinder links:           
    
Ray Anthony         
Raymond Burr         
Ella Fitzgerald           
Janet Leigh      
Julie London      
Jayne Mansfield      
Jack Webb           
           
Net links:           
           
Jack Webb Films           
Jack Webb on Television  
        
Video link:           
           
Jack Webb Television Hall of Fame induction ceremony      
       
       
       
     
            
           
            
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, April 2, 2019            
            
       

Just the facts, Jack!
















Raymond Burr articles/mentions

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Miss Barbara Eden Bends It!  
William Hopper ~ The Suave Gumshoe  
Jack Webb ~ More than a Friday            
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
date & photographer unknown















January 26, 2018

William Hopper ~ The Suave Gumshoe

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Today is the birthday of William DeWolf Hopper Jr., who was born January 26, 1915, in New York City. He was an American stage, film, and television actor. The only child of actor DeWolf Hopper and Hollywood columnist and actress, Hedda Hopper, he had minor roles in more than 80 feature films in the 1930s and '40s. He became best known for his work in television, as the suave gumshoe, Paul Drake, in the long-running CBS series, Perry Mason.       
         
        
William Hopper - February 19, 1940       
photo by George Hurrell            

          
He was my favorite character on Perry Mason; there was something about the way he moved that intrugued me. He kind of glided from place to place in an easy going way. He was debonair as all get out and he knew EVERYTHING!     

In 1957, the CBS television network launched the Perry Mason series based on Erle Stanley Gardner characters.  Hopper auditioned for both the Mason and Drake roles. "He was perfect as Drake, and we got him," recalled executive producer Gail Patrick Jackson.                     
      
"Paul Drake in the Erle Stanley Gardner books was an entirely different character," Hopper said in 1962. "I play him my way. Now I'm amused to read Gardner's new books. Paul Drake now comes out like me!"

"Just as Raymond Burr will always be Perry Mason, Bill Hopper will always be Paul Drake," wrote Brian Kelleher and Diana Merrill in their chronicle of the TV series. "He defined the role."    
       
A running gag on the series, is that although Paul Drake is a "wolf" and dates nearly every woman that appears on the series, the only woman he does not date is Della Street whom he always respectfully refers to as "Hi Beautiful".      

The 1959 episode, The Case of Paul Drake's Dilemma, had Hopper's character on trial for murder. It was the only time in the series' nine-year run that Paul Drake was the defendant.     

 Hopper and Raymond Burr in the Perry Mason episode,
The Case of Paul Drake's Dilemma - (1959) 


Hopper made his film debut as a baby in his father's 1916 silent movie Sunshine Dad. His mother, Hedda Hopper, divorced his father in 1922 and moved to Hollywood with their son. She became one of America's best-known gossip columnists, with nearly 30 million readers in newspapers in the U.S.

I will never forget the cameo appearance Hedda Hopper made near the end of the 1950 film, Sunset Boulevard; she plays herself reporting the murder to her publication. She's officious as all get-out, wears her trademark outrageous hat, and is just delightful.  



Sunset Boulevard starred Gloria Swanson. It was the role of a lifetime for her. I've always thought it was brilliant of Swanson to take on the role of Norma Desmond as very few remember a single one of her films when her star shined in her early career but almost everyone knows her stunning performance in Sunset Boulevard. And when being photographed, who hasn't said, "Mr. DeMille, I'm ready for my closeup!" The role enshrined her in the Pantheon of Movie Star Greats.        

William Hopper  became an actor because his mother expected it of him. "When I worked at Warner Bros.," he said, "I was so scared I stuttered all the time."

In March 1936, Hopper, working under the name Wolfe Hopper, won a contract at Paramount Pictures. Early in his film career, Hopper appeared in numerous movies, uncredited and also under the name DeWolf Hopper.

 
Wolfe Hopper & Gail Patrick - July 1936 
Paramount Pictures fashion photograph
      

In 1940, Hopper married actress Jane Kies, whose professional name was Jane Gilbert; Kies was the sister of Margaret Lindsay. Lindsay appeared in the films, Jezebel (1938) and Scarlet Street (1945). Lindsay's most acclaimed film role was in The House of the Seven Gables in 1940, with George Sanders and Vincent Price. Gilbert and Hopper had worked together on the 1939 film, Invisible Stripes.     
     
Hopper served with the United States Navy during World War II, as a volunteer with the Office of Strategic Services and as a member of the newly created Underwater Demolition Team. He received a Bronze Star and several other medals during operations in the Pacific.


          
          
In the course of his career Hopper worked with many theater and film lumiaries, Katharine Cornell, Grace Moore, Franchot Tone, Ann Sheridan, John Ford, Jan Sterling, Claire Trevor, Natalie Wood, Ronald Reagan, Errol Flynn, Humphrey Bogart, Errol Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, Mary Astor, Peter Lorre, Fred MacMurray, James Cagney, Joan Leslie, Walter Huston, Richard Whorf, Irene Manning, George Tobias, Rosemary DeCamp, Jeanne Cagney and, of course, Raymond Burr.

His film credits as DeWolf Hopper include Knute Rockne - All American, They Died with Their Boots On, The High and the Mighty and Dive Bomber. As William Hopper, The Maltese Falcon, Yankee Doodle Dandy, Rebel Without a Cause, The Bad Seed, Myra Breckinridge, and the Sci-Fi adventures, The Deadly Mantis (1957) and 20 Million Miles to Earth (1957) (link to complete list below).     

His television credits include, Gunsmoke, The Millionaire, Studio 57, The Joseph Cotten Show and, of course, 271 episodes of Perry Mason (complete list below).  

In 1959, Hopper was nominated as Best Supporting Actor (Continuing Character) in a Dramatic Series at the 11th Primetime Emmy Awards for his performance as Paul Drake.       

Hopper continued to work in summer stock and to make movie appearances during his years on Perry Mason; however, after the series was cancelled in 1966, he declined other television offers. He did, though, make one final film appearance in Myra Breckinridge (1970), which premiered in New York three months after his death.             

Hopper entered Desert Hospital in Palm Springs, California, on February 14, 1970, after suffering a stroke. He died of pneumonia three weeks later, on March 6, at age 55. He was buried in Rose Hills Memorial Park in Whittier, California.     



          
       
              
Viewfinder links:       
       
Humphrey Bogart articles/mentions   
Carl Van Vechten articles/mentions             
Natalie Wood articles/mentions            
         
Net links:       
        
Film credits        
Television credits          
List of Perry Mason episodes            
         
YouTube links:       
        
William Hopper -        
               Screen Test as 'Perry Mason' (1956)       
               20 Million Miles to Earth Trailer    
               The Bad Seed (1956) - Original Theatrical Trailer    
               Paul Drake in The Case of the Garrulous Gambler           
       
       
     
"Hi, beautiful!" 
                        ~ Paul Drake (William Hopper) 
  
    

Styrous® ~ Friday, January 26, 2018