James Whitmore

James Whitmore

Age
87 (passed away Feb. 6th, 2009)
Birthday
Oct. 1st, 1921
Born in
White Plains, New York, USA
Height
5' 8"

James Whitmore's Main TV Roles

Show Character(s)
My Friend Tony TV Show
My Friend Tony
The Loner TV Show
The Loner
Frontier Justice TV Show
Frontier Justice
George Burns Comedy Week TV Show
George Burns Comedy Week
The Law and Mr. Jones TV Show
The Law and Mr. Jones
 

Main Movie Roles

2001 - The Majestic
1997 - The Relic
1994 - The Shawshank Redemption
1986 - The Adventures of Mark Twain
1977 - The Serpent's Egg
1974 - Where the Red Fern Grows
1973 - The Harrad Experiment
1972 - Chato's Land
1970 - Tora! Tora! Tora!
1969 - Guns of the Magnificent Seven
1968 - Planet of the Apes
1968 - Madigan
1968 - The Split
1956 - The Eddy Duchin Story
1956 - Crime in the Streets
1955 - The Last Frontier
1955 - Oklahoma!
1953 - Kiss Me Kate
1951 - Across the Wide Missouri
1951 - Angels in the Outfield
1950 - The Asphalt Jungle
1949 - Battleground
1949 - The Undercover Man

Guest TV Roles

Show Name
Characters Played
Ep Count
Dr. Vincent Campanelli
26
Joel Begley
5
Timothy Fitzpatrick
4
Tom Wills
4
Ezra Hollis
4
Capt. Miles Shay
4
Captain Ewell
3
Raymond Oz
3
Retired Governor William Sterling Sr.
3
Major Will Stanton
2
[Complete List]



BIOGRAPHY:

Born on October 1, 1921, just outside New York City in White Plains, New York, character veteran James Whitmore was well regarded in his early years for his award-winning dramatic capabilities on Broadway and in films. Later he conquered TV with the same trophy-winning results. The son of James Allen Whitmore and wife Florence Crane, he was educated at Connecticut's Choate School after receiving a football scholarship. He later earned his BA from Yale University in 1944 before serving with the Marines in World War II. Following his discharge he prepared for the stage under the G.I. bill at the American Theatre Wing, where he met first wife Nancy Mygatt. They went on to have three sons together -- Steve, Dan and actor James Whitmore Jr..

Applause and subsequent kudos came quite swiftly for Whitmore under both the Broadway and film banners. After appearing with the Peterborough, New Hampshire Players in the summer of 1947 participating in the play "The Milky Way," Whitmore made an auspicious Broadway debut as Tech Sergeant Evans in "Command Decision" later that year. His gritty performance reaped the stage acting trifecta -- Tony, Donaldson and Theatre World awards --in one fell swoop. He often remarked that most of his satisfaction came performing on the live stage.

While the accolades he received on late 40s Broadway perked up Hollywood's ears, the film version of Command Decision (1948) starred Clark Gable and was filmed without Whitmore. Song-and-dance star Van Johnson (I), who was looking for straight, serious roles after a vastly successful musical career, was given Whitmore's coveted part. The disappointment didn't last long. Whitmore made his film bow with a prime role in the documentary-styled crime thriller The Undercover Man (1949) alongside Glenn Ford (I) and Nina Foch, and merited equal attention with his second appearance in the war picture Battleground (1949). Following its release, Whitmore was the talk of the town once again at awards time -- this time in Hollywood. Grabbing the Golden Globe and an Oscar nomination for "support actor" for his efforts, he went on to find a solid footing in films throughout the early part of the 1950s decade.

Hardly the handsome, matinée lead type, he nevertheless primed himself for leading man success. Whitmore's talent, charisma and fortitude earned him a number of starring roles as well as top supports in quality pictures. Gruff on the edges with a softer inner core, he appeared opposite Nancy Davis (I) [Reagan] in the inspirational drama The Next Voice You Hear... (1950) as a religious, morally-minded family man; showed off his saltier side alongside Marjorie Main in Mrs. O'Malley and Mr. Malone (1950); and ably portrayed both a pathetic crook in The Asphalt Jungle (1950) and a level-minded security chief in the stoic military drama Above and Beyond (1952) with Robert Taylor (I). Elsewhere, he played it strictly for laughs as a Runyonesque gangster in the classic MGM musical Kiss Me Kate (1953) partnered with Keenan Wynn; and portrayed a valiant cop fighting off gigantic mutant ants in Them! (1954), one of the more intelligent sci-fi dramas of the 50s. He alternately demonstrated both a gentle and crustier sides in a queue of roles that ranged from a social worker in Crime in the Streets (1956) to Tyrone Power's manager in The Eddy Duchin Story (1956).

As his film career began to wane in the late 1950s, the craggy-faced, bush-browed actor turned more and more to TV with memorable roles in "The Twilight Zone," "The Detectives" (again with Robert Taylor (I)), "Ben Casey" and a host of live theater dramas. He also starred in his own series as attorney Abraham Lincoln Jones in "The Law and Mr. Jones" (1960) which lasted two seasons. Every so often a marvelous character turn would rear its head that had him turning back to films. Notable were his white man passing for black in the controversial social drama Black Like Me (1964), his weary veteran cop in Madigan (1968), and his brash, authoritative simian in the classic sci-fi Planet of the Apes (1968).

Divorced from wife Nancy after two decades, Whitmore married actress Audra Lindley, Mrs. Roper of "Three's Company" (1977) TV fame, in 1972. The couple forged a strong acting partnership as well, particularly on stage, and maintained a professional relationship long after their 1979 divorce. Whitmore and Lindley were lauded for their appearances together in such plays as "The Magnificent Yankee," "On Golden Pond," "The Visit," "Foxfire" and "Love Letters," among others.

In the 70s Whitmore became a magnificent one-man acting machine on stage portraying such inspired notables as Will Rogers, Harry Truman and Theodore Roosevelt. He disappeared into these historical legends so efficiently that even the powers-that-be had the good sense to preserve them on film and TV in the form of Will Rogers' USA (1972) (TV); Give 'em Hell, Harry! (1975), which earned him his second Oscar nomination; and Bully: An Adventure with Teddy Roosevelt (1978).

Earning distinction throughout his six-decade career, Whitmore showed worthy Oscar potential once again with his touching role as an aged, ill-fated prison parolee in The Shawshank Redemption (1994), and copped an Emmy for a recurring part on "The Practice" in the late 90s. A household face in commercials as well, one of his ultimate passions was gardening and he eventually became the commercial spokesman for Miracle-Gro plant food.

Whitmore remarried his first wife Nancy briefly before finding a lasting twilight union with fourth wife, actress-turned-author Noreen Nash, whom he married broaching age 80 in 2001. Whitmore died of lung cancer on February 6, 2009, after having been diagnosed in mid-November 2008.


TRIVIA:
  • Is a member of Yale University's exclusive Skull & Bones club, an undergraduate secret society famous for the post-graduation accomplishments of its members. Other living members include President 'George W. Bush' (qv) and his father, former President 'George Bush (I)' (qv), Sen. 'John Kerry (I)' (qv), political commentator 'William F. Buckley' (qv) and Pulitzer-Prize winning historian 'David McCullough (II)' (qv). Deceased members include President William Howard Taft and President Bush's own grandfather, 'Prescott Bush' (qv), a U.S. Senator and partner in the Wall St. white shoe brokerage firm of Brown Bros., Harriman.
  • Well known for his role as Capt. Benteen in _"The Twilight Zone" (1959) {On Thursday We Leave for Home (#4.16)}_ (qv), considered by many fans to be the best hour-long entry in the show's history.
  • In the early 1950s Whitmore conducted an acting workshop in Hollywood; one of his pupils was a struggling young actor, then unknown, 'James Dean (I)' (qv). Whitmore helped Dean get some jobs in LA but encouraged Dean to go to New York to audition for the Actors Studio. Dean was one of the few accepted the year he auditioned.
  • Youngest of four children, his father was an Executive Secretary for a local Park Commission in White Plains, NY.
  • Won Broadway's 1948 Tony Award for Outstanding Performance by a Newcomer for "Command Decision."
  • Met and married first wife Nancy Mygatt while studying at the American Theatre Wing. She was their press agent at the time.
  • Sometimes people confuse Whitmore and 'Spencer Tracy' (qv). The two sometimes look as if they could have been brothers.
  • Is a United States Marine. Served in the United States Marine Corps during World War Two.


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