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{{Short description|American actor (1913–1952)}} | |||
]'''John Garfield''' (born ], ] in ]; died ], ] in ]) was a ] ] ]. Garfield was especially adept at playing brooding, rebellious characters and was twice nominated for an ] (see below). | |||
{{for|the Michigan politician|John P. Garfield}} | |||
{{Use American English|date=May 2021}} | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2021}} | |||
{{Infobox person | |||
| name = John Garfield | |||
| image = John Garfield - 1942.jpg | |||
| caption = Garfield in '']'' (1942) | |||
| birth_name = Jacob Julius Garfinkle | |||
| birth_date = {{birth date|1913|03|04}} | |||
| birth_place = New York City, U.S. | |||
| death_date = {{death date and age|1952|05|21|1913|03|04}} | |||
| death_place = New York City, U.S. | |||
| resting_place = ] | |||
| occupation = Actor | |||
| years_active = 1932–1952 | |||
| spouse = {{marriage|Roberta Seidman<br>|1935}} | |||
Born '''Jacob Julius Garfinkle''' to David and Hannah Garfinkle, he was sent to a school for problem children in the ] after the death of his mother when he was seven years old. It was there, under the guidance of the school's principal, noted educator ], that he was introduced to ] and acting. He won a scholarship to an acting school hosted by ], and made his ] debut in ]. The play '']'' was written for him, but he was passed over for the lead role. He decided to leave Broadway and try his success in ]. In ] he received wide critical acclaim and a nomination for the ] for his role in '']''. | |||
| children = 3 | |||
}} | |||
'''John Garfield''' (born ''' Jacob Julius Garfinkle'''; March 4, 1913 – May 21, 1952) was an American actor who played brooding, rebellious, working-class characters.<ref>{{cite news| title=John Garfield Dies in N.Y. Home of Actress| url=https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-john-garfield-19590522-20160519-snap-story.html| date=May 22, 1952| newspaper=]| agency=]| access-date=January 22, 2020}}</ref> He grew up in poverty in New York City. In the early 1930s, he became a member of the ]. In 1937, he moved to Hollywood, eventually becoming one of ]' stars. He received ] nominations for his performances in '']'' (1938) and '']'' (1947). | |||
During ], Garfield and actress ] were the driving force behind the building of the ], a club offering food and entertainment for American ]. | |||
Called to testify before the U.S. Congressional House Committee on Un-American Activities (]), he denied ] affiliation and refused to "name names", effectively ending his film career. Some have alleged that the stress of this persecution led to his premature death at 39 from a heart attack.<ref name="Beaver">{{cite book| last=Beaver| first=Jim| author-link=Jim Beaver| title=John Garfield: His Life and Films| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8aUqAAAAYAAJ&q=death| year=1978| publisher=A.S. Barnes & Co.| location=Cranbury, NJ| isbn=978-0498018909| pages=42–43}}</ref> Garfield is acknowledged as a predecessor of such ] actors as ], ], and ]. | |||
Garfield graduated to leading roles in films such as '']'', ''Humoresque'' and '']''. In 1948 he was nominated for the ] for his starring role in '']''. A strong willed and often verbally, sometimes physically combative individual, he did not hesitate to venture out on his own when the opportunity arose. When his contract with ] expired in 1946, instead of signing another contract which was the standard practice, Garfield opted to start his own independent production company. He was among the first ] stars to take this step. | |||
==Early life== | |||
Long involved in liberal politics, Garfield became caught up in the ] ] scare of the late ] and early ]. When called to testify before the House on Un-American Activities Committee or HUAC, which was empowered to investigate purported communist infiltration in ], Garfield refused to name names. Though his wife had been a member of the Communist Party, no evidence was ever presented that Garfield had ever been a Communist. However, his forced testimony before the committee damaged his reputation and he was ] by the Hollywood ] bosses for the remainder of his career. | |||
] | |||
Jacob Garfinkle ({{langx|yi|יעקב גאַרפינקלע}}) was born in a small apartment on ] in Manhattan's ], to David and Hannah Garfinkle, Russian Jewish immigrants, and grew up in the heart of the ].<ref name=Nott>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E_l8SoBVr28C&pg=PA16 |title=He Ran All the Way: The Life of John Garfield |first=Robert |last=Nott |publisher=Hal Leonard Corporation |year=2003 |isbn=9780879109851 |access-date=March 10, 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/actingjewishnego0000bial |url-access=registration |title=Acting Jewish: Negotiating Ethnicity on the American Stage & Screen |first=Henry |last=Bial |publisher=University of Michigan Press |year=2005 |access-date=March 10, 2013 |isbn=978-0472069088 |pages=-40}}{{Dead link|date=August 2023}}</ref> In early infancy, a middle name—Julius—was added, and for the rest of his life those who knew him well called him Julie.<ref name=McGrath/> His father, a clothes presser and part-time ], struggled to make a living and to provide even marginal comfort for his small family. When Garfield was five, his brother Max was born. Their mother never fully recovered from what was described as a "difficult" pregnancy and birth. She died two years later, and the young boys were sent to live with various relatives, all poor, scattered across the ] of ], ] and ]. Several of these relatives lived in tenements in a section of East Brooklyn called ], and there, Garfield lived in one house and slept in another. At school, he was judged a poor reader and speller, deficits that were aggravated by irregular attendance. He would later say of his time on the streets there, that he learned "all the meanness, all the toughness it's possible for kids to acquire."<ref name=Swindell>{{cite book| last=Swindell| first=Larry| title=Body and Soul| year=1975| publisher=William Morrow and Company| location=New York| isbn=978-0688029074| page=6| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SdlZAAAAMAAJ}}</ref> | |||
{{Quote box |width=25em | bgcolor=#ACE1AF |align=right |quote="If I hadn't become an actor, I might have become ]."<ref name="Swindell" />|salign=right}} | |||
With film work scarce because of the blacklist, Garfield returned to Broadway and starred in a 1952 revival of ''],'' finally being cast in the lead role denied him years before. | |||
His father remarried and moved to the ], where Garfield joined a series of gangs. Much later, he would recall: "Every street had its own gang. That's the way it was in poor sections ... the old safety in numbers." He soon became a gang leader. At this time, people started to notice his ability to mimic well-known performers, both physically and facially. He also began to hang out and eventually spar at a boxing gym on ]. At some point, he contracted ] (it was diagnosed later in adulthood), causing permanent damage to his heart and causing him to miss a lot of school. After he was expelled three times and expressed a wish to quit school altogether, his father and stepmother sent him to P.S. 45, a school for difficult children. It was under the guidance of the school's principal—the educator ]—that he was introduced to acting.<ref name=Beaver/> Noticing Garfield's tendency to stammer, Patri assigned him to a speech therapy class taught by a charismatic teacher named Margaret O'Ryan. She gave him acting exercises and made him memorize and deliver speeches in front of the class and, as he progressed, in front of school assemblies. O'Ryan thought he had a natural talent and cast him in school plays. She encouraged him to sign up for a citywide debating competition sponsored by '']''. To his own surprise, he took second prize. | |||
With Patri and O'Ryan's encouragement, he began to take acting lessons at a drama school that was part of ] and began to appear in their productions. At one of the latter, he received back-stage congratulations and an offer of support from the Yiddish actor ], who recommended him to the ].<ref name=McGrath>{{cite book |last=McGrath |first=Patrick J. |title=John Garfield: The Illustrated Career in Films and on Stage |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xtIarL3_y5YC&pg=PA5 |access-date=May 16, 2016 |date=January 1, 1993 |publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0899508672 |page=5}}</ref> Funded by the ], "the Lab" had contracted with ] to stage its experimental productions and with Russian actress and expatriate ] to supervise classes in acting. Former members of the ], they were the first proponents of ]'s ] in the United States, which soon developed into what came to be known as "]". Garfield took morning classes and began volunteering time at the Lab after hours, auditing rehearsals, building and painting scenery, and doing crew work. He would later view this time as beginning his apprenticeship in the theater. Among the people becoming disenchanted with the Guild and turning to the Lab for a more radical, challenging environment were ], ], ], ] and ]. In varying degrees, all would become influential in Garfield's later career. | |||
Long-term heart problems, allegedly aggravated by the stress of his blacklisting, led to his early death at the age of 39 on ] ], ]. Garfield is interred at ] in ], ], ]. | |||
After a stint with ]'s Civic Repertory Theater and a short period of vagrancy, involving hitchhiking, freight hopping, picking fruit, and logging in the U.S. Northwest, (] conceived the film '']'' after hearing Garfield tell of his hobo adventures),<ref name=Swindell/> Garfield made his ] debut in 1932 in a play called ''Lost Boy''. It ran for only two weeks but gave Garfield something critically important for an actor struggling to break into the theater: a credit. | |||
Two of his children would later become actors themselves. | |||
There is a claim that he was a patron of ]'s ] or brothel in New York.<ref>{{cite book| url=https://archive.org/details/carnalknowledgeb00baxt| url-access=registration| title=Carnal Knowledge: Baxter's Concise Encyclopedia of Modern Sex| last=Baxter| first=John| date=February 10, 2009| publisher=HarperCollins| isbn=978-0-06-087434-6| page=| access-date=June 28, 2016}}</ref> | |||
==Academy Award Nominations== | |||
*] - ] - '']'' | |||
==New York theater and the Group== | |||
*] - ] - '']'' | |||
Garfield received feature billing in his next role, that of Henry the office boy in ]'s play ''Counsellor-at-Law'', starring ]. The play ran for three months, made an Eastern tour and returned for an unprecedented second, repeat engagement, only closing when Muni was contractually compelled to go back to Hollywood to make a film for Warners. At this point, Warner's expressed an interest in Garfield and sought a ]. He turned them down. | |||
Garfield was given a star on the ] at 7065 ]. | |||
Garfield's former colleagues Crawford, Clurman and Strasberg had begun a new theater collective, calling it simply "]", and Garfield lobbied his friends hard to get in. After months of rejection, he began frequenting the inside steps of the ] where the Group had its offices. Cheryl Crawford noticed him one day and greeted him warmly. Feeling encouraged, he made his request for apprenticeship. Something intangible impressed her, and she recommended him to the other directors. They made no objection. | |||
] had been a close friend of Garfield from the early days in the Bronx. After Odets' one-act play '']'' became a surprise hit, the Group announced it would mount a production of his full-length drama '']''. At the playwright's insistence, Garfield was cast as Ralph, the sensitive young son who pleads for "a chance to get to first base". The play opened in February 1935, and Garfield was singled out by critic ] for having a "splendid sense of character development". Garfield's apprenticeship was officially over; he was voted full membership by the company. Odets was the man of the moment, and he claimed to the press that Garfield was his "find" and that he would soon write a play just for him. That play would turn out to be '']'', but when ] was cast in the lead role instead, a disillusioned Garfield began to take a second look at the overtures being made by ].<ref name=Nott/> | |||
==Warner Bros.== | |||
] | |||
Garfield had been approached by Hollywood studios before—both ] and Warners offering screen tests—but talks had always stalled over a clause he wanted inserted in his contract, one that would allow him time off for stage work. Now Warner Bros. acceded to his demand, and Garfield signed a standard feature-player agreement—seven years with options—in Warner's New York office.<ref>The "option" gave the studio the right to drop the performer after every six-month period.</ref> Many in the Group were livid over what they considered his betrayal. ]'s reaction was different, suggesting that the Group did not so much fear that Garfield would fail, but that he would succeed.<ref name=Swindell/> ]'s first order of business was a change of name to John Garfield. | |||
<!-- Deleted image removed: ] --> | |||
After many false starts, he was finally cast in a supporting, yet crucial role as a tragic young composer in a ] film titled '']'' (1938). After the picture's release, he received very positive notices and a nomination for the ]. The studio quickly revised Garfield's contract—designating him a star player rather than a featured one—for seven years without options. They also created a name-above-the-title vehicle for him titled '']'' (1939). Before the success of ''Daughters'', Garfield had made a ] feature called '']'' (also 1939). Not wanting their new star to appear in a low-budget film, Warners ordered an A movie upgrade by adding $100,000 to its budget and recalling director Michael Curtiz to shoot newly scripted scenes. | |||
Garfield's debut had a cinematic impact difficult to conceive in retrospect. As biographer Lawrence Swindell put it: {{blockquote|Garfield's work was spontaneous, non-actory; it had abandon. He didn't recite dialogue, he attacked it until it lost the quality of talk and took on the nature of speech ... Like ], he was an exceptionally mobile performer from the start of his screen career. These traits were orchestrated with his physical appearance to create a screen ''persona'' innately powerful in the sexual sense. What Warners saw immediately was that Garfield's impact was felt by both sexes. This was almost unique.<ref name=Swindell/>}} | |||
His "honeymoon" with Warners over, Garfield entered a protracted period of conflict with the studio, with Warners attempting to cast him in crowd-pleasing melodramas like '']'' (also 1939) and Garfield insisting on quality scripts that would offer challenges and highlight his versatility. The result was often a series of suspensions, with Garfield refusing an assigned role and Warners refusing to pay him. Garfield's problem was shared by any actor working in the studio system of the 1930s: by contract, the studio had the right to cast him in any project they wanted to. But, as Robert Nott explains: | |||
{{blockquote|To be fair, most of the studios had a team of producers, directors, and writers who could pinpoint a particular star's strengths and worked to capitalize on those strengths in terms of finding vehicles that would appeal to the public—and hence make the studio money. The forces that prevented him from getting high quality roles were really the result of the combined willpower of the Warner Bros., the studio system in general, and the general public, which also had its own perception of how Garfield (or Cagney or Bogart for that matter) should appear on screen.<ref name=Gould>{{cite web| last=Gould| first=Mark R.| title=John Garfield, Film Noir and the Hollywood Blacklist| url=http://atyourlibrary.org/john-garfield-film-noir-and-hollywood-blacklist| work=He Ran All The Way: The Life of John Garfield| publisher=@yourlibrary| access-date=September 13, 2011| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120402111521/http://atyourlibrary.org/john-garfield-film-noir-and-hollywood-blacklist| archive-date=April 2, 2012| url-status=dead}}</ref>}} | |||
A notable exception to this trend was '']'' (also 1939), a not-quite-sequel (same cast, different story and characters) to his debut film. The film did well critically, but failed to find an audience, the public being dissatisfied that it was not a true sequel (hard to pull off, since the original character Mickey Borden died in the first picture). The director, Curtiz, called the film "my obscure masterpiece".<ref name=Swindell/> | |||
At the onset of ], Garfield immediately attempted to enlist in the armed forces, but was turned down because of his heart condition.<ref name=Nott/> Frustrated, he turned his energies to supporting the war effort. He and actress ] were the driving forces behind the opening of the ], a club offering food and entertainment for American ]. He traveled overseas to help entertain the troops, made several ] and starred in a string of patriotic box-office successes like '']'', '']'' (both 1943) and '']'' (1945). He was particularly proud of the last film, based on the life of ], a war hero blinded in combat. In preparing for the role, Garfield lived for several weeks with Schmid and his wife in Philadelphia and would blindfold himself for hours at a time. | |||
]'' (1947)]] | |||
After the war, Garfield starred in a series of successful films such as '']'' (1946) with ], '']'' (also 1946) with ], and '']'' (1947), an Oscar-winning Best Picture. In ''Gentleman's Agreement'', Garfield took a featured, but supporting, part because he believed deeply in the film's exposé of ] in America. He was nominated for the ] for his starring role in '']'' (1947). That same year, Garfield returned to Broadway in the play ''Skipper Next to God''. Strong-willed and often verbally combative, Garfield did not hesitate to venture out on his own when the opportunity arose. In 1946, when his contract with ] expired, Garfield decided not to renew it and opted to start his own independent production company. | |||
In 1949, he would again star in a ] play, '']''. | |||
==The Red Scare== | |||
{{Quote box |width=25em | bgcolor=#ACE1AF |align=right |quote="I have nothing to hide and nothing to be ashamed of. My life is an open book. I am no Red. I am no 'pink.' I am no fellow traveler. I am a Democrat by politics, a liberal by inclination, and a loyal citizen of this country by every act of my life."|salign=right |source=—from his statement read before the HUAC}} | |||
Long involved in liberal politics, Garfield was caught up in the ] scare of the late 1940s and early 1950s. He supported the ], which opposed governmental investigation of communist activity in Hollywood. When called to testify in 1951 before the ], which was empowered to investigate communist infiltration in America, Garfield refused to name ] members or followers, testifying that, indeed, he knew none in the film industry. Garfield rejected communism and, just prior to his death in hopes of redeeming himself in the eyes of the blacklisters, wrote that he had been duped by communist ideology in an unpublished article called "I Was a Sucker for a Left Hook", a reference to Garfield's movies about boxing.<ref>{{cite book| last1=Bernstein| first1=Walter| title=Inside Out: A Memoir of the Blacklist| date=July 31, 2013| publisher=Random House| location=New York| isbn=978-0-8041-5048-4| pages=304| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3XwBAAAAQBAJ&pg=PT220| access-date=December 3, 2014}}</ref> However, his forced testimony before the committee had severely damaged his reputation. He was ] in '']'' and barred from future employment as an actor by Hollywood ] bosses for the remainder of his career.<ref name=Beaver/> | |||
With film work scarce because of the blacklist, Garfield returned to Broadway and starred in a 1952 revival of '']'', finally being cast in the lead role denied him years before. | |||
Near the end of his life, in an effort to clear his name, Garfield began work on an article for ], in which he would denounce communism without "naming names"; his lawyer advised him to concede that he had been “duped" into contributing time and money to communist ]s.<ref name="Vanguard2021">{{cite web |last1=Allen |first1=Shannon |title=John Garfield, HUAC, and ''He Ran All the Way'' (1951) |url=https://vanguardofhollywood.com/john-garfield-huac/ |website=Vanguard of Hollywood |access-date=18 April 2022 |date=February 26, 2021}}</ref> He then arranged to meet with the FBI to press his case. At the meeting, however, the FBI representatives showed him a dossier on his wife Robbe, which included her old ] and cancelled checks to events sponsored by the party, and said that the FBI would clear him if he signed a statement betraying Robbe as a Communist. Garfield instead responded with an angry expletive and walked out of the meeting.<ref name="Vanguard2021"/> | |||
==Death== | |||
]]] | |||
] | |||
On May 9, 1952, Garfield moved out of his New York apartment for the last time, indicating to friends that the separation from his wife Roberta was not temporary. He confided to columnist ] that he would soon be divorced. Close friends speculated that it was his wife's opposition to his planned confession in '']'' magazine that triggered the separation. He heard that a HUAC investigator was reviewing his testimony for possible perjury charges. His agent reported that ] wanted him for a film called ''Taxi'' but would not even begin talks unless the investigation concluded in his favor. Three actor friends, ], ] and ], had all recently died after being listed by the committee.<ref name=Swindell/> | |||
On the morning of May 20, Garfield, against his doctor's strict orders, played several strenuous sets of tennis with a friend, mentioning the fact that he had not been to bed the night before. He met actress Iris Whitney for dinner and afterward became ill, complaining that he felt chilled. She took him to her apartment, where he refused to let her call a doctor and instead went to bed. The next morning, she found him dead. Long-term heart problems, allegedly aggravated by the stress of his blacklisting, had led to his death at the age of 39.<ref>{{cite journal| first1=William| last1=Pechter| first2=Abraham| last2=Polonsky| title=Abraham Polonsky and "Force of Evil"| journal=Film Quarterly| volume=15| number=3| date=Spring 1962| page=53| doi=10.2307/1210628| jstor=1210628| quote=(Pechter interviewing Polonsky): "It has been suggested that John Garfield's political difficulties and debarment from Hollywood work was a considerable influence in accelerating his early death. Do you have any opinion on this? Yes. He defended his streetboy's honor and they killed him for it."}}</ref> | |||
The funeral was the largest in New York since ]'s, with over ten thousand people crowding the streets outside.<ref name=Weintraub/> The ] surrounding Garfield's death led to a running joke, "John Garfield Still Dead Syndrome", that parodied the phenomenon; it would later inspire "]" in the 1970s after ]'s protracted terminal illness.<ref name="Collins">{{cite news| last=Collins| first=Gail| date=July 8, 2009| title=Michael, a Foreign Affair| newspaper=The New York Times| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/09/opinion/09collins.html| access-date=July 9, 2009| quote=The practice of churning out stories about a deceased celebrity for as long as possible is an old tradition. It used to be known as the "John Garfield Still Dead" syndrome, after the extensive post-funeral coverage of a movie star who had a fatal heart attack in 1952 in the bed of a woman other than his wife.}}</ref> Garfield's estate, valued at "more than $100,000", was left entirely to his wife. Shortly afterward, the HUAC closed its investigation of John Garfield, leaving him in the clear.{{Citation needed|date=August 2014}} Garfield was interred at ] in ], ], New York. | |||
==Personal life== | |||
He and Roberta Seidman married in February 1935. His wife had been a member of the Communist Party.<ref name=Weintraub>{{cite news| last=Weintraub| first=Bernard| title=Recalling John Garfield, Rugged Star KO'd by Fate| url=http://themave.com/Garfield/artc/nytimes.htm| access-date=September 12, 2011| newspaper=The New York Times| date=January 29, 2003| archive-date=July 1, 2016| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160701215819/http://themave.com/Garfield/artc/nytimes.htm| url-status=dead}}</ref> They had three children: Katherine (1938 – March 18, 1945), who died of an allergic reaction; David (1943–1994); and Julie (born 1946), the latter two later becoming actors themselves.<ref name=Nott /> | |||
His widow Roberta married motion picture and labor lawyer Sidney Cohn in 1954, who died in 1991; Roberta died in a Los Angeles nursing home in 2004. At the time of her death, Julie Garfield told the '']'' that her mother was embittered over Garfield's treatment by studio executives, who she believed, "had used Garfield as a scapegoat to take attention from others in Hollywood because he had 'formed his own production company and they felt threatened by him.{{'"}}<ref>{{Cite web |last=Thurber |first=Jon |date=2004-01-26 |title=Roberta Garfield Cohn, 89; Leftist Activist and Wife of John Garfield |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2004-jan-26-me-cohn26-story.html |access-date=2023-06-02 |website=Los Angeles Times |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
==Filmography== | ==Filmography== | ||
===Feature films=== | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
*'']'' (]) (short subject) | |||
|- | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
! Year | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
! Title | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
! Role | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
! Director | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
! Notes | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
|- | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| 1938 | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| '']'' | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| Mickey Borden | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| ] | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| Film debut <br> Nominated—] <br> Nominated—] | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
|- | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| rowspan="6"| 1939 | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Johnnie Bradfield | |||
*'']'' (]) (short subject) | |||
| ] | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
|- | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| '']'' | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| Tim Haydon | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| ] | |||
*'']'' (]) (Cameo) | |||
| | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
|- | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| '']'' | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| ] | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| ] | |||
*'']'' (]) (short subject) | |||
| | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
|- | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| '']'' | |||
*'']'' (]) (short subject) | |||
| Gabriel Lopez | |||
*'']'' (]) (Cameo) | |||
| Michael Curtiz | |||
*'']'' (]) (narrator in American version) | |||
| | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
|- | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| '']'' | |||
*'']'' (]) (Cameo) | |||
| Joe Bell | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| ] | |||
*'']'' (]) | |||
| | |||
*'']'' (]) (also producer) | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Mickey Borden | |||
| Michael Curtiz | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="4"| 1940 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Tommy Gordon | |||
| ] | |||
| Alternate title: ''Years Without Days'' | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Rims Rosson | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| John Alexander / Johnny Blake | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Joseph Enrico "Joe" Lorenzo | |||
| Alfred E. Green | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="3"| 1941 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| George Leach | |||
| Michael Curtiz | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Harold Goff | |||
| Anatole Litvak | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Dr. Michael "Mike" Lewis | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| 1942 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Daniel "Danny" Alvarez | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="4"| 1943 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Sgt. Joe Winocki, Aerial Gunner | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| John "Kit" McKittrick | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Himself (cameo) | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Wolf | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2"| 1944 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Tom Prior | |||
| Edward A. Blatt | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' || Himself (cameo) | |||
| Delmer Daves | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| 1945 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| ] | |||
| Delmer Daves | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="3"| 1946 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Frank Chambers | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Nick Blake | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Paul Boray | |||
| Jean Negulesco | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="3"| 1947 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Charley Davis | |||
| ] | |||
| Nominated—] <br> Nominated—] | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Dave Goldman | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Himself (cameo) | |||
| ] | |||
| Uncredited | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2"| 1948 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Narrator (American version) | |||
| ] | |||
| Originally titled ''Anni difficili'' | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Joe Morse | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2"| 1949 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Loafer with Newspaper (cameo) | |||
| ] | |||
| Uncredited | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Tony Fenner | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2"| 1950 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Dan Butler | |||
| Jean Negulesco | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Harry Morgan | |||
| Michael Curtiz | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
| 1951 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| Nick Robey | |||
| ] | |||
| Final film role | |||
|} | |||
===Short subjects=== | |||
* '']'' (1938) | |||
* ''Meet the Stars #1: Chinese Garden Festival'' (1940) | |||
* '']'' (1943) | |||
* ''Screen Snapshots: The Skolsky Party'' (1946) | |||
* ''Screen Snapshots: Out of This World Series'' (1947) | |||
===Documentary=== | |||
* ''The John Garfield Story'' (2003) (available on Warner Home Video's 2004 DVD of ''The Postman Always Rings Twice'') | |||
==Radio appearances== | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
|- | |||
! Year | |||
! Program | |||
! Episode | |||
! Ref. | |||
|- | |||
| 1941 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| "]" | |||
| align="center"| <ref>url=https://www.amazon.com/Lux-Radio-Theatre-Destiny-episode/dp/B08L2CPR8C</ref> | |||
|- | |||
| May 19, 1946 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| "]" | |||
| align="center"| <ref>url=https://www.eBay.com/publicity photo of ] and John Garfield</ref> | |||
|- | |||
| 1946 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| "]" | |||
| align="center"| <ref>{{cite news| title="Blood on the Sun" Next "Academy" Show| url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/3335205/harrisburg_telegraph/| newspaper=Harrisburg Telegraph| date=October 12, 1946| page=17| via=]| access-date=October 1, 2015}} {{Open access}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
| 1947 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| "]" | |||
| align="center"| <ref>{{cite journal| title=Those Were the Days| journal=Nostalgia Digest| date=Spring 2009| volume=35| issue=2| pages=32–39}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
| 1948 | |||
| '']'' | |||
| "]" | |||
| align="center"| | |||
|} | |||
==Awards and nominations== | |||
{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" | |||
|- | |||
! Year | |||
! Award | |||
! Category | |||
! Nominated work | |||
! Result | |||
! Ref. | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| rowspan="2"| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| '']'' | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
| align="center"| <ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1939 |title=The 11th Academy Awards (1939) Nominees and Winners |access-date=August 16, 2011 |publisher=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706093754/http://www.oscars.org/awards/academyawards/legacy/ceremony/11th-winners.html |archive-date=July 6, 2011 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| '']'' | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
| align="center"| <ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1948 |title=The 20th Academy Awards (1948) Nominees and Winners |access-date=August 18, 2011 |publisher=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110706093801/http://www.oscars.org/awards/academyawards/legacy/ceremony/20th-winners.html |archive-date=July 6, 2011 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| Best Acting | |||
| rowspan="2"| ''Four Daughters'' | |||
| {{won}} | |||
| align="center"| <ref>{{cite web |url=https://nationalboardofreview.org/award-years/1938/ |title=1938 Award Winners |publisher=] |access-date=July 29, 2024}}</ref> | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| rowspan="2"| ] | |||
| rowspan="2"| ] | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
| align="center"| | |||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| ''Body and Soul'' | |||
| {{nom}} | |||
| align="center"| | |||
|} | |||
* He was given a star on the ] at 7065 ]. | |||
==Cultural references== | |||
In '']'' (1973), Detective Kinderman says Father Damien Karras "looks like a boxer", and more specifically John Garfield as he appeared in ''Body and Soul''. | |||
The protagonist in ]'s novel '']'', Larry "Doc" Sportello, discusses Garfield's film appearances throughout the detective story.<ref>{{cite journal| last1=Miller| first1=Laura| title=Pynchon Lights Up| url=https://www.salon.com/2009/07/31/pynchon_2/| journal=]| date=July 31, 2009| access-date=October 21, 2017}}</ref> | |||
The ] song "The Late John Garfield Blues" is inspired by Garfield.<ref>{{cite news| last1=Jaffee| first1=Robert David| title=Witness to a Persecution: In Search of Blacklistee John Garfield| url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-david-jaffee/witness-to-a-persecution-_b_2735083.html| access-date=December 3, 2014| work=The Huffington Post| date=February 22, 2013}}</ref> The actor is also mentioned by Prine in "Picture Show", a song in the musician's Grammy Award-winning album '']''. | |||
In the film '']'' (1975), Burt Reynolds' character references Garfield during a discussion of screen heroes. | |||
In the film '']'' (1993), when discussing the contract for one night with his wife, there is a "John Garfield" clause in the contract stating he pays even if he dies during the event. | |||
Garfield is a character in ''Names'', Mark Kemble's play about former Group Theatre members' struggles with the ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Hirschhorn |first=Joel |date=2001-12-04 |title=Names |url=https://variety.com/2001/legit/reviews/names-2-1200552406/ |access-date=2023-01-27 |website=Variety |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* Morris, George. ''John Garfield''. New York, Jove Publications, 1977 {{ISBN|0-15-646250-8}} | |||
*{{cite book| last=McGrath| first=Patrick J.| title=John Garfield: The Illustrated Career in Films And on Stage| year=2006| publisher=McFarland & Co., Inc.| location=North Carolina| isbn=978-0-7864-2848-9| page=273| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YfRpu4IB89AC}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Commons}} | |||
*{{imdb name|id= 0002092|name=John Garfield}} | |||
*{{ |
* {{IMDb name|0002092}} | ||
* {{IBDB name}} | |||
* | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160105022912/http://themave.com/Garfield/ |date=January 5, 2016 }} | |||
* | |||
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Latest revision as of 13:56, 15 December 2024
American actor (1913–1952) For the Michigan politician, see John P. Garfield.
John Garfield | |
---|---|
Garfield in Tortilla Flat (1942) | |
Born | Jacob Julius Garfinkle (1913-03-04)March 4, 1913 New York City, U.S. |
Died | May 21, 1952(1952-05-21) (aged 39) New York City, U.S. |
Resting place | Westchester Hills Cemetery |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1932–1952 |
Spouse |
Roberta Seidman (m. 1935) |
Children | 3 |
John Garfield (born Jacob Julius Garfinkle; March 4, 1913 – May 21, 1952) was an American actor who played brooding, rebellious, working-class characters. He grew up in poverty in New York City. In the early 1930s, he became a member of the Group Theatre. In 1937, he moved to Hollywood, eventually becoming one of Warner Bros.' stars. He received Academy Award nominations for his performances in Four Daughters (1938) and Body and Soul (1947).
Called to testify before the U.S. Congressional House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), he denied communist affiliation and refused to "name names", effectively ending his film career. Some have alleged that the stress of this persecution led to his premature death at 39 from a heart attack. Garfield is acknowledged as a predecessor of such Method actors as Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift, and James Dean.
Early life
Jacob Garfinkle (Yiddish: יעקב גאַרפינקלע) was born in a small apartment on Rivington Street in Manhattan's Lower East Side, to David and Hannah Garfinkle, Russian Jewish immigrants, and grew up in the heart of the Yiddish Theater District. In early infancy, a middle name—Julius—was added, and for the rest of his life those who knew him well called him Julie. His father, a clothes presser and part-time cantor, struggled to make a living and to provide even marginal comfort for his small family. When Garfield was five, his brother Max was born. Their mother never fully recovered from what was described as a "difficult" pregnancy and birth. She died two years later, and the young boys were sent to live with various relatives, all poor, scattered across the boroughs of Brooklyn, Queens and The Bronx. Several of these relatives lived in tenements in a section of East Brooklyn called Brownsville, and there, Garfield lived in one house and slept in another. At school, he was judged a poor reader and speller, deficits that were aggravated by irregular attendance. He would later say of his time on the streets there, that he learned "all the meanness, all the toughness it's possible for kids to acquire."
"If I hadn't become an actor, I might have become Public Enemy Number One."
His father remarried and moved to the West Bronx, where Garfield joined a series of gangs. Much later, he would recall: "Every street had its own gang. That's the way it was in poor sections ... the old safety in numbers." He soon became a gang leader. At this time, people started to notice his ability to mimic well-known performers, both physically and facially. He also began to hang out and eventually spar at a boxing gym on Jerome Avenue. At some point, he contracted scarlet fever (it was diagnosed later in adulthood), causing permanent damage to his heart and causing him to miss a lot of school. After he was expelled three times and expressed a wish to quit school altogether, his father and stepmother sent him to P.S. 45, a school for difficult children. It was under the guidance of the school's principal—the educator Angelo Patri—that he was introduced to acting. Noticing Garfield's tendency to stammer, Patri assigned him to a speech therapy class taught by a charismatic teacher named Margaret O'Ryan. She gave him acting exercises and made him memorize and deliver speeches in front of the class and, as he progressed, in front of school assemblies. O'Ryan thought he had a natural talent and cast him in school plays. She encouraged him to sign up for a citywide debating competition sponsored by The New York Times. To his own surprise, he took second prize.
With Patri and O'Ryan's encouragement, he began to take acting lessons at a drama school that was part of The Heckscher Foundation and began to appear in their productions. At one of the latter, he received back-stage congratulations and an offer of support from the Yiddish actor Jacob Ben-Ami, who recommended him to the American Laboratory Theatre. Funded by the Theatre Guild, "the Lab" had contracted with Richard Boleslavski to stage its experimental productions and with Russian actress and expatriate Maria Ouspenskaya to supervise classes in acting. Former members of the Moscow Art Theatre, they were the first proponents of Konstantin Stanislavski's 'system' in the United States, which soon developed into what came to be known as "the Method". Garfield took morning classes and began volunteering time at the Lab after hours, auditing rehearsals, building and painting scenery, and doing crew work. He would later view this time as beginning his apprenticeship in the theater. Among the people becoming disenchanted with the Guild and turning to the Lab for a more radical, challenging environment were Stella Adler, Lee Strasberg, Franchot Tone, Cheryl Crawford and Harold Clurman. In varying degrees, all would become influential in Garfield's later career.
After a stint with Eva Le Gallienne's Civic Repertory Theater and a short period of vagrancy, involving hitchhiking, freight hopping, picking fruit, and logging in the U.S. Northwest, (Preston Sturges conceived the film Sullivan's Travels after hearing Garfield tell of his hobo adventures), Garfield made his Broadway debut in 1932 in a play called Lost Boy. It ran for only two weeks but gave Garfield something critically important for an actor struggling to break into the theater: a credit.
There is a claim that he was a patron of Polly Adler's bordello or brothel in New York.
New York theater and the Group
Garfield received feature billing in his next role, that of Henry the office boy in Elmer Rice's play Counsellor-at-Law, starring Paul Muni. The play ran for three months, made an Eastern tour and returned for an unprecedented second, repeat engagement, only closing when Muni was contractually compelled to go back to Hollywood to make a film for Warners. At this point, Warner's expressed an interest in Garfield and sought a screen test. He turned them down.
Garfield's former colleagues Crawford, Clurman and Strasberg had begun a new theater collective, calling it simply "the Group", and Garfield lobbied his friends hard to get in. After months of rejection, he began frequenting the inside steps of the Broadhurst Theater where the Group had its offices. Cheryl Crawford noticed him one day and greeted him warmly. Feeling encouraged, he made his request for apprenticeship. Something intangible impressed her, and she recommended him to the other directors. They made no objection.
Clifford Odets had been a close friend of Garfield from the early days in the Bronx. After Odets' one-act play Waiting for Lefty became a surprise hit, the Group announced it would mount a production of his full-length drama Awake and Sing. At the playwright's insistence, Garfield was cast as Ralph, the sensitive young son who pleads for "a chance to get to first base". The play opened in February 1935, and Garfield was singled out by critic Brooks Atkinson for having a "splendid sense of character development". Garfield's apprenticeship was officially over; he was voted full membership by the company. Odets was the man of the moment, and he claimed to the press that Garfield was his "find" and that he would soon write a play just for him. That play would turn out to be Golden Boy, but when Luther Adler was cast in the lead role instead, a disillusioned Garfield began to take a second look at the overtures being made by Hollywood.
Warner Bros.
Garfield had been approached by Hollywood studios before—both Paramount and Warners offering screen tests—but talks had always stalled over a clause he wanted inserted in his contract, one that would allow him time off for stage work. Now Warner Bros. acceded to his demand, and Garfield signed a standard feature-player agreement—seven years with options—in Warner's New York office. Many in the Group were livid over what they considered his betrayal. Elia Kazan's reaction was different, suggesting that the Group did not so much fear that Garfield would fail, but that he would succeed. Jack Warner's first order of business was a change of name to John Garfield.
After many false starts, he was finally cast in a supporting, yet crucial role as a tragic young composer in a Michael Curtiz film titled Four Daughters (1938). After the picture's release, he received very positive notices and a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. The studio quickly revised Garfield's contract—designating him a star player rather than a featured one—for seven years without options. They also created a name-above-the-title vehicle for him titled They Made Me a Criminal (1939). Before the success of Daughters, Garfield had made a B movie feature called Blackwell's Island (also 1939). Not wanting their new star to appear in a low-budget film, Warners ordered an A movie upgrade by adding $100,000 to its budget and recalling director Michael Curtiz to shoot newly scripted scenes.
Garfield's debut had a cinematic impact difficult to conceive in retrospect. As biographer Lawrence Swindell put it:
Garfield's work was spontaneous, non-actory; it had abandon. He didn't recite dialogue, he attacked it until it lost the quality of talk and took on the nature of speech ... Like Cagney, he was an exceptionally mobile performer from the start of his screen career. These traits were orchestrated with his physical appearance to create a screen persona innately powerful in the sexual sense. What Warners saw immediately was that Garfield's impact was felt by both sexes. This was almost unique.
His "honeymoon" with Warners over, Garfield entered a protracted period of conflict with the studio, with Warners attempting to cast him in crowd-pleasing melodramas like Dust Be My Destiny (also 1939) and Garfield insisting on quality scripts that would offer challenges and highlight his versatility. The result was often a series of suspensions, with Garfield refusing an assigned role and Warners refusing to pay him. Garfield's problem was shared by any actor working in the studio system of the 1930s: by contract, the studio had the right to cast him in any project they wanted to. But, as Robert Nott explains:
To be fair, most of the studios had a team of producers, directors, and writers who could pinpoint a particular star's strengths and worked to capitalize on those strengths in terms of finding vehicles that would appeal to the public—and hence make the studio money. The forces that prevented him from getting high quality roles were really the result of the combined willpower of the Warner Bros., the studio system in general, and the general public, which also had its own perception of how Garfield (or Cagney or Bogart for that matter) should appear on screen.
A notable exception to this trend was Daughters Courageous (also 1939), a not-quite-sequel (same cast, different story and characters) to his debut film. The film did well critically, but failed to find an audience, the public being dissatisfied that it was not a true sequel (hard to pull off, since the original character Mickey Borden died in the first picture). The director, Curtiz, called the film "my obscure masterpiece".
At the onset of World War II, Garfield immediately attempted to enlist in the armed forces, but was turned down because of his heart condition. Frustrated, he turned his energies to supporting the war effort. He and actress Bette Davis were the driving forces behind the opening of the Hollywood Canteen, a club offering food and entertainment for American servicemen. He traveled overseas to help entertain the troops, made several bond selling tours and starred in a string of patriotic box-office successes like Air Force, Destination Tokyo (both 1943) and Pride of the Marines (1945). He was particularly proud of the last film, based on the life of Al Schmid, a war hero blinded in combat. In preparing for the role, Garfield lived for several weeks with Schmid and his wife in Philadelphia and would blindfold himself for hours at a time.
After the war, Garfield starred in a series of successful films such as The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) with Lana Turner, Humoresque (also 1946) with Joan Crawford, and Gentleman's Agreement (1947), an Oscar-winning Best Picture. In Gentleman's Agreement, Garfield took a featured, but supporting, part because he believed deeply in the film's exposé of antisemitism in America. He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his starring role in Body and Soul (1947). That same year, Garfield returned to Broadway in the play Skipper Next to God. Strong-willed and often verbally combative, Garfield did not hesitate to venture out on his own when the opportunity arose. In 1946, when his contract with Warner Bros. expired, Garfield decided not to renew it and opted to start his own independent production company.
In 1949, he would again star in a Clifford Odets play, The Big Knife.
The Red Scare
—from his statement read before the HUAC"I have nothing to hide and nothing to be ashamed of. My life is an open book. I am no Red. I am no 'pink.' I am no fellow traveler. I am a Democrat by politics, a liberal by inclination, and a loyal citizen of this country by every act of my life."
Long involved in liberal politics, Garfield was caught up in the communist scare of the late 1940s and early 1950s. He supported the Committee for the First Amendment, which opposed governmental investigation of communist activity in Hollywood. When called to testify in 1951 before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, which was empowered to investigate communist infiltration in America, Garfield refused to name Communist Party members or followers, testifying that, indeed, he knew none in the film industry. Garfield rejected communism and, just prior to his death in hopes of redeeming himself in the eyes of the blacklisters, wrote that he had been duped by communist ideology in an unpublished article called "I Was a Sucker for a Left Hook", a reference to Garfield's movies about boxing. However, his forced testimony before the committee had severely damaged his reputation. He was blacklisted in Red Channels and barred from future employment as an actor by Hollywood movie studio bosses for the remainder of his career.
With film work scarce because of the blacklist, Garfield returned to Broadway and starred in a 1952 revival of Golden Boy, finally being cast in the lead role denied him years before.
Near the end of his life, in an effort to clear his name, Garfield began work on an article for Look magazine, in which he would denounce communism without "naming names"; his lawyer advised him to concede that he had been “duped" into contributing time and money to communist front groups. He then arranged to meet with the FBI to press his case. At the meeting, however, the FBI representatives showed him a dossier on his wife Robbe, which included her old Communist Party membership card and cancelled checks to events sponsored by the party, and said that the FBI would clear him if he signed a statement betraying Robbe as a Communist. Garfield instead responded with an angry expletive and walked out of the meeting.
Death
On May 9, 1952, Garfield moved out of his New York apartment for the last time, indicating to friends that the separation from his wife Roberta was not temporary. He confided to columnist Earl Wilson that he would soon be divorced. Close friends speculated that it was his wife's opposition to his planned confession in Look magazine that triggered the separation. He heard that a HUAC investigator was reviewing his testimony for possible perjury charges. His agent reported that 20th Century-Fox wanted him for a film called Taxi but would not even begin talks unless the investigation concluded in his favor. Three actor friends, Canada Lee, Mady Christians and J. Edward Bromberg, had all recently died after being listed by the committee.
On the morning of May 20, Garfield, against his doctor's strict orders, played several strenuous sets of tennis with a friend, mentioning the fact that he had not been to bed the night before. He met actress Iris Whitney for dinner and afterward became ill, complaining that he felt chilled. She took him to her apartment, where he refused to let her call a doctor and instead went to bed. The next morning, she found him dead. Long-term heart problems, allegedly aggravated by the stress of his blacklisting, had led to his death at the age of 39.
The funeral was the largest in New York since Rudolph Valentino's, with over ten thousand people crowding the streets outside. The media circus surrounding Garfield's death led to a running joke, "John Garfield Still Dead Syndrome", that parodied the phenomenon; it would later inspire "Generalissimo Francisco Franco is still dead" in the 1970s after Francisco Franco's protracted terminal illness. Garfield's estate, valued at "more than $100,000", was left entirely to his wife. Shortly afterward, the HUAC closed its investigation of John Garfield, leaving him in the clear. Garfield was interred at Westchester Hills Cemetery in Hastings-on-Hudson, Westchester County, New York.
Personal life
He and Roberta Seidman married in February 1935. His wife had been a member of the Communist Party. They had three children: Katherine (1938 – March 18, 1945), who died of an allergic reaction; David (1943–1994); and Julie (born 1946), the latter two later becoming actors themselves.
His widow Roberta married motion picture and labor lawyer Sidney Cohn in 1954, who died in 1991; Roberta died in a Los Angeles nursing home in 2004. At the time of her death, Julie Garfield told the Los Angeles Times that her mother was embittered over Garfield's treatment by studio executives, who she believed, "had used Garfield as a scapegoat to take attention from others in Hollywood because he had 'formed his own production company and they felt threatened by him.'"
Filmography
Feature films
Short subjects
- Swingtime in the Movies (1938)
- Meet the Stars #1: Chinese Garden Festival (1940)
- Show Business at War (1943)
- Screen Snapshots: The Skolsky Party (1946)
- Screen Snapshots: Out of This World Series (1947)
Documentary
- The John Garfield Story (2003) (available on Warner Home Video's 2004 DVD of The Postman Always Rings Twice)
Radio appearances
Year | Program | Episode | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
1941 | Lux Radio Theatre | "Dust Be My Destiny" | |
May 19, 1946 | Theatre Guild on the Air | "They Knew What They Wanted" | |
1946 | Academy Award | "Blood on the Sun" | |
1947 | Screen Guild Players | "Saturday's Children" | |
1948 | Suspense | "Death Sentence" |
Awards and nominations
Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1938 | Academy Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Four Daughters | Nominated | |
1947 | Best Actor | Body and Soul | Nominated | ||
1938 | National Board of Review Awards | Best Acting | Four Daughters | Won | |
1938 | New York Film Critics Circle Awards | Best Actor | Nominated | ||
1947 | Body and Soul | Nominated |
- He was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7065 Hollywood Boulevard.
Cultural references
In The Exorcist (1973), Detective Kinderman says Father Damien Karras "looks like a boxer", and more specifically John Garfield as he appeared in Body and Soul.
The protagonist in Thomas Pynchon's novel Inherent Vice, Larry "Doc" Sportello, discusses Garfield's film appearances throughout the detective story.
The John Prine song "The Late John Garfield Blues" is inspired by Garfield. The actor is also mentioned by Prine in "Picture Show", a song in the musician's Grammy Award-winning album The Missing Years.
In the film Hustle (1975), Burt Reynolds' character references Garfield during a discussion of screen heroes.
In the film Indecent Proposal (1993), when discussing the contract for one night with his wife, there is a "John Garfield" clause in the contract stating he pays even if he dies during the event.
Garfield is a character in Names, Mark Kemble's play about former Group Theatre members' struggles with the House Un-American Activities Committee.
References
- "John Garfield Dies in N.Y. Home of Actress". Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. May 22, 1952. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
- ^ Beaver, Jim (1978). John Garfield: His Life and Films. Cranbury, NJ: A.S. Barnes & Co. pp. 42–43. ISBN 978-0498018909.
- ^ Nott, Robert (2003). He Ran All the Way: The Life of John Garfield. Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 9780879109851. Retrieved March 10, 2013.
- Bial, Henry (2005). Acting Jewish: Negotiating Ethnicity on the American Stage & Screen. University of Michigan Press. pp. 39-40. ISBN 978-0472069088. Retrieved March 10, 2013.
- ^ McGrath, Patrick J. (January 1, 1993). John Garfield: The Illustrated Career in Films and on Stage. McFarland. p. 5. ISBN 978-0899508672. Retrieved May 16, 2016.
- ^ Swindell, Larry (1975). Body and Soul. New York: William Morrow and Company. p. 6. ISBN 978-0688029074.
- Baxter, John (February 10, 2009). Carnal Knowledge: Baxter's Concise Encyclopedia of Modern Sex. HarperCollins. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-06-087434-6. Retrieved June 28, 2016.
- The "option" gave the studio the right to drop the performer after every six-month period.
- Gould, Mark R. "John Garfield, Film Noir and the Hollywood Blacklist". He Ran All The Way: The Life of John Garfield. @yourlibrary. Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved September 13, 2011.
- Bernstein, Walter (July 31, 2013). Inside Out: A Memoir of the Blacklist. New York: Random House. p. 304. ISBN 978-0-8041-5048-4. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
- ^ Allen, Shannon (February 26, 2021). "John Garfield, HUAC, and He Ran All the Way (1951)". Vanguard of Hollywood. Retrieved April 18, 2022.
- Pechter, William; Polonsky, Abraham (Spring 1962). "Abraham Polonsky and "Force of Evil"". Film Quarterly. 15 (3): 53. doi:10.2307/1210628. JSTOR 1210628.
(Pechter interviewing Polonsky): "It has been suggested that John Garfield's political difficulties and debarment from Hollywood work was a considerable influence in accelerating his early death. Do you have any opinion on this? Yes. He defended his streetboy's honor and they killed him for it."
- ^ Weintraub, Bernard (January 29, 2003). "Recalling John Garfield, Rugged Star KO'd by Fate". The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 1, 2016. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
- Collins, Gail (July 8, 2009). "Michael, a Foreign Affair". The New York Times. Retrieved July 9, 2009.
The practice of churning out stories about a deceased celebrity for as long as possible is an old tradition. It used to be known as the "John Garfield Still Dead" syndrome, after the extensive post-funeral coverage of a movie star who had a fatal heart attack in 1952 in the bed of a woman other than his wife.
- Thurber, Jon (January 26, 2004). "Roberta Garfield Cohn, 89; Leftist Activist and Wife of John Garfield". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 2, 2023.
- url=https://www.amazon.com/Lux-Radio-Theatre-Destiny-episode/dp/B08L2CPR8C
- url=https://www.eBay.com/publicity photo of June Havoc and John Garfield
- ""Blood on the Sun" Next "Academy" Show". Harrisburg Telegraph. October 12, 1946. p. 17. Retrieved October 1, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
- "Those Were the Days". Nostalgia Digest. 35 (2): 32–39. Spring 2009.
- "The 11th Academy Awards (1939) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved August 16, 2011.
- "The 20th Academy Awards (1948) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved August 18, 2011.
- "1938 Award Winners". National Board of Review. Retrieved July 29, 2024.
- Miller, Laura (July 31, 2009). "Pynchon Lights Up". Salon. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
- Jaffee, Robert David (February 22, 2013). "Witness to a Persecution: In Search of Blacklistee John Garfield". The Huffington Post. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
- Hirschhorn, Joel (December 4, 2001). "Names". Variety. Retrieved January 27, 2023.
Further reading
- Morris, George. John Garfield. New York, Jove Publications, 1977 ISBN 0-15-646250-8
- McGrath, Patrick J. (2006). John Garfield: The Illustrated Career in Films And on Stage. North Carolina: McFarland & Co., Inc. p. 273. ISBN 978-0-7864-2848-9.
External links
- John Garfield at IMDb
- John Garfield at the Internet Broadway Database
- John Garfield – The first Rebel Archived January 5, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
- "The Jewish Brando", Tablet Magazine
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- 1952 deaths
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