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Robert Ryan

TCM Tribute to Robert Ryan

ryanrobert01Robert Bushnell Ryan

(November 11, 1909 – July 11, 1973) was an American actor who often played hardened cops and ruthless villains.

Early life and Career

Ryan was born in Chicago, Illinois, the first child of Timothy Ryan and his wife Mabel Bushnell Ryan. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1932, having held the school’s heavyweight boxing title all four years of his attendance. After graduation, the 6′ 4″ Ryan found employment as a stoker on a ship, a WPA worker, and a ranch hand in Montana.

Ryan attempted to make a career in show business as a playwright, but was forced to start acting in order to support himself. He studied acting in Hollywood and appeared on stage and in small film parts during the early 1940s, beginning with The Ghost Breakers and Queen of the Mob, both for Paramount Pictures in 1940.

In January 1944, after securing a contract guarantee from RKO Radio Pictures, Ryan enlisted in the United States Marine Corps and served as a drill instructor at Camp Pendleton, located between Oceanside and San Clemente in Southern California. At Camp Pendleton, he befriended writer and future director Richard Brooks, whose novel, The Brick Foxhole, he greatly admired. He also took up painting.

ROBERT-RYANRyan’s breakthrough film role was as an anti-Semitic killer in Crossfire (1947), a film noir based on Brooks’s novel. The role won Ryan his sole career Oscar nomination, for Best Supporting Actor. From then on, Ryan’s specialty was tough/tender roles, finding particular expression in the films of directors such as Nicholas Ray, Robert Wise and Sam Fuller. In Ray’s On Dangerous Ground (1951) he portrayed a burnt-out city cop finding redemption while solving a rural murder. In Wise’s The Set-Up (1949), he played an over-the-hill boxer who is brutally punished for refusing to take a dive. Other important films were Anthony Mann’s western The Naked Spur, Sam Fuller’s uproarious Japanese set gangland thriller House of Bamboo, Bad Day at Black Rock, and the socially conscious heist movie Odds Against Tomorrow. He also appeared in several all-star war films, including The Longest Day (1962) and Battle of the Bulge (1965), and The Dirty Dozen. He also played John the Baptist in MGM’s Technicolor epic King of Kings (1961) and was the villainous Claggart in Peter Ustinov’s adaptation of Billy Budd (1962).

In his later years, Ryan continued playing significant roles in major films. Among the most notable were The Dirty Dozen, The Professionals (1966) and Sam Peckinpah’s highly influential brutal western The Wild Bunch (1969). In his final screen appearance, as Larry Slade in the American Film Theatre’s 1973 film of Eugene O’Neill’s The Iceman Cometh, Ryan, who died before the film’s premiere, won the Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor, the National Board of Review Award for Best Actor (in a tie with Al Pacino, for Serpico), and a special award from the National Society of Film Critics.

Less than two years before, Ryan had tackled O’Neill’s next – and penultimate – play onstage, portraying James Tyrone in Arvin Brown’s critically acclaimed Off-Broadway production of Long Day’s Journey Into Night. Ryan’s relatively infrequent stage appearances also include three on Broadway, including a supporting role in the 1941 premiere of Clash by Night (whose 1952 film adaptation would again feature Ryan, this time starring opposite Barbara Stanwyck and Paul Douglas), and, two decades later, starring roles in Mr. President and a 1969 revival of The Front Page, the oft-filmed comedy drama about newspapermen.

Robert_Ryan_in_Marine_Raiders

Ryan in Marine Raiders (1944)

The latter production was one of the first developed by the Plumstead Playhouse (later the Plumstead Theatre Company), a Long Island-based repertory company founded by Ryan, Martha Scott and Henry Fonda; the following winter, a film of the production (produced jointly by MPC and Plumstead) would be broadcast nationally over the upstart Hughes TV Network. Another highlight among Ryan’s regional theater credits came in the summer of 1960, when he starred opposite Katharine Hepburn at the American Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford, Connecticut, playing Antony to Hepburn’s Cleopatra. Ryan also played the title characters in Shakespeare’s Coriolanus (1954, Off-Broadway) and Othello (1967, in Nottingham, England).

Ryan made his belated small screen debut in 1955 as Abraham Lincoln in the Screen Director’s Playhouse adaptation of Christopher Morley’s story, “Lincoln’s Doctor’s Dog.” As he explained to reporters, despite financial considerations, Ryan preferred to steer clear of any TV series commitment:

The only money in TV is in the series, and I want to stay out of those. Sure, I might make a million or so in a series, but I’d wind up being ‘Sidewinder Sam’ for the rest of my life.

2743064673_d4b71d328cRyan would remain true to these convictions, appearing in many television series, but always as a guest star. Notable appearances include his portrayal of Franklin Hoppy-Hopp in the 1964 episode “Who Chopped Down the Cherry Tree?” on the NBC medical drama about psychiatry, The Eleventh Hour. Similarly, he guest starred as Lloyd Osment in the 1964 episode “Better Than a Dead Lion” in the ABC psychiatric series, Breaking Point. In 1964, Ryan appeared with Warren Oates in the episode “No Comment” of CBS’s short-lived drama about newspapers, The Reporter, starring Harry Guardino in the title role of journalist Danny Taylor. Ryan appeared three times (1962–1964) on the western Wagon Train, four times (1956–1959) on CBS’s Dick Powell’s Zane Grey Theater and twice (1959 and 1961) on the Zane Grey spin-off Frontier Justice. Among Ryan’s many appearances on the dramatic anthology series of TV’s golden age, perhaps most notable are his starring roles in Playhouse 90’s production of The Great Gatsby, opposite Jeanne Crain, and in the Buick-Electra Playhouse adaptation of Ernest Hemingway’s “The Snows of Kilimanjaro,” written by A.E. Hotchner, directed by John Frankenheimer, and co-starring Ann Todd, Mary Astor, and Janice Rule.

Although Ryan never appeared in any production of Gene Roddenberry’s “Star Trek”, Ryan was originally considered for the role of Commodore Matt Decker in the Fall 1967 episode “The Doomsday Machine. ” Episode author Norman Spinrad had written the script with actor Robert Ryan in mind to play Commodore Decker, but Ryan was unavailable, owing to prior commitments. That role subsequently went to William Windom.

Politics

robert-ryan-04Ryan was a liberal Democrat who tirelessly supported civil rights issues. Despite his military service, he also came to share the pacifist views of his wife Jessica, who was a Quaker.

In the late 1940s, as the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) intensified its anti-communist attacks on Hollywood, he joined the short-lived Committee for the First Amendment. Throughout the 1950s, he donated money and services to civic and religious organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union, American Friends Service Committee, and United World Federalists. In September 1959, he and Steve Allen became founding co-chairs of The Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy’s Hollywood chapter.

By the mid-1960’s, Ryan’s political activities included efforts to fight racial discrimination. He served in the cultural division of the Committee to Defend Martin Luther King and, with Bill Cosby, Robert Culp, Sidney Poitier, and other actors, helped organize the short-lived Artists Help All Blacks.

Ryan’s film work often ran counter to the political causes he embraced. He was a pacifist who starred in war movies, westerns, and violent thrillers. He was an opponent of McCarthyism who played a nefarious Communist agent in I Married a Communist. In socially progressive films such as Crossfire, Bad Day at Black Rock, Executive Action and Odds Against Tomorrow, he played bigoted villains. Ryan was often vocal about this dichotomy. At a screening of Odds Against Tomorrow, he appeared before the press to discuss “the problems of an actor like me playing the kind of character that in real life he finds totally despicable.”

Personal Life

On March 11, 1939, he married Jessica Cadwalader. They had two sons—Cheyney, a research fellow at Oxford University and a Professor of Philosophy and Law at the University of Oregon, his oldest son, Walker T, a bluesman—and one daughter, Lisa. They lived in the Manhattan co-op The Dakota at 72nd and Central Park West and eventually sublet the apartment to John Lennon and Yoko Ono.

In the fall of 1951, a progressive school by the name of Oakwood was opened in Jessica and Robert Ryan’s backyard, founded by a small group of parents who decided to create a school based on their views of education and child-rearing. Three years later, those parents, including the Ryans, Sidney Harmon and Elizabeth Schappert, Wendy and Ross Cabeen, and Charles and Emilie Haas bought and built the elementary school campus on Moorpark Street in Los Angeles.

Robert and Jessica remained married until her death from cancer in 1972. He died from lung cancer in New York City the following year at age 63.

41J367BJ0SL._SX313_BO1,204,203,200_Filmography

1940 – The Ghost Breakers
1940 – Golden Gloves
1940 – Queen of the Mob
1940 – North West Mounted Police
1940 – The Texas Rangers Ride Again (last film for Paramount)
1943 – Bombardier (first film for RKO)
1943 – Behind the Rising Sun
1943 – The Sky’s the Limit
1943 – Tender Comrade
1943 – Gangway for Tomorrow
1944 – Marine Raiders
1947 – The Woman on the Beach
1947 – Crossfire
1948 – Berlin Express
1948 – The Boy with Green Hair
1948 – Act of Violence
1948 – Return of the Bad Men
1949 – Caught
1949 – I Married a Communist
1949 – The Set-Up
1950 – The Secret Fury
1950 – Born to Be Bad
1951 – Best of the Badmen
1951 – The Racket
1951 – Flying Leathernecks
1951 – On Dangerous Ground
1952 – Clash by Night
1952 – Beware, My Lovely
1952 – Horizons West
1953 – City Beneath the Sea
1953 – The Naked Spur
1953 – Inferno
1954 – Alaska Seas
1954 – About Mrs. Leslie
1954 – Her Twelve Men
1955 – Bad Day at Black Rock
1955 – The Tall Men
1955 – House of Bamboo
1955 – Escape to Burma
1956 – The Proud Ones
1956 – Back from Eternity
1957 – Men in War
1958 – God’s Little Acre
1958 – Lonelyhearts
1959 – Day of the Outlaw
1959 – Odds Against Tomorrow
1960 – Ice Palace
1961 – King of Kings
1961 – The Canadians
1962 – The Longest Day
1962 – Billy Budd
1965 – Battle of the Bulge
1965 – The Dirty Game
1966 – The Professionals
1967 – The Dirty Dozen
1967 – Hour of the Gun
1968 – Custer of the West
1968 – Anzio
1968 – A Minute to Pray, a Second to Die
1969 – Captain Nemo and the Underwater City
1969 – The Wild Bunch
1971 – Lawman
1972 – …and Hope to Die (fr)
1973 – Lolly-Madonna XXX
1973 – The Outfit
1973 – Executive Action
1973 – The Iceman Cometh (as Larry Slade)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Ryan

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