- Dean Jagger
-
Dean Jagger
in Dangerous Number (1937)Born Ira Dean Jagger
November 7, 1903
Columbus Grove, Ohio,
United StatesDied February 5, 1991 (aged 87)
Santa Monica, California,
United StatesOccupation Actor Years active 1929–87 Spouse Antoinette Lawrence (1935-43) (divorced)
Gloria Ling (1947-67) (divorced) 1 daughter
Etta Mae Norton (1968-91) (his death)Dean Jagger (November 7, 1903 – February 5, 1991) was an Academy Award winning American film actor.[1]
Contents
Career
Born Ira Dean Jagger in Columbus Grove, Ohio, Jagger made his film debut in The Woman from Hell (1929) with Mary Astor. He became a successful character actor, without becoming a major star, and appeared in almost 100 films in a career that lasted until shortly before his death.
Jagger made his breakthrough to major roles in film with his portrayal of Brigham Young in Brigham Young (1940).[2] According to George D. Pyper, a technical consultant on the film who had personally known Brigham Young, said that Jagger not only resembled Young, he also spoke like him and had many of his mannerisms.[2]
Jagger then played prominent roles in Western Union (1941), Sister Kenny (1946) and Raoul Walsh's Western neo-noir Pursued (1947).
He received an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in Twelve O'Clock High (1949). In the film he played the middle-aged adjutant Major Stovall, who acts as an advisor to the commander General Savage (Gregory Peck), and is tasked with writing letters to the next of kin of slain airmen. He appeared in the biblical epic The Robe (1953) as the weaver Justus of Cana, "whose words were like his work: simple, lasting, and strong," as Marcellus Gallio (Richard Burton) put it later in the film.
He was the retired general honored by Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye in the musical White Christmas (1954) and a helpless sheriff in the iconic Bad Day at Black Rock (1955) directed by John Eliot Sturges.
For the 1956 British science-fiction film X the Unknown, there was controversy when the actor refused to work with director Joseph Losey on this film because Losey was on the Hollywood blacklist. Losey was removed from the project after a few days shooting and replaced with Les Norman.
Jagger portrayed the father of Elvis Presley in 1958's King Creole. He was the traveling manager for an evangelist played by Jean Simmons in the acclaimed 1960 drama Elmer Gantry, which won three Academy Awards.
In 1969 Jagger played "The Highwayman" in John Huston's The Kremlin Letter. In 1971's Vanishing Point, the actor made a brief but memorable appearance as a prospector in the desert with a knack for handling rattlesnakes.
Jagger also achieved success in the television series Mr. Novak, receiving Emmy Award nominations for his role, in 1964 and 1965. He won a Daytime Emmy award for a guest appearance in the religious series This Is the Life. He did dozens of TV dramatic roles, including an episode of The Twilight Zone called "Static." In an early episode of the television series Kung Fu Jagger appeared as Caine's Grandfather who wants little to do with him, but starts Caine on his series long search for his half brother Danny. One of Jagger's last television roles was a guest appearance on St. Elsewhere, The Fugitive.
In later years, Jagger played outstanding made for TV successful movie roles in The Glass House (1972, ABC) which also starred Alan Alda and Vic Morrow. The screenplay was done by Truman Capote. Jagger played state prison Warden Auerbach. And then in 1973, he was in another TV movie which was a pilot for TV series called "The Stranger". This movie was science fiction where Glenn Corbett of Star Trek (TOS) guest star fame where he was one called Metamorphosis. In this intended new show he was a stranded earthman astronaut on the alien planet called Terra, and Jagger was a leader of a corrupt deceptive government known as "The Perfect Order". The great TV movie also starred Lew Ayres and Cameron Mitchell. None of the major three networks ever picked it up as a weekly series as the moon missions ended and cops and robber shows were dominating the networks of the day.
Dean Jagger has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contribution to motion pictures, at 1523 Vine Street.
Personal life
He dropped out of school several times before finally attending Wabash College. While at Wabash he was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. He worked as a teacher before studying acting at Chicago's Lyceum Art Conservatory. Before making his first movie "in 1929, Jagger had worked in stock, vaudeville and radio."[3]
Jagger was baptized a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1972.[4][5]
He died from heart disease in Santa Monica, California. He was 87, and was buried in the small hamlin town of Hughson, CA. at Lakewood Memorial Park. His widow Etta Mae Norton Jagger joined him there in death just 11 months later, in January 17, 1992. She was 67.
References
- ^ Obituary Variety, February 11, 1991.
- ^ a b LDS Church News, July 7th, 2003
- ^ http://www.allmovie.com/artist/dean-jagger-35003
- ^ Famous Mormon Actors, Producers and Directors
- ^ LDS Church News July 12th, 2003
External links
- Dean Jagger at the Internet Movie Database
- Dean Jagger at the Internet Broadway Database
- Dean Jagger at Find a Grave
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor (1941–1960) Donald Crisp (1941) · Van Heflin (1942) · Charles Coburn (1943) · Barry Fitzgerald (1944) · James Dunn (1945) · Harold Russell (1946) · Edmund Gwenn (1947) · Walter Huston (1948) · Dean Jagger (1949) · George Sanders (1950) · Karl Malden (1951) · Anthony Quinn (1952) · Frank Sinatra (1953) · Edmond O'Brien (1954) · Jack Lemmon (1955) · Anthony Quinn (1956) · Red Buttons (1957) · Burl Ives (1958) · Hugh Griffith (1959) · Peter Ustinov (1960)
Complete list · (1936–1940) · (1941–1960) · (1961–1980) · (1981–2000) · (2001–2020) Categories:- 1903 births
- 1991 deaths
- American film actors
- American television actors
- Best Supporting Actor Academy Award winners
- Actors from Indiana
- American Latter Day Saints
- Converts to Mormonism
- Cardiovascular disease deaths in California
- Daytime Emmy Award winners
- Wabash College alumni
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.