
Spencer Tracy
Spencer Tracy is one of the biggest names in movies and he was one of the finest actors in the history of Hollywood. He did not have the matinee idol looks of a conventional leading man and he did not need them. His talent for acting, the effortless ease and consistency of his performances were what made him stand out.
He made seventy five feature films during his career and he was a favorite of both critics and the public. He was ranked at number nine on the AFI's list of Greatest Male Stars of All Time and he was the first actor to win the Best Actor Award in consecutive years (1937 for Captains Courageous and 1938 for Boys Town). In all he was nominated on nine occasions for the Best Actor Award, a record for male stars which he shares with Laurence Olivier.
In 1921, studying at Ripon College, he first got his taste for the stage as a successful member of the debating team and when he played the lead in a play entitled 'The Truth' which earned him his first critical review as "an unusually strong actor". Having decided on acting as a career he moved to New York to study at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Through the early 1920's he performed in several Broadway productions and then he joined a stock company in White Plains, New York. Whilst in stock he earned money working as a janitor and as a salesman. He met his future wife, Louise Treadwell, when they were acting and touring in stock together and they married in September, 1923.
Tracy continued to learn his trade in stock for several years around Michigan and in Canada. In 1930 he appeared on Broadway in 'The Last Mile' which was a popular hit. He was seen by director John Ford who signed him to appear with Humphrey Bogart in 'Up the River' in the same year for Fox Film Corporation.
After signing a contract with Fox, Tracy moved with his family to Hollywood in 1931 and began to work hard in his new profession, making over 20 films in the next four years and playing opposite established leading ladies such as Loretta Young and Bette Davis. He established a reputation for a skilful, relaxed acting style and his popularity with the public steadily increased but he began to feel frustrated in that his burgeoning talent was not being showcased in more meaningful roles.
In 1935 he made an important career change when MGM bought his contract from 20th Century-Fox. Louis B Mayer, head of MGM felt that Tracy's relaxed acting style would be an ideal counterpoint to their rugged number one leading man, Clark Gable. He was to spend over twenty years with that studio expanding and perfecting his great natural acting gifts.
After some minor parts he played the leading man in 'Fury', directed by Fritz Lang and then in 1936 he received his first Academy Award nomination for Best Actor for his performance in 'San 'Francisco', co-starring Clark Gable. This was swiftly followed by 'Libeled Lady', a screwball comedy, with William Powell, Myrna Loy, and Jean Harlow . In the following 2 years he won the Award for Best Actor: in 1936 for 'Captains Courageous' and in 1937 for 'Boys Town'. It was the first time the Best Actor Award had been won in consecutive years and Tracey became a Hollywood superstar. His box-office successes continued in 1939 with 'Stanley and Livingstone' and in 1940 with 'Northwest Passage' and 'Edison the Man'. The following year brought another hit movie with 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' and Tracy found himself topping even Clark Gable as MGM's leading actor. In 1942 his life changed for ever. He met and fell in love with another mercurial talent, Katharine Hepburn.
Tracy had been married to actress Louise Treadwell for 19 years when he first worked with Katharine Hepburn on 'Woman of the Year' in 1942. He and Louise had two children, John, born in 1924 and Susan, born in 1932. John had been born deaf and Louise had, as a result of teaching him, become an activist for deaf education and eventually, with the help of Spencer, founded the John Tracy Clinic at USC.
Tracy was a drinker and a womaniser. During the 1930's he had a relationship with Loretta Young and later, during a break with Hepburn, he would romance his co-star, Gene Tierney, but he was adamant that due to his Catholic faith, he would not divorce Louise. He and Katharine Hepburn were an established Hollywood couple for the last 25 years of Tracy's life but their relationship was not public knowledge and they were able to carry on their affair in absolute secrecy, even maintaining two dwellings to give the impression of living apart. It was an era when Hollywood careers could be destroyed by scandal and they dared not risk their secret becoming known.
They went on to make a total of nine films together including 'Adam's Rib', one of the top films of 1949, 'Father of the Bride' in 1950 with Elizabeth Taylor), 'Bad Day At Black Rock' in 1955, with Lee Marvin and 'Judgment at Nuremberg' in 1961, with Burt Lancaster.
After' Bad Day at Black Rock', for which he received another Best Actor Award nomination, Tracy came to the end of his contract with MGM, and he henceforth made his movies as a freelancer for different studios. Some of his finest performances were yet to come. In 1958 he was nominated for The Best Actor Award for his performance in 'The Old Man and the Sea' and again he was nominated for the Award in 1961 for his performance as defense attorney Henry Drummond in 'Inherit the Wind' and in 1962 as Judge Dan Hayward in 'Judgment at Nuremburg'. These last two were his seventh and eighth nominations.
After his appearance in 'It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World ' in 1962, Tracy was hospitalized with a congested lung condition and forced for the next four years to turn down many film roles. He had been something of a hellraiser all his life and in the mid 1960's he was diagnosed with diabetes. His alcoholism also began to catch up with him and for the last 5 years of his life he was looked after at his Beverly Hills home by Katharine Hepburn. He made one final film with her in 1967, 'Guess Who's Coming to Dinner'.
Two weeks after completing the movie, on June 10, 1967, he died at home of a heart attack. He was 67. Katharine Hepburn, who was in the house when he died, did not attend his funeral out of respect to his wife and children.
Actors and Actresses June Allyson Judith Anderson Dana Andrews Jean Arthur Fred Astaire Mary Astor Lauren Bacall Lucille Ball Ralph Bellamy Joan Bennett Ingrid Bergman Humphrey Bogart Ward Bond Ernest Borgnine Marlon Brando Walter Brennan James Cagney Charlie Chaplin Montgomery Clift Claudette Colbert Gary Cooper Joan Crawford Tony Curtis Bebe Daniels Bette Davis Olivia de Havilland Marlene Dietrich Kirk Douglas Irene Dunne Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Errol Flynn Henry Fonda Joan Fontaine Clark Gable Greta Garbo Ava Gardner Judy Garland Greer Garson John Gilbert Paulette Goddard Betty Grable Cary Grant Sydney Greenstreet Jean Harlow Gabby Hayes Rita Hayworth Audrey Hepburn Katharine Hepburn William Holden Judy Holliday Bob Hope Leslie Howard John Huston Ruby Keeler Gene Kelly Grace Kelly Deborah Kerr Alan Ladd Veronica Lake Hedy Lamarr Burt Lancaster Charles Laughton Janet Leigh Vivien Leigh Jack Lemmon Joan Leslie Carole Lombard Myrna Loy Ida Lupino Fred MacMurray Karl Malden Fredric March James Mason Raymond Massey Joel McCrea Hattie McDaniel Ray Milland Ann Miller Thomas Mitchell Robert Mitchum Marilyn Monroe Paul Muni Paul Newman Maureen O'Hara Laurence Olivier Maureen O'Sullivan Gregory Peck Sidney Poitier Eleanor Powell Dick Powell William Powell Tyrone Power Claude Rains Edward G. Robinson Ginger Rogers Cesar Romero Mickey Rooney Jane Russell Rosalind Russell George Sanders Randolph Scott Norma Shearer Frank Sinatra Barbara Stanwyck James Stewart Elizabeth Taylor Gene Tierney Spencer Tracy John Wayne Johnny Weismuller Esther Williams Richard Widmark Fay Wray Jane Wyman Loretta Young
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