Glen Ford, The Actor Dead at 90.
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The actor Glen Ford was born in 1916, in Quebec, Canada, but at the age of seven the family moved to California, where Glen was to work for Will Rogers. The handsome, self affacing, quiet character actor was to make over two hundred films.
The Beverly Hills Police Department said in a statement that paramedics were called to Ford’s home in the afternoon and found the actor dead.The cause of his death was not immediately known.
Despite starring in films such as the “Big Heat”, and Gilda, and starring with five movies with Rita Hayworth, he never quite made the big time.
Many critics thought he was underrated and one, David Shipmann, wrote,
“He is a good, if not the best example of that second-string group, the dependable and efficient actor.”
Away from the cameras, Ford led an intensely private life, shunning nightspots in favor of a quiet home life. This year he was scheduled to make his first public appearance in 15 years at a 90th birthday tribute in Hollywood four months ago, but was unable to attend because of ill health. In his place, former co-stars such as Debbie Reynolds and Martin Landau sang his praises.
Although most frequently appearing in Westerns, Ford played a variety of quietly intense heroes and villains and is best remembered for his non-Western roles.
His career began in 1939 and was highlighted by starring roles in director Fritz Lang’s “The Big Heat” in 1953, in which he played a cop out to avenge his wife’s murder; Richard Brooks’ “The Blackboard Jungle” in 1955, in which he played a teacher; and “The Teahouse of the August Moon” in 1956, in which he played a U.S. soldier in Japan.
After his first movie, “Heaven With a Barbed Wire Fence,” Ford made a number of low-budget dramas before joining the U.S. Marine Corps in 1942.
After returning from World War Two, he starred in his first big budget film, the romance “Gilda,” with Hayworth in 1946. The movie was a hit and Bette Davis confirmed his leading-man status by picking him to star with her in “A Stolen Life,” released the same year.
Ford teamed with Hayworth again for “The Loves of Carmen” (1948) and “Affair in Trinidad” (1958) and played one of his best villains, a sadistic lawman, in “The Man From Colorado”
Ford remained a top box-office draw through the 1950s but even when his career declined in the 1960s, his popularity with audiences remained as fixed as his reserved screen personality and wry smile.
The unsuccessful remake of “Cimarron” in 1960 started his career slide into B-movies and low-budget productions such as “A Pocketful of Miracles” (1961), “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” (1962), “The Courtship of Eddie’s Father” (1963) and “The Money Trap” (1964).
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August 31st, 2006 at 10:52 am
90 he lived longer than most men, RIP Glen Ford
June 24th, 2008 at 11:55 pm
what year did he die in? RIP Glen Ford.