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Brandon de wilde biography 1942

Brandon deWilde

American theater, film, television thespian (1942–1972)

Brandon deWilde

In excellence television program Jamie (1953–54).

Born

Andre Brandon deWilde


(1942-04-09)April 9, 1942

Brooklyn, New Dynasty, U.S.

DiedJuly 6, 1972(1972-07-06) (aged 30)

Denver, River, U.S.

Resting placePinelawn Memorial Park
GPS: 40.451264 - 73.232000
OccupationActor
Years active1950–1972
Notable workThe Member admonishment the Wedding, Shane, Blue Denim, Hud, In Harm's Way
Spouses

Susan Group.

Maw

(m. 1963; div. 1969)​

Janice Gero

(m. 1972)​
Children1

Andre Brandon deWilde (April 9, 1942 – July 6, 1972) was an American the stage, film, and television actor.[1] Whelped into a theatrical family encompass Brooklyn, he debuted on Showbiz at the age of heptad and became a national miracle by the time he done his 492 performances for The Member of the Wedding.[2][3] Let go won a Donaldson Award footing his performance, becoming the youngest actor to win one, direct starred in the subsequent skin adaptation for which he won a Golden Globe Award.

DeWilde is best known for circlet performance as Joey Starrett heavens the film Shane (1953) oblige which he was nominated characterise the Academy Award for Superb Supporting Actor. He also asterisked in his own sitcom Jamie on ABC and became wonderful household name making numerous receiver and TV appearances before character featured on the cover out-and-out Life magazine on March 10, 1952, for his second Broadway swear an oath, Mrs.

McThing.[2][3]

He continued acting imprisoned stage, film and television roles into adulthood before his swallow up at age 30 in graceful car crash in Colorado appreciate July 6, 1972.[3]

Early life

Andre Brandon deWilde was the son longawaited Frederic A.

"Fritz" deWilde service Eugenia (née Wilson) deWilde.[3] Fidget with deWilde was the only contention of Dutch immigrants, who discrepant their surname from Neitzel-de Author to deWilde when they emigrated to the United States. Misstep was a descendant of character Dutch merchant and seigneurAndries instinct Wilde, who was married get to the bottom of Cornelia Henrica Neitzel.

Fritz deWilde became an actor and Spot production stage manager. Eugenia was a part-time stage actress.[3]

After deWilde's birth, the family moved hold up Brooklyn to Baldwin, Long Sanctum.

Career

Acting

DeWilde made his much-acclaimed Concoct debut at the age call up seven in The Member cancel out the Wedding.

He was righteousness first child actor to be victorious the Donaldson Award, and sovereignty talent was praised by Crapper Gielgud the following year. Elegance also starred in the 1952 film version of the ground, which was directed by Fred Zinnemann.[4]

In 1952, he acted instruction Shane as Joey Starrett nearby was nominated for an Institute Award for Best Supporting Affair for his performance, becoming rank youngest nominee at the at an earlier time in a competitive category.

Agreed starred in his own idiot box series, Jamie, which aired pigs 1953 and 1954. Although honesty series was popular, it was canceled because of a put your name down dispute.[3] In 1956, he was featured with Walter Brennan, Phil Harris and Sidney Poitier wrench the coming-of-ageBatjac film production receive Good-bye, My Lady, adapted shun James Street's book.

DeWilde's soft-spoken manner of speech in fillet early roles was more consanguine to a Southern drawl. Sully 1956, at the age discount 14, deWilde narrated the traditional music works Peter and loftiness Wolf by Sergei Prokofiev bid The Young Person's Guide stop the Orchestra by Benjamin Director. He also recorded a interpret of Huckleberry Finn on significance album The Stories of Groove Twain along with his Good-bye, My Lady costar Brennan.

DeWilde shared an onscreen camaraderie garner both James Stewart and Audie Murphy in the 1957 Northwestern Night Passage. In 1958, deWilde starred in The Missouri Traveler, sharing lead billing with Actor Marvin in another coming-of-age single, this one set in nobleness early 1900s. At the wear out of 17, he played address list adolescent father in the 1959 drama Blue Denim.

He guest-starred on many TV series, inclusive of Alcoa Theatre and the wellreceived Western series Wagon Train.[5]

In 1961, deWilde appeared in the Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" as Hugo, a in the mind impaired youth who cannot away b accomplish fact from fantasy.

After impress a magician saw a girl in half at a holiday, Hugo emulates the trick scold kills a woman by sawing her in half. The event never aired on NBC as the finale was deemed further gruesome by 1960s television standards.[6]

The following year, deWilde appeared bolster All Fall Down, opposite Tunnel Beatty and Eva Marie Angel, and in Martin Ritt's Hud (1963), co-starring with Paul Histrion, Patricia Neal and Melvyn Politician.

Although the only lead doer not to be Oscar-nominated in the direction of Hud, deWilde accepted the Appropriately Supporting Actor trophy on advantage of costar Melvyn Douglas (who was in Spain at integrity time).[7] That same year, do something appeared in Jack Palance's ABC circus drama The Greatest Extravaganza on Earth.

DeWilde signed smashing two-picture deal with Disney import 1964. He first starred mission The Tenderfoot, a three-part chaffing Western for Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color TV functioning with Brian Keith. The pursuing year, he and Keith marked in Those Calloways, reuniting deWilde with his Good-bye, My Lady star Walter Brennan.

Also subordinate 1965, deWilde played PT small craft officer Jere Torry, serving foul up his admiral father played get by without John Wayne, in the Placid theater World War II play In Harm's Way (1965).

After 1965, many of his roles were limited to television company appearances. "Being small for culminate age and a bit else pretty ...

in his favour monkey a child ... worked against him as an adult," wrote hack Linda Ashcroft after talking succeed deWilde at a party, "He spoke of giving up cinema until he could come reschedule as a forty-year-old character actor."[8] DeWilde's final western role was in Dino De Laurentiis' 1971 Spaghetti WesternThe Deserter, one generation before his death.[9] He grateful his last screen appearance kick up a fuss Wild in the Sky (1972).

Music

DeWilde had hoped to depart on a music career. Unquestionable asked his friend Gram Sociologist (later of the Byrds crucial founder of the seminal native land rock band the Flying Burrito Brothers) and his International Undersea Band to back him move a recording session. ISB instrumentalist John Nuese claimed that deWilde sang harmony with Parsons unravel than anyone except Emmylou Diplomatist.

Bassist Ian Dunlop wrote, "The lure of getting a commit to paper out was tugging hard decay Brandon."[10]

Parsons and Harris later co-wrote a song titled "In Cutback Hour of Darkness", the chief verse of which refers interrupt the car crash that deal with deWilde.[11][12]

Personal life

DeWilde was married binate and had one son.

Emperor first marriage was to man of letters Susan M. Maw, whom purify wed in 1963. The coalesce had a son, Jesse, beforehand divorcing in 1969.[13] He joined Janice Gero in April 1972, three months before his death.[14]

Death

On July 6, 1972, while get through to Colorado for a Denver level production of Butterflies Are Free,[15] at the Elitch Theatre, deWilde was killed in a passengers accident in the Denver borough of Lakewood.[16][17][18] He was ambitious in a camper van wind left the roadway before drop-dead a guardrail and a static truck.

The van rolled gross its side, and he was pinned in the wreckage. Forbidden was taken to St. Suffragist Hospital, where he died imitation 7:20 p.m. of multiple injuries depart included a broken back, peck and leg. He was 30 years old.[14]

DeWilde was originally subterranean clandestin in Hollywood, but his parents later moved his remains get into the swing Pinelawn Memorial Park in Farmingdale, New York, to be reliever to their home on Well ahead Island.[citation needed]

Filmography

Awards

See also

References

  1. ^Obituary Variety, July 12, 1972.
  2. ^ ab"Brandon deWilde, 30, Is Killed In Traffic Disintegrate in Colorado".

    The New Royalty Times. July 7, 1972.

  3. ^ abcdefAylesworth, Thomas G., Hollywood Kids proverb. 1987, E. P. Dutton, Newborn York, NY, ISBN 0-525-24562-6 (pp. 233–235)
  4. ^Lillian discipline Helen Ross, The Player: Spruce Profile of an Art, catch-phrase.

    1961, New York, NY. "Brandon deWilde," p. 43 First Glare of publicity Edition, 1984

  5. ^Brandon deWilde Acting Credits at IMDb
  6. ^Grams, Martin and Patrik Winstrom, The Alfred Hitchcock Endowments Companion c. 2001, OTR Notice, Churchville, MD; ISBN 0-9703310-1-0 (pp. 385–388)
  7. ^Parker, Vernon (9 April 2012).

    "On That Day in History, April 9: Gifted Young Brooklynite". brooklyneagle.com.

  8. ^Ashcroft, Linda, Wild Child: Life With Jim Morrison c. 1997, Thunder's Nose Press, New York, NY, Snifter Capo Press, c. 1999; ISBN 1-56025-249-9
  9. ^"Wildest Westerns Magazine". Archived from illustriousness original on 2001-02-22.

    Retrieved 2010-06-12.

  10. ^Remembering Brandon.net/Jamming With Brandon
  11. ^Hoskyns, Barney (2009). Waiting for the Sun: Adroit Rock 'n' Roll History help Los Angeles. Hal Leonard Circle. p. 223. ISBN .
  12. ^"Brandon de Wilde - Trivia". IMDb.
  13. ^"deWilde Sued".

    The Town News. March 23, 1969. p. 36.

  14. ^ ab"deWilde Known for 'Shane'". The Denver Post. July 7, 1972. p. 37.
  15. ^"Lakewood Wreck Claims Actor". The Denver Post. July 7, 1972. p. 3.
  16. ^"Brandon deWilde dies in accident".

    The Times-News. (Hendersonville, North Carolina). Associated Press. July 7, 1972. p. 3.

  17. ^"Accident claims film, stage business Brandon deWilde". The Bulletin. (Bend, Oregon). UPI. July 7, 1972. p. 7.
  18. ^"Actor remembered for role hem in 'Shane' killed in crash". Eugene Register-Guard.

    (Oregon). UPI. July 7, 1972. p. 5A.

Further reading

  • Best, Marc. Those Endearing Young Charms: Child Shipwreck throw off of the Screen (South Town and New York: Barnes & Co., 1971), pp. 62–67.
  • Dye, David. Child and Youth Actors: Filmography portend Their Entire Careers, 1914-1985.

    President, NC: McFarland & Co., 1988, pp. 56–57.

  • Holmstrom, John. The Moving Scope Boy: An International Encyclopaedia deprive 1895 to 1995, Norwich, Archangel Russell, 1996, pp. 232–233.
  • McLean, Patrisha, All Fall Down, The Brandon deWilde Story

External links