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Robert Preston
Age
68 (passed away Mar. 21st, 1987)
Birthday
Jun. 8th, 1918
Born in
Newton Highlands, Massachusetts, USA
Height
5' 10"
Robert Preston's Main TV Roles
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Main Movie Roles1984 - The Last Starfighter1982 - Victor Victoria 1981 - S.O.B. 1977 - Semi-Tough 1974 - Mame 1972 - Child's Play 1972 - Junior Bonner 1962 - The Music Man 1962 - How the West Was Won 1955 - The Last Frontier 1950 - The Sundowners 1949 - The Lady Gambles 1948 - Blood on the Moon 1947 - The Macomber Affair 1942 - This Gun for Hire 1942 - Wake Island 1939 - Union Pacific 1939 - Beau Geste |
American leading man of vast charisma. The son of a garment worker and a record store clerk, he grew up in Los Angeles. He was a trained musician, playing several instruments, and in high school became interested in theatre. He joined the Pasadena Community Playhouse, taking classes and appearing in scores of plays alongside such soon-to-be-well-known actors as Dana Andrews (I), George Reeves (I), Victor Mature, and Don DeFore. Even in the distinguished company of Playhouse veterans like Victor Jory (I) and Samuel S. Hinds, young Preston Meservey, or Pres, as he was always known to intimates, was an acknowledged star in the making. During one play, a Paramount scout saw him and he signed a contract with the studio, which renamed him Robert Preston. After several roles in inconsequential films, Preston became a favorite of director Cecil B. DeMille, who cast him in several films but became nevertheless one of the few people Preston actively and publicly disliked. In 1946, after serving in England with the Army Air Corps, Preston married Kay Feltus (aka Catherine Craig (I)), whom he had known in Pasadena. He struggled through numerous unfulfilling roles in the Forties, then relocated to New York and concentrated on theatre. He played many roles on Broadway and in 1957 began the part that would immortalize him in entertainment history, that of Professor Harold Hill in the musical The Music Man. He won a Tony Award for the role and repeated it in the film version. Now a star of the first magnitude, Preston alternated between stage and film, winning another Tony for I Do, I Do, and appearing to enormous good effect in such films as The Dark at the Top of the Stairs (1960), All the Way Home (1963), and Junior Bonner (1972). He received an Oscar nomination for his triumphant portrayal of a witty, gay entertainer in Victor Victoria (1982). He died in 1987 from lung cancer, after a career that took him from modest supporting lead to national treasure.
TRIVIA:
- Cousin of Emmerson Denney, Producer/Personal Manager.
- Twice won Broadway's Tony Award as Best Actor (Musical): in 1958, for "The Music Man," a performance he recreated in the film version of the same name, _The Music Man (1962)_ (qv); and, in 1967, for "I Do! I Do!". He was also nominated in the same category in 1975 for "Mack and Mabel,: in which he played movie pioneer 'Mack Sennett' (qv).
- The name of his character in the movie, 'Mame' (qv), Beauregard Jackson Pickett Burnside is taken from the names of four Civil War generals - Pierre Goustave Toutant Beauregard, Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson, and George Pickett (Confederate), and Ambrose Burnside (Union).
- Before starring in the musical "The Music Man", he had not only never appeared in a musical before, he had never sung a note before.
- Biography in: "The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives". Volume Two, 1986-1990, pages 708-709. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1999.
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