Hollywood tough-guy, Robert Mitchum, dead at 79
'The image was created to enhance my lack of glamour'
July 19, 1999
Web posted at: 6:26 p.m. EDT (2226 GMT)
LOS ANGELES (CNN) -- Robert Mitchum, a rugged leading man and
sometime bad boy who defined cool before Hollywood knew what
it was, died at home in his sleep Tuesday at the age of 79.
Mitchum had been suffering from emphysema and lung cancer,
and died at 5 a.m. in his Santa Barbara County home,
according to a family spokesman.
Mitchum starred in more than 100 movies, including "The Story
of G.I. Joe" and "The Sundowners," and played the fearsome
ex-convict in the original "Cape Fear."
Mitchum remained a star despite a limited education, being
jailed for marijuana possession and a contempt for directors
and studio bosses. His effortless nonchalance once caused
Katherine Hepburn to snap, "You know you can't act, and if
you hadn't been good-looking you would never have gotten a
picture."
Mitchum already had lived a colorful life before he appeared
in his first film.
He was born August 6, 1917, in Bridgeport, Connecticut, as
Robert Charles Duran Mitchum. His father, James, was a
soldier and barroom brawler who was Scotch-Irish on his
father's side and Blackfoot Indian on his mother's.
Mitchum's mother, Ann, was a Norwegian immigrant.
Mitchum hits the road at 16
After World War I, the elder Mitchum was crushed between two
freight cars in the Charleston, South Carolina, Navy Yard,
leaving his widow and two small children. Ann Mitchum
returned to Bridgeport, remarried and settled in New York.
At 16, Mitchum hit the road, catching rides on trains and
taking odd jobs for money. He said he held such jobs as an
engine wiper on a freighter, a nightclub bouncer and a
ditch-digger.
He also had 27 fights as a professional boxer, but decided a
career change was in order after a fighter "had my nose over
to one side, gave me a scar on my left eye, had me all messed
up. So I quit."
Mitchum also said he was arrested for vagrancy when he was 16
and spent six days on a chain gang in Savannah, Georgia,
before escaping. In 1937, he joined his family in Long Beach,
California, and became involved in the local theater at the
urging of his sister.
He wrote and directed plays, ghost-wrote for an astrologer,
worked as a drop-hammer operator for Lockheed Aircraft and
sold shoes. In 1940, he married his boyhood sweetheart,
Dorothy Spence.
After acting with the Long Beach Theater Guild, he broke into
films, playing heavies in a succession of "Hopalong Cassidy"
westerns. He also had supporting roles in a series of war
films, comedies and dramas and, in 1943 alone, appeared in 18
films.
Nominated for Oscar in 1945
In 1945, he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best
Supporting Actor for his portrayal of an Army lieutenant in
"The Story of G.I. Joe."
He was drafted that same year and spent eight months in the
Army before resuming his career. His rugged looks, gruff
manner and deep voice fit perfectly the public's taste for
manly heroes after the pretty-boy actors who dominated the
1930s.
"After the war, suddenly there was this thing for ugly
heroes," Mitchum said once, "so I started going around in
profile."
"I was fortunate from day one," he said on another occasion.
"I never looked back and I worked all the time."
He also gained a reputation as a serious drinker and a
ladies' man, and it very nearly ended his $3,000-a-week
career. He and a blond starlet named Lila Leeds were arrested
in September 1948, at her home on charges of marijuana
possession.
Mitchum told his lawyer: "Well, this is the bitter end of
everything -- my career, my marriage, everything."
He was sentenced to 60 days on an honor farm, but emerged as
jaunty as ever, saying, "It's just like Palm Springs without
the riffraff."
'The image was created to enhance my lack of glamour'
He returned to the filming of John Steinbeck's "The Red
Pony," and his popularity, both with producers and the
public, proved stronger than ever.
Mitchum's cynicism made him ideal for RKO's film noir
dramas of the 1950s: "The Big Steal," "The Racket," "Where
Danger Lives," "Out of the Past" and "Second Chance."
He also starred as a leading man for such stars as Jane
Russell ("Macao," "His Kind of Woman"), Ava Gardner ("My
Forbidden Past"), Susan Hayward ("White Witch Doctor"), Rita
Hayworth ("Fire Down Below") and Shirley MacLaine ("Two for
the Seesaw").
He once remarked: "I think when producers have a part that's
hard to cast, they say, 'Send for Mitchum; he'll do
anything.'" He added: "I don't care what I play; I'll play
Polish gays, women, midgets, anything."
Of his cool, tough-guy persona, Mitchum said, "The studios
knew I was on-time and I usually got it right on the first
take. The image was something that was created to enhance my
lack of glamour."
In 1955, he appeared in two of his most dramatic roles, as an
idealist surgeon in "Not as a Stranger" and as a crazed
evangelist in "Night of the Hunter," Charles Laughton's only
film as a director.
"I always thought I had as much inspiration and as much
tenderness as anyone else in this business," Mitchum said in
1983. "I always thought I could do better. But you don't get
to do better, you get to do more."
'I work cheap'
Among his other films were "Rachel and the Stranger," "El
Dorado" (with John Wayne) and "Ryan's Daughter." He twice
played Raymond Chandler's private eye Philip Marlowe in
"Farewell, My Lovely" in 1975 and "The Big Sleep" in 1978.
In the 1980s, Mitchum shifted smoothly to television dramas
and worked well into his 70s. He appeared in the epic
miniseries "The Winds of War" and "War and Remembrance."
Although he claimed, "I work cheap," Mitchum collected
$1 million for "The Winds of War" and $250,000
for "That Championship Season."
Despite rumors of his extramarital escapades, Mitchum and his
wife remained married.
"Sure there were rough times," she once remarked. "Sometimes
the women would elbow me out of the way to get to Bob. But
what people overlook is that Bob is a very family-oriented
person. Whatever he does, he always comes back to the
family."
The Mitchums had two sons, Jim and Christopher, both actors;
and a daughter, Petrine.
The funeral will be private, and Mitchum's ashes will be
scattered at sea.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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