Dana Andrews
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Dana Andrews (January 1, 1909 – December 17, 1992) was an American film actor. He was one of Hollywood's major stars of the 1940s, and continued acting, though generally in less prestigious roles, into the 1980s. One of his best-known roles, and the one for which he received the most praise, was as war veteran Fred Derry in The Best Years of Our Lives (1946).
Contents
Early life
He was born Carver Dana Andrews on a farmstead outside Collins, Covington Coul ppl poultry, Mississippi, the third of thirteen children of Charles Forrest Andrews, a Baptist minister, and his wife Annis (née Speed).[2] The family subsequently moved to Huntsville, Texas, where his younger siblings (including actor Steve Forrest) were born.
He attended college at Sam Houston State University[3] and also studied business administration in Houston, Texas. In 1931, he traveled to Los Angeles, California, seeking opportunities as a singer. He worked at various jobs, including pumping gas in Van Nuys. To help Andrews study music at night, "The station owners stepped in ... with a deal: $50 a week for full-time study, in exchange for a five-year share of possible later earnings."[4]
Career
Andrews signed a contract with Samuel Goldwyn and nine years after arriving in Los Angeles was offered his first movie role in William Wyler's The Westerner (1940), starring Gary Cooper.[5] He was also memorable as the gangster in the 1941 comedy Ball of Fire, again teaming with Gary Cooper. In the 1943 movie adaptation of The Ox-Bow Incident with Henry Fonda, often cited as one of his best films, he played a lynching victim. His signature roles came as an obsessed detective in Laura (1944) opposite Gene Tierney, and as a U.S. Army Air Force officer returning home from the war in the Oscar-winning 1946 film The Best Years of Our Lives. Both films became classics. In 1945, he co-starred with Jeanne Crain in the musical State Fair. In 1947, he was voted the 23rd most popular star in the U.S.[6]
He played a brutal cop in Where the Sidewalk Ends (1950), also with Gene Tierney. Around this time, alcoholism began to derail Andrews' career, and on a couple of occasions it nearly cost him his life on the highway. By the middle 1950s, Andrews was acting almost exclusively in B-movies. A handful of films he starred in during the late 1950s, however, contain memorable work. Two movies for Fritz Lang in 1956, While the City Sleeps and Beyond a Reasonable Doubt, and two for Jacques Tourneur, Night of the Demon (1957) and The Fearmakers (1958), are well regarded.
From 1952 to 1954, Andrews starred in the radio series I Was a Communist for the FBI about the experiences of Matt Cvetic, an FBI informer who infiltrated the Communist Party. In 1963, he was elected president of the Screen Actors Guild. Andrews later appeared in a leading role as college president Tom Boswell on the NBC daytime soap opera Bright Promise from its premiere on September 29, 1969 until March 1971.[7] In 1960 he and Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. starred in The Crowded Sky. Fifteen years later, Andrews and Zimbalist appeared in Airport 1975, Andrews playing a businessman pilot who has a heart attack and crashes his plane into a 747 that Zimbalist is flying.
Later years
In the 1970s, Andrews was active in real estate, telling a newspaper reporter, "I have one hotel that brings me in $200,000 a year."[5]
Personal life
Andrews married Janet Murray on New Year's Eve, 1932. Their son David (1933–1964) was a musician and composer who died from a cerebral hemorrhage. Janet Andrews died in 1935 of pneumonia. On November 17, 1939, he married actress Mary Todd, by whom he had three children, Katharine, Stephen and Susan. For two decades the family lived in Toluca Lake.
Andrews eventually brought his alcoholism under control and worked actively with the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence.[5] In 1972, he appeared in a television public service advertisement on the subject.[2]
He spent his final years living at the John Douglas French Center for Alzheimer's Disease in Los Alamitos, California.[2]
Death
In the last years of his life, Andrews suffered from Alzheimer's disease. In 1992, two weeks before his 84th birthday, he died of congestive heart failure and pneumonia. This is especially poignant in that Mr. Andrews had a photographic memory with instant recall. As a guest on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, Carson commented on these remarkable mental gifts after Andrews recited verbatim his lines from a scene in the 1940s movie that Johnny mentioned as being one of his favorite WWII movies. This led into a discussion of Andrews remembering every line of dialogue from all of his movies, how he only had to read a script once to remember it permanently, and how these abilities made him popular with directors whenever there were script re-writes during filming.
Select filmography
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- The Westerner (film debut, 1940)
- Lucky Cisco Kid (1940)
- Sailor's Lady (1940)
- Kit Carson (1940)
- Tobacco Road (1941)
- Belle Starr (1941)
- Ball of Fire (1941)
- Swamp Water (1941)
- Berlin Correspondent (1942)
- Crash Dive (1943)
- The Ox-Bow Incident (1943)
- The North Star (1943)
- December 7th (1943)
- Up in Arms (1944)
- The Purple Heart (1944)
- Wing and a Prayer (1944)
- Laura (1944)
- State Fair (1945)
- Fallen Angel (1945)
- A Walk in the Sun (1945)
- Canyon Passage (1946)
- The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)
- Daisy Kenyon (1947)
- Boomerang (1947)
- Night Song (1948)
- The Iron Curtain (1948)
- No Minor Vices (1948)
- Deep Waters (1948)
- My Foolish Heart (1949)
- Sword in the Desert (1949)
- The Forbidden Street (1949)
- Where the Sidewalk Ends (1950)
- Edge of Doom (1950)
- Sealed Cargo (1951)
- The Frogmen (1951)
- Assignment – Paris! (1952)
- Three Hours to Kill (1954)
- Elephant Walk (1954)
- Duel in the Jungle (1954)
- Strange Lady in Town (1955)
- Smoke Signal (1955)
- While the City Sleeps (1956)
- Comanche (1956)
- Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (1956)
- Zero Hour! (1957)
- Night of the Demon (1957)
- The Fearmakers (1958)
- Enchanted Island (1958)
- The Crowded Sky (1960)
- Madison Avenue (1962)
- The Twilight Zone: "No Time Like the Past" (1963)
- Town Tamer (1965)
- In Harm's Way (1965)
- The Satan Bug (1965)
- Brainstorm (1965)
- Berlin, Appointment for the Spies (1965)
- Crack in the World (1965)
- Battle of the Bulge (1965)
- The Loved One (1965)
- The Frozen Dead (1966)
- Johnny Reno (1966)
- The Cobra (1967)
- Hot Rods to Hell (1967)
- The Devil's Brigade (1968)
- Night Gallery: "The Different Ones" (1971)
- Innocent Bystanders (1972)
- Airport 1975 (1974)
- Take a Hard Ride (1975)
- The Last Tycoon (1976)
- Good Guys Wear Black (1978)
- Born Again (1978)
- The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries: "Assault on the Tower" (1978)
- The Pilot (1980)
- Falcon Crest (TV series, 2 episodes) (1982/1983)
- Prince Jack (1985)
Radio appearances
Year | Program | Episode/source |
---|---|---|
1948 | Lux Radio Theatre | The Luck of the Irish[8] |
1952 | Hallmark Playhouse | The Secret Road[9] |
1953 | Theater of Stars | The Token[10] |
References
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External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.. |
- Dana Andrews on I Was a Communist for the FBI radio program
- Dana Andrews at the Internet Movie Database
- Dana Andrews at the Internet Broadway DatabaseLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Dana Andrews at AllMusic
- Dana Andrews at the TCM Movie Database
- Photographs and literature
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- Pages with reference errors
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- 1909 births
- 1992 deaths
- Male actors from Mississippi
- Male actors from Texas
- American male film actors
- American male television actors
- California Republicans
- Presidents of the Screen Actors Guild
- Deaths from pneumonia
- Infectious disease deaths in California
- Mississippi Republicans
- Texas Republicans
- People from Covington County, Mississippi
- 20th-century American male actors
- Sam Houston State University alumni
- 20th Century Fox contract players
- People with Alzheimer's disease