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Glenn Ford

Personal Profile

Glenn Ford
  • Birth Name:
    Gwyllyn Samuel Newton Ford
  • Date of Birth:
    May 1, 1916
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Taurus
  • Place of Birth:
    Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
  • Place of Death:
    Beverly Hills, Los Angeles County, California, U.S.A
  • Date of Death:
    August 30, 2006
  • Height:
    5' 11"
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Nationality:
    American
  • Education:
    Santa Monica High School, Santa Monica, California
  • Address:
    c/o 911 Oxford Way,Beverly Hills, CA 90210.

Family

Glenn Ford
  • Father:
    Newton Ford
  • Mother:
    Hannah Ford
  • Spouse:
    Eleanor Powell (1943-1959), Kathryn Hays (1966-1969), Cynthia Hayward (1974-1977), Jeanne Baus (1993-1994)
  • Son:
    Peter Newton Ford

Career

Glenn Ford

Awards

Glenn Ford

1957- Golden Apple, Most Cooperative Actor

1948- Golden Apple, Most Cooperative Actor

1962- Golden Globe, Best Motion Picture Actor - Musical/Comedy for: Pocketful of Miracles (1961)

1958, Golden Laurel, Top Male Comedy Performance for: Don't Go Near the Water (1957)

Trivia

Glenn Ford
  • The 2006 movie Superman Returns includes a scene where Ma Kent (played by Eva Marie Saint) stands next to the living room mantel after Superman returns from his quest to find remnants of Krypton.
  • In 1991, Ford agreed to star in a cable network series, African Skies.
  • Ford's final scene in the film begins with a direct reference to Blackboard Jungle - the earlier film's theme song "Rock Around the Clock" is heard on a car radio.
  • In 1978, Ford had a supporting role in Superman, as Clark Kent's adopted father, Jonathan Kent, a role that introduced Ford to a new generation of film audiences.
  • In 1971, Ford signed with CBS to star in his first television series, a half hour comedy/drama titled The Glenn Ford Show.
  • Ford's versatility also allowed him to star in a number of popular comedies, including The Teahouse of the August Moon, Don't Go Near the Water, The Gazebo, Cry For Happy, and The Courtship of Eddie's Father.
  • His major roles in thrillers, dramas and action films include A Stolen Life with Bette Davis, The Secret of Convict Lake with Gene Tierney, The Big Heat, Framed, Blackboard Jungle, Interrupted Melody with Eleanor Parker, Experiment in Terror with Lee Remick, Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, Ransom!, Superman and westerns such as The Fastest Gun Alive, 3:10 to Yuma and Cimarron.
  • Ford's career flourished in the 1950s and into the 1960s, and continued into the early 1990s, with an increasing number of television roles.
  • While the movie is mostly remembered as the vehicle for Hayworth's "provocative rendition of a song called Put the Blame on Mame", The New York Times movie reviewer Bosley Crowther praised Ford's "stamina and poise in a thankless role" despite the movie's poor direction.
  • He went on to be a leading man opposite her in a total of five films.

Quotes

Glenn Ford
  • "I wish I were up and around, but I'm doing the best that I can. There's so much I have to be grateful for."
  • "When I see films that go on and on with dialogue, I feel like telling the actors, "Be quiet! Let the audience do some of the work!"
  • :I'm out of place doing sophistication. I'm so uncomfortable in a tuxedo."
  • "Never give up. Take what life throws at you and throw it right back. If life keeps throwing then you have a tennis match going. Learn to like tennis."
  • "If they tried to rush me, I'd always say I've only got one other speed, and it's slower."
  • "I've never played anyone but myself on screen."
  • "The Western is a man's world and I love it."
  • "People laugh when I say I'm not an actor, but I'm not, I play myself."
  • "When I'm on camera, I have to do things pretty much the way I do things in everyday life. It gives the audience someone real to identify with."
  • “We recognize that this change in policy has significant impact across the university.”
View all Quotes: Glenn Ford

Biography

Glenn Ford
Last Updated: Tuesday, August 18, 2009

glennThe son of a Canadian railroad executive, Glenn Ford first toddled on-stage at age four in a community production of Tom Thumb's Wedding. In 1924, Ford's family moved to California, where he was active in high-school theatricals. He landed his first professional theater job as a stage manager in 1934, and, within a year, he was acting in the West Coast company of Lillian Hellman's The Children's Hour.

Although he made his film debut in 20th Century Fox's Heaven With a Barbed Wire Fence (1939), Ford was signed by Columbia, which remained his home base for the next 14 years. After an apprenticeship in such B-movies as Blondie Plays Cupid (1940), Ford was promoted to Columbia's A-list.

Outwardly a most ordinary and unprepossessing personality, Ford possessed that intangible "something" that connected with audiences. The first phase of his stardom was interrupted by World War II service in the Marines (he retained his officer's commission long after the war, enabling him to make goodwill visits to Korea and Vietnam). Upon his return, Ford had some difficulty jump-starting his career, but, in 1946, he was back on top as Rita Hayworth's co-star in Gilda. While he insisted that he "never played anyone but [himself] onscreen," Ford's range was quite extensive.

He was equally effective as a tormented film noir hero (The Big Heat [1953], Human Desire [1954]) as he was in light comedy (Teahouse of the August Moon [1956], The Gazebo[1959]). Nearly half of his films were Westerns, many of which The Desperadoes (1943), The Fastest Gun Alive (1956), 3:10 to Yuma (1957), Cowboy (1958) — were among the best and most successful examples of that highly specialized genre. He was also quite effective at conveying courage under pressure: While it was clear that his characters in such films as The Blackboard Jungle (1955) and Ransom (1956) were terrified by the circumstances surrounding them, it was also obvious that they weren't about to let that terror get the better of them.

In 1958, Ford was voted the number one male box-office attraction. Through sagacious career choices, the actor was able to extend his popularity long after the studio system that "created" him had collapsed. In 1971, he joined such film stars as Shirley MacLaine, Anthony Quinn, and Jimmy Stewart in the weekly television grind. While his series Cade's County ended after a single season, in the long run it was more successful than the vintage-like programs of MacLaine, Quinn, et al., and enjoyed a healthy life in syndication.

glennFord went on to star in another series, The Family Holvak (1975), and hosted a weekly documentary, When Havoc Struck (1978). He also headlined such miniseries as Once an Eagle (1976) and Evening in Byzantium (1978), and delivered a particularly strong performance as an Irish-American patriarch in the made-for-TV feature The Gift (1979). He continued showing up in choice movie supporting roles into the early '90s; one of the best of these was as Clark Kent's foster father in Superman: The Movie (1978).

Although illness sharply curtailed his performing activities after that, Ford was still seemingly on call during the 1980s and '90s whenever a cable TV documentary on Hollywood's Golden Era required an eyewitness interview subject. In 1970, Ford published an autobiography, Glenn Ford, RFD Beverly Hills. His first wife was actress Eleanor Powell; He was also married to Kathryn Hays and Cynthia Hayward. His last film appearance was a cameo in 1993's Tombstone; after a series of strokes later that decade, he died in 2006 at the age of 90.

Filmography

Glenn Ford

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