Forrest Tucker

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For the bank robber see Forrest Tucker (criminal)
Forrest Tucker
Forrest Tucker Music Man 1962.JPG
Tucker in the role of "Professor" Harold Hill, 1962.
Born Forrest Meredith Tucker
(1919-02-12)February 12, 1919
Plainfield, Indiana, U.S.
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Cause of death Lung cancer
Resting place Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills)
Occupation Actor
Years active 1940–86
Spouse(s) Sandra Jolley (1940–50) (one child)
Marilyn Johnson (1951–60) (her death)
Marilyn Fisk (1961–85) (two children)
Sheila Forbes (1986) (his death)

Forrest Meredith Tucker (February 12, 1919 – October 25, 1986) was an American actor in both movies and television who appeared in nearly a hundred films. Tucker worked as a vaudeville straight man, aged fifteen years old. A mentor provided funds and contacts for a trip to California, where party hostess Cobina Wright persuaded guest, Wesley Ruggles to give Tucker a screen test, based on his pugnacious good looks, thick wavy hair and height of six foot five. Tucker was a sight reader who needed only one take, and his film career started well despite a perception in most Hollywood studios that blond men were not photogenic, but he enlisted during WW2. After twenty years mainly spent in westerns and action roles, he returned to his roots showing versatility as a comedic and stage musical actor. He also became identified with a character in the TV show F Troop, in which he played a blustery version of his amiable real life persona. Tucker struggled with a drinking problem that began to affect his performances in the latter years of his career.

Early life and education

Tucker described himself as a farm boy. He was born in Plainfield, Indiana, a son of Forrest A. Tucker and his wife, Doris Heringlake. His mother has been described as an alcoholic.[1] Tucker began his performing career at age 14 at the 1933 Chicago World's Fair, pushing the big wicker tourist chairs by day and singing "Throw Money" at night. After his family moved to Washington, D.C., Tucker attracted the attention of Jimmy Lake, the owner of the Old Gaiety Burlesque Theater, by winning its Saturday night amateur contest on consecutive weeks. After his second win, Tucker was hired full-time as master of ceremonies at the theatre. However, his initial employment there was short-lived; it was soon discovered that Tucker was underage. Tucker graduated from Washington-Lee High School, Arlington, Virginia, near Washington, D.C., in 1938. Tucker joined the United States Army cavalry. He was stationed at Fort Myer in Arlington County, Virginia, but was discharged when his age became known. He returned to work at the Old Gaiety after his 18th birthday.

Career

Hollywood

When Lake's theatre closed for the summer in 1939, Tucker was helped by a wealthy mentor to travel to California and try to break into film acting. He made a successful screen test, and began auditioning for movie roles. In his own estimation Tucker was in the mold of large "ugly guys" such as Wallace Beery, Ward Bond and Victor McLaglen, rather than a matinee idol.[2] His debut was as a powerfully built farmer who clashes with the hero in The Westerner (1940), which starred Gary Cooper. Tucker stood out in a fight scene with Cooper, and was given a contract with Columbia Pictures. Overcoming a feeling in Hollywood that fair hair did not photograph well, he quickly attained leading man status, starring in PRC's Emergency Landing, and the classic Keeper of the Flame.[3]

Despite his budding stardom, Tucker enlisted in the United States Army during World War II, earning a commission as a second lieutenant. He resumed his acting career at the war's end, appearing in the classic 1946 film The Yearling and stealing a few scenes from Errol Flynn in Never Say Goodbye the same year.

In 1948 Tucker left Columbia and signed with Republic Pictures. At Republic, he made his breakthrough in Sands of Iwo Jima (1949), as PFC Thomas, a Marine with a score to settle with John Wayne's Sergeant Stryker. Graduating to top billing, Tucker starred in numerous action films during the 1950s, including Rock Island Trail (1950), California Passage (1950), Rage at Dawn (1955, where he played Frank Reno), The Abominable Snowman (1957), The Quiet Gun (1957), and The Crawling Eye (1958).

The year 1958 brought another turning point in his career, when he won the role of Beauregard Burnside, Mame's first husband in Auntie Mame, the highest grossing U.S. film of the year. Tucker showed a flair for light comedy under the direction of Morton DaCosta that had largely been unexplored in his roles in westerns and science fiction films.[4]

Physique and gossip

At six feet five inches, Tucker tied Sterling Hayden as the tallest star in Hollywood.[5] Co-star Marie Windsor recalled that she was delighted to play opposite someone her 'own size'. Possibly because of his height and build (he wore size fourteen and a half shoes[6]) rumors that he was extraordinarily well endowed circulated in Hollywood.[7][8] According to one story, while playing golf with friends he was denied a gimme and objected that the distance was so short that he could knock the ball in with his member. On being challenged, he accomplished the feat.[9]

Stage and television star

A two-year stint on television in the series Crunch and Des from 1955 to 1956 with Sandy Kenyon, featuring Forrest as a charter-boat captain in the Bahamas, was well received. Tucker was cast as "Professor" Harold Hill by director Da Costa in the national production of The Music Man and played the role 2,008 times over the next five years, including a 56-week run at the Shubert Theatre in Chicago. Following his Music Man run, Tucker starred in the Broadway production of Fair Game for Lovers (1964) and then turned to television for his most famous role, starring as frontier capitalist Sgt. Morgan O'Rourke in F Troop (1965–67). Though F Troop lasted only two seasons on ABC, the series has been in constant syndication since, reaching three generations of viewers. (Two of his Gunsmoke episodes feature Tucker in his cavalry uniform again, as the comic Sergeant Holly (1970), who in one scene "marries" and spends a hectic night with Miss Kitty.) He appeared in many television series, including CBS's Appointment with Adventure in the 1956 series finale titled "Two Falls for Satan", ABC's Channing a drama about college life that aired during the 1963–64 season. In 1961, Tucker appeared on NBC in Audie Murphy's short-lived western series Whispering Smith.

Tucker played the outlaw Bob Dalton in the 1963 episode "Three Minutes to Eternity" of the syndicated western series, Death Valley Days, a dramatization of the simultaneous bank robberies by the Dalton gang in Coffeyville, Kansas. Tom Skerritt portrayed the surviving Emmett Dalton; Jim Davis was cast as Grat Dalton. The episode was narrated by Stanley Andrews, known as "The Old Ranger".[10]

After the close of F Troop, Tucker returned to films in character parts (Barquero and Chisum, both 1970) and occasional leads (1975's The Wild McCullochs). On television, Tucker was a frequent guest star, including a total of six appearances on Gunsmoke and the recurring role of Jarvis Castleberry, Flo's estranged father on the 1976-1985 TV series, Alice and its spinoff, Flo. Tucker was a regular on three series after F Troop: Dusty's Trail (1973) with Bob Denver; The Ghost Busters (1975–76) which reunited him with F Troop co-star Larry Storch; guest star on The Bionic Woman as J.T. Conners and Filthy Rich playing the second Big Guy Beck. (1982–83). He continued to be active on stage as well, starring in the national productions of Plaza Suite, Show Boat, and That Championship Season.

Tucker suffered from severe alcoholism in his final years[11] but returned to the big screen after an absence of several years, in the Cannon Films action film Thunder Run (1986), playing the hero, trucker Charlie Morrison. His final film appearance was Outtakes,[12] a low-budget imitation of The Groove Tube.

Death

Tucker, who had been ill for some time, collapsed on his way to the ceremony for his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in August 1986. He died from throat cancer at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital on October 25, 1986, a few months after the theatrical release of Thunder Run and Outtakes.[13] He was interred in Forest Lawn–Hollywood Hills Cemetery in the Hollywood Hills.

Personal life

Tucker married four times: (1) to Sandra Jolley (1919–86), divorced in 1950, daughter of the character actor I. Stanford Jolley (who also died of emphysema) and the sister of the Academy Award-winning art director Stan Jolley,[14] (2) to Marilyn Johnson on March 28, 1950, and after her death in 1960 (3) to Marilyn Fisk on October 23, 1961. He had a daughter (Pamela "Brooke" Tucker) by his first marriage and a daughter (Cindy Tucker) and son (Forrest Sean Tucker) by his third. (4) In 1986, he married Sheila Forbes.

Partial filmography

Television

References

  1. Raised by the Stars: Interviews with 29 Children of Hollywood Actors By Nick Thomas, chapter 12.
  2. Forrest Tucker, Stage, TV and Film Star, Dies LA TimesOctober 27, 1986|JOHN KENDALL | Times Staff Writer]
  3. February 16, 2012, Just Shy of Respect: The Hollywood Life and Death of Alan Ladd
  4. The Milwaukee Sentinel - Jul 2, 1963
  5. Raised by the Stars: Interviews with 29 Children of Hollywood Actors , Nick Thomas, chapter 12.
  6. Raised by the Stars: Interviews with 29 Children of Hollywood Actors, Nick Thomas, chapter 12.
  7. Celebrity Diss and Tell: Stars Talk About Each Other, Boze Hadleigh p.181.
  8. Playbill - Issues 1-12 - (1992), p. 50.
  9. The Legend Of Forrest Tucker (1997)
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. Forrest Tucker
  12. Outtakes (dead link)
  13. "Forrest Tucker, Stage, TV and Film Star, Dies" LA Times, October 27, 1986|JOHN KENDALL | Times Staff Writer]
  14. Emily Mae Jolley - Entertainment News, Obituary, Media - Variety.

External links