James Kirkwood Sr.
American actor and film director
James Kirkwood Sr.
Born (1876-02-22 ) February 22, 1876Died August 24, 1963(1963-08-24) (aged 87) Occupation(s) Actor , film director Years active 1909–1956 Spouses
Beatrice Powers Kirkwood
(
m. 1931;
div. 1934)
Marjorie Davidson
(
m. 1940, divorced)
Children 4, including James Kirkwood Jr.
James Cornelius Kirkwood Sr. (February 22, 1876[ 1] – August 24, 1963) was an American actor and director .
Biography
Kirkwood debuted on screen in 1909 and was soon playing leads for D. W. Griffith . He started directing in 1912, and became a favorite of Mary Pickford , with whom he is rumored to have had an affair. In 1923, he married actress Lila Lee ; with her, he had a son, James Kirkwood Jr. , who became a successful writer, winning both a Tony Award and a Pulitzer Prize for A Chorus Line .[ 2] [ 3] Previously he had been married to Gertrude Robinson , with whom he also had a child.[ 4] During his marriage to Robinson, he had an affair with Mary Miles Minter , who was 15 at the time. They "married" without clergy in the countryside near Santa Barbara. Their relationship ended after Minter became pregnant with Kirkwood's child and underwent an abortion.[ 5]
In 1931, he married actress Beatrice Powers, and had a daughter, Joan Mary Kirkwood, with her. They divorced in 1934, with Powers citing mental cruelty.[ 6] He married Marjorie Davidson (1920–2008) in 1940, and had a son with her, Terrance Michael Kirkwood (born 1941).
He was George Melford 's original choice for the starring role of Sheik Ahmed Ben Hassan in The Sheik , which was later famously passed to Rudolph Valentino .[ 7] [ 8] His directing career fizzled in 1920,[citation needed ] but he continued acting well into the 1950s. His film career would span more than two hundred films over nearly a half century.
He died at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital .[ 9]
Selected filmography
A Corner in Wheat (1909, Short) – The Farmer
At the Altar (1909, Short)
The Lonely Villa (1909, Short) – Among Rescuers
The Hessian Renegades (1909, Short) – Messenger's Father
Pippa Passes (1909, Short) – Jules
Fools of Fate (1909, Short) – Ben Webster
Nursing a Viper (1909, Short) – In Mob
The Death Disc: A Story of the Cromwellian Period (1909, Short) – Cromwell's Advisor
The Red Man's View (1909, Short) – Silver Eagle's Father – the Tribal Spokesman (uncredited)
In Little Italy (1909, Short) – The Sheriff
To Save Her Soul (1909, Short) – Backstage at Debut / At Party
The Day After (1909, Short) – Party Guest
The Rocky Road (1910, Short) – The Best Man
The Woman from Mellon's (1910, Short) – The Minister
The Modern Prodigal (1910, Short)
The Bridal Room (1912, Short) – Minor Role
The Left-Handed Man (1913, Short) – The Old Soldier
The House of Discord (1913, Short) – The Wife's Sweetheart
Home, Sweet Home (1914) – The Mother's Son
The Eagle's Mate (1914) – Lancer Morne
Behind the Scenes (1914) – Steve Hunter
The Green-Eyed Devil (1914, Short, Director)
Lord Chumley (1914, Short, Director)
Cinderella (1914, Short, Director)
Strongheart (1914, Short, Director)
The Floor Above (1914, Director)
Gambier's Advocate (1915) – Stephen Gambier
Little Pal (1915, Director) – Minor Role (uncredited)
The Heart of Jennifer (1915, Director) – James Murray
Fanchon the Cricket (1915, Director)
The Foundling (1916) – Detective
The Lost Bridegroom (1916, Director)
Susie Snowflake (1916, Director)
Dulcie's Adventure (1916, Director)
Faith (1916, Director)
The Innocence of Lizette (1916, Director)
A Dream or Two Ago (1916, Director)
Over There (1917, Director)
The Gentle Intruder (1917, Director)
Environment (1917, Director)
Annie-for-Spite (1917, Director)
Periwinkle (1917, Director)
Melissa of the Hills (1917, Director)
The Struggle Everlasting (1918, Director)
The Uphill Path (1918, Director)
The Luck of the Irish (1920) – William Grogan
The Scoffer (1920) – Dr. Stannard Wayne
In the Heart of a Fool (1920) – Grant Adams
The Forbidden Thing (1920) – Abel Blake
The Branding Iron (1920) – Pierre Landis
Love (1920) – Tom Chandler
Man, Woman & Marriage (1921) – David Courtney
Bob Hampton of Placer (1921) – Bob Hampton
A Wise Fool (1921, extant ; Library of Congress) – Jean Jacques Barbille
The Great Impersonation (1921) – Sir Everard Dominey / Leopold von Ragastein
The Man from Home (1922) – Daniel Forbes Pike
Under Two Flags (1922) – Cpl. Victor
Pink Gods (1922) – John Quelch
The Sin Flood (1922) – O'Neill
Ebb Tide (1922) – Robert Herrick
You Are Guilty (1923) – Stephen Martin
Human Wreckage (1923) – Alan MacFarland
The Eagle's Feather (1923) – John Trent
Ponjola (1923) – Lundi Druro
Discontented Husbands (1924) – Michael Frazer
Love's Whirlpool (1924) – Jim Reagan
Wandering Husbands (1924) – George Moreland
Broken Barriers (1924) – Ward Trenton
Another Man's Wife (1924) – John Brand
Circe, the Enchantress (1924) – Dr. Wesley Van Martyn
The Painted Flapper (1924) – Richard Whitney
Gerald Cranston's Lady (1924) – Gerald Cranston
Secrets of the Night (1924 extant ) – Robert Andrews
The Top of the World (1925) – Guy Ranger / Burke Ranger
The Police Patrol (1925) – Officer Jim Ryan
That Royle Girl (1925) – Calvin Clarke
Lover's Island (1925) – Jack Avery
The Reckless Lady (1926) – Colonel Fleming
The Wise Guy (1926) – Guy Watson
Butterflies in the Rain (1926) – John Humphries
Million Dollar Mystery (1927) – James Norton
Someone to Love (1928) – Mr. Kendricks
Black Waters (1929) – Rev. Eph Kelly / Tiger Larabee
The Time, the Place and the Girl (1929) – The Professor
Hearts in Exile (1929) – Baron Serge Palma
The Devil's Holiday (1930) – Mark Stone
Worldly Goods (1930) – John C. Tullock
The Spoilers (1930) – Joe Dextry
Young Sinners (1931) – John Gibson
A Holy Terror (1931) – William Drew
Transatlantic (1931) – Sigrid's Beau (uncredited)
Over the Hill (1931) – Pa Shelby in Prologue
The Rainbow Trail (1932) – Venters
Charlie Chan's Chance (1932) – Inspector Flannery
Cheaters at Play (1932) – Detective Crane
She Wanted a Millionaire (1932) – Roger Norton
Lena Rivers (1932) – Henry R. Graham
Careless Lady (1932) – Judge
My Pal, the King (1932) – Count DeMar
Playthings of Desire (1933) – Jim Malvern
Hired Wife (1934) – Philip Marlowe
The Lady from Cheyenne (1941) – Politician
No Hands on the Clock (1941) – Warren Benedict
Tennessee Johnson (1942) – Senator (uncredited)
Government Girl (1943) – Senator (uncredited)
Madame Curie (1945) – Board Member (uncredited)
The Spanish Main (1945) – Captain Spratlin (uncredited)
Rendezvous with Annie (1946) – Walters
I've Always Loved You (1946) – Murphy (uncredited)
That Brennan Girl (1946) – John Van Derwin (uncredited)
That's My Man (1947) – Racetrack Man (uncredited)
Driftwood (1947) – Rev. MacDougal
The Inside Story (1948) – Townsman (uncredited)
The Untamed Breed (1948) – Sheriff (uncredited)
Joan of Arc (1948) – Judge Mortemer (uncredited)
Red Stallion in the Rockies (1949) – Judge Hardy
The Doolins of Oklahoma (1949) – Reverend Mears (uncredited)
Intruder in the Dust (1949) – Convict (uncredited)
Roseanna McCoy (1949) – A Hatfield (uncredited)
The Nevadan (1950) – Tex (uncredited)
Fortunes of Captain Blood (1950) – Physician (uncredited)
The Lone Ranger (1950, Episode: "Double Jeopardy") – Judge Henry Brady
Stage to Tucson (1950) – Sheriff Pete Deuce (uncredited)
Belle Le Grand (1951) – Judge (uncredited)
Santa Fe (1951) – Surveyor (uncredited)
Two of a Kind (1951) – Ben (uncredited)
Man in the Saddle (1951) – Sheriff Medary (uncredited)
I Dream of Jeanie (1952) – Doctor
Winning of the West (1953) – Wagon Train Survivor (uncredited)
The Sun Shines Bright (1953) – Gen. Fairfield
Woman They Almost Lynched (1953) – Old Man (uncredited)
The Last Posse (1953) – Judge Parker
Sweethearts on Parade (1953) – Narrator (voice, uncredited)
Passion (1954) – Don Rosendo (uncredited)
Adventures of the Texas Kid: Border Ambush (1954) – Tim Johnson
The Search for Bridey Murphy (1956) – Brian MacCarthy at Age 68
Two Rode Together (1961) – Officer (uncredited) (final film role)
References
^ Egan, Sean (2011) Ponies & Rainbows: The Life of James Kirkwood Orlando, Florida: BearManor Media.
^ New York Times , "James Kirkwood, Actor, Dead at 80," August 25, 1963, p. 82; Los Angeles Times , "Actor James Kirkwood Dies at 80", August 25, 1963, p. K10
^ Whitfeld, Eileen, Pickford: The Woman Who Made Hollywood , pp. 137–138
^ Egan, Sean (December 2011). "Ponies & Rainbows: The Life of James Kirkwood" .
^ Carr, William H. A. (June 2016). Hollywood Tragedy – from Fatty Arbuckle to Marilyn Monroe . Edizioni Savine. ISBN 9788896365953 .
^ San Pedro News Pilot, Volume 6, Number 191, 14 October 1933
^ "Greenroom Jottings (Page One)" . Motion Picture Magazine . New York: Brewster Publications. October 1921. Retrieved October 25, 2015 .
^ "Greenroom Jottings (Page Two)" . Motion Picture Magazine . New York: Brewster Publications. October 1921. Retrieved October 25, 2015 .
^ "JAMES KIRKWOOD, ACTOR, DEAD AT 80; Hero of Silent Films Also Starred on the Stage Began Career in 1900" . The New York Times . August 25, 1963 – via NYTimes.com.
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