Steve Cochran (born Robert Alexander Cochran,[citation needed] May 25, 1917 – June 15, 1965) was an American film, television and stage actor. He attended the University of Wyoming. After a stint working as a cowboy, Cochran developed his acting skills in local theatre and gradually progressed to Broadway, film and television.
Steve Cochran | |
---|---|
Born | Robert Alexander Cochran May 25, 1917 Eureka, California, U.S.[1] |
Died | June 15, 1965 Off the coast of Guatemala | (aged 48)
Alma mater | University of Wyoming |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1944–1965 |
Spouses | Florence Lockwood
(m. 1935; div. 1946)Jonna Jensen
(m. 1961) |
Children | 1 |
Relatives | Alex Johns (grandson) |
Early life and career
editCochran was born in Eureka, California.[2]
After stints as a cowpuncher and railroad station hand, he studied at the University of Wyoming, where he also played basketball. Impulsively, he quit college in 1937 and went straight to Hollywood to become a star.[3]
Theatre
editCochran was rejected for military service in World War II because of a heart murmur, but he directed and performed in plays at various Army camps.[4]
He was appearing with Constance Bennett in a touring production of Without Love in December 1943 when he was signed by Sam Goldwyn.[5]
Hollywood
editSam Goldwyn
editSamuel Goldwyn brought Cochran to Hollywood in 1945.[2] Goldwyn made only a few films a year, so he loaned Cochran to Columbia Pictures for Booked on Suspicion (1945), a Boston Blackie movie.
Goldwyn then put him in Wonder Man (1945), a Danny Kaye movie co-starring Virginia Mayo and Vera-Ellen in which Cochran played a gangster. Columbia then used him in another Boston Blackie film, Blackie's Rendezvous (1945), in which he played a villain, and in The Gay Senorita (1945) with Jinx Falkenburg.
Goldwyn then used Cochran in another Danny Kaye movie with Mayo and Vera-Ellen, The Kid from Brooklyn (1946). After United Artists borrowed him to play a gangster in The Chase (1946), Cochran appeared in the prestigious drama The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), playing a man who has an affair with a woman played by Virginia Mayo that continues even after her husband (played by Dana Andrews) returns from war.
Cochran had a supporting role opposite Groucho Marx in Copacabana (1947) for United Artists. Goldwyn got him to play another gangster opposite Kaye and Mayo in A Song is Born (1948), directed by Howard Hawks.
He made his TV debut in "Dinner at Antoine's" for The Philco-Goodyear Television Playhouse (1949) and followed this with "Tin Can Skipper" for NBC Presents (1949).
He then returned to Broadway to support Mae West in a shortlived revival of her play Diamond Lil. This revived Hollywood's interest in him.[7]
Warner Bros.
editIn 1949, Cochran went over to Warner Bros., playing Big Ed Somers, a power-hungry henchman to James Cagney's psychotic mobster in White Heat (1949) opposite Virginia Mayo. Warner Bros. eventually took over Cochran's and Mayo's contracts from Goldwyn.[citation needed]
Cochran supported Joan Crawford in The Damned Don't Cry (1950), after which he was given his first lead role, in Highway 301 (1950), playing a gangster. He was a villain to Gary Cooper's hero in Dallas (1950) and played a Ku Klux Klan member in Storm Warning (1951) with Ginger Rogers and Doris Day.
Cochran was a villain in Canyon Pass (1951), a western, and then was given the lead in Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison (1951), which inspired Johnny Cash to write his song "Folsom Prison Blues".[citation needed]
Warners gave him another lead in Tomorrow Is Another Day (1951), a film noir with Ruth Roman that was originally intended for Burt Lancaster.[8]
He returned to supporting parts in Jim Thorpe – All-American (1951) with Burt Lancaster.
Warners starred him in The Tanks Are Coming (1951) and in a rare sympathetic role in The Lion and the Horse (1952).[9] He co-starred with Cornel Wilde in Operation Secret (1952) and supported Virginia Mayo in She's Back on Broadway (1953). In The Desert Song (1953), Cochran played Gordon Macrae's rival for Kathryn Grayson.[10] He then left Warners[why?].
Post-Warners
editCochran starred in the low-budget action film Shark River (1953) for United Artists and was a villain in Back to God's Country (1953), which starred Rock Hudson, at Universal.
He returned to television, appearing in episodes of Lux Video Theatre ("Three Just Men" (1953)), and Studio One in Hollywood ("Letter of Love" (1953)). He reportedly made a film in Mexico called Embarcardero, which he wrote and directed. He also starred in it, alongside Edward Norri.[11]
Cochran then went to Germany to make Carnival Story (1954) for the King Brothers. It was his first film in Europe.[12]
Back in Hollywood, he co-starred in Private Hell 36 (1954) with Ida Lupino for Don Siegel. His TV roles included "Foreign Affair" (1954) for Robert Montgomery Presents; "The Role of a Lover" (1954) and "The Most Contagious Game" (1955) for Studio One; "Trip Around the Block" (1954) and "The Menace of Hasty Heights" (1956) for The Ford Television Theatre; "The After House" (1954), "Fear is the Hunter" (1956), and "Bait for the Tiger" (1957) for Climax!; and "The Seeds of Hate" (1955) for General Electric Theatre.
Republic Pictures hired him to play Ann Sheridan's love interest in Come Next Spring (1956).[13] Cochran then went to the UK to play the lead in The Weapon (1956).
Cochran supported Van Johnson in MGM's Slander (1957). He went to Italy to star in Il Grido (1957) for Michelangelo Antonioni alongside Alida Valli and Betsy Blair; filming took seven months.[14]
On television, he appeared in "Outlaw's Boots" (1957) for Schlitz Playhouse, "Debt of Gratitude" (1958) for Zane Grey Theater, "Strictly Personal" (1958) for The Loretta Young Show, and an episode of The Twilight Zone, “What You Need”, in 1959.
Cochran played the lead roles in Quantrill's Raiders (1958), an Allied Artists western, and in I Mobster (1959), a Roger Corman gangster film. Albert Zugsmith used him for the lead roles in The Beat Generation (1959) and The Big Operator (1959).
In late 1959, Cochran played a character who was looking to get out of the rut he was in, by cashing in on the talents of a street peddler. The TV show was called the Twilight Zone, Season 1, Episode 12.
Later career
editAfter 1959, Cochran worked mostly in television, guest-starring in series such as Bonanza (Season 6, episode 26, "The Trap", aired on March 28, 1965, in which he played the murderous twin Shannon brothers), The Untouchables, Route 66, Bus Stop, Stoney Burke, The Naked City, Shirley Temple's Storybook, The Dick Powell Theatre, The Virginian, Death Valley Days, Mr. Broadway, and Burke's Law.
He had the lead in the TV movie The Renegade (1960) and was in Sam Peckinpah's debut feature, The Deadly Companions (1961). They had first worked together when Peckinpah was the dialogue director of the film noir Private Hell 36 (1954).
Cochran was Merle Oberon's co-star in Of Love and Desire (1963), shot in Mexico. He had the lead in Mozambique (1964) for Harry Alan Towers.
Producer
editIn 1953, Cochran formed his own production company, Robert Alexander Productions, which attempted to make some television series,[15] and films such as The Tom Mix Story (with Cochran as Mix), Hope is the Last Thing to Die, about the Mexican War, and Klondike Lou.[14][16] None of these was ever produced, but his company did make a television pilot, Fremont the Trailblazer, in which he played John C. Frémont and co-starred with Barbara Wilson and James Gavin.[17][18] Cochran also wrote, produced, directed, and starred in Tell Me in the Sunlight (1965).
Personal life
editCochran was a notorious womanizer and attracted tabloid attention for his tumultuous private life, which included well-documented affairs with numerous starlets and actresses. Mamie Van Doren later wrote about their sex life in graphic detail in her tell-all autobiography Playing the Field: My Story (New York: G.P. Putnam, 1987). He was also married and divorced three times to actresses Fay McKenzie, Florence Lockwood, and Jonna Jensen. He and Lockwood had one daughter, Xandra,[19] through whom he was the grandfather of film and television producer Alex Johns, who was a co-executive producer for more than seventy episodes of the animated television series Futurama.[20] In the 2002 documentary The Importance of Being Morrissey, Steven Morrissey claims that his parents named him after Steve Cochran.
In 1950, Cochran hired future screenwriter and actor Montgomery Pittman as a gardener at Cochran's Beverly Hills home.[21]
Cochran was in trouble with the police several times in his life, including a reported assault and a charge of reckless driving in 1953.[22][23]
Death
editCochran recruited two “young women” and a 14-year-old girl to accompany him on a sailing trip from Acapulco to Costa Rica, ostensibly to take part in an upcoming film. The yacht lost one of its two masts in a storm a few days into the trip. Cochran fell ill and died two days later, on June 15, 1965, at the age of 48, of what was later determined to be an acute lung infection. The women who were accompanying him did not know how to sail the boat and were trapped with the decomposing body for ten days before being rescued out at sea. The boat, still carrying his corpse, was later found drifting off the coast of Guatemala.[24][25][26] [27]
Cochran's widow was given half of his estate of $25,000. She shared it with his daughter by another marriage.[28] Cochran was buried in Monterey, California.[29]
Cochran has a star at 1750 Hollywood Boulevard in the Motion Pictures section of the Hollywood Walk of Fame. It was dedicated on February 8, 1960.[30]
Filmography
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1945 | Boston Blackie Booked on Suspicion | Jack Higgins | Alternative title: Booked on Suspicion |
1945 | Wonder Man | Ten Grand Jackson | |
1945 | Boston Blackie's Rendezvous | Jimmy Cook | Alternative title: Blackie's Rendezvous |
1945 | The Gay Senorita | Tomas Obrion aka Tim O'Brien | |
1946 | The Kid from Brooklyn | Speed McFarlane | |
1946 | The Chase | Eddie Roman | |
1946 | The Best Years of Our Lives | Cliff | Alternative titles: Glory for Me and Home Again |
1947 | Copacabana | Steve Hunt | |
1948 | A Song Is Born | Tony Crow | Alternative title: That's Life |
1949 | White Heat | Big Ed Somers | |
1950 | The Damned Don't Cry | Nick Prenta | |
1950 | Highway 301 | George Legenza | |
1950 | Dallas | Bryant Marlow | |
1951 | Storm Warning | Hank Rice | |
1951 | Raton Pass | Cy Van Cleave | Alternative title: Canyon Pass |
1951 | Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison | Chuck Daniels | |
1951 | Tomorrow Is Another Day | Bill Clark / Mike Lewis | |
1951 | Jim Thorpe – All-American | Peter Allendine | Alternative title: Man of Bronze |
1951 | The Tanks Are Coming | Francis Aloysius 'Sully' Sullivan | |
1952 | The Lion and the Horse | Ben Kirby | |
1952 | Operation Secret | Marcel Brevoort | |
1953 | She's Back on Broadway | Rick Sommers | |
1953 | The Desert Song | Captain Claude Fontaine | |
1953 | Shark River | Dan Webley | |
1953 | Back to God's Country | Paul Blake | |
1954 | Carnival Story | Joe Hammond | |
1954 | Private Hell 36 | Cal Bruner | |
1956 | Come Next Spring | Matt Ballot | |
1956 | The Weapon | Mark Andrews | |
1957 | Slander | H.R. Manley | |
1957 | Il Grido | Aldo | |
1958 | Quantrill's Raiders | Capt. Alan Wescott | |
1959 | I Mobster | Joe Sante | |
1959 | The Beat Generation | Dave Culloran | |
1959 | The Big Operator | Bill Gibson | Alternative title: Anatomy of the Syndicate |
1959 | The Twilight Zone | Fred Renard | Season 1 Episode 12 (What you need) |
1961 | The Deadly Companions | Billy Keplinger | |
1963 | Of Love and Desire | Steve Corey | |
1965 | Mozambique | Brad Webster | |
1965 | Bonanza (TV Series) | Burk Shannon | season 6 episode 26 (The Trap) |
1967 | Tell Me in the Sunlight | Dave | Filmed in 1965; released posthumously (final film role) |
References
edit- ^ Geoff Mayer (2012). Historical Dictionary of Crime Films. Scarecrow Press. pp. 89–. ISBN 978-0-8108-6769-7.
- ^ a b Monush, Barry (2003). Screen World Presents the Encyclopedia of Hollywood Film Actors: From the silent era to 1965. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 136. ISBN 9781557835512. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
- ^ The Life Story of STEVE COCHRAN Picture Show; London Vol. 59, Iss. 1530, (Jul 26, 1952): 12.
- ^ John Austin, Tales of Hollywood the Bizarre SP Books, 1992, p. 70.
- ^ "SCREEN NEWS HERE AND IN HOLLYWOOD". New York Times. December 3, 1943. p. 27.
- ^ "("Steve Cochran" search results)". Playbill Vault. Playbill. Archived from the original on 29 April 2017. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
- ^ "Actor Steve Cochran Believed to Be Dead in Boat Off Guatemala Shore: STEVE COCHRAN", Los Angeles Times, 27 June 1965: B.
- ^ Hopper, Heda. "Steve Cochran Set for Dramatic Role", Los Angeles Times, December 15, 1950.
- ^ "Steve Cochran Star in Sympathetic Role", Los Angeles Times, August 11 1951, p. A8.
- ^ "SHAVED DOWN". The Sun. No. 2567. Sydney. 6 July 1952. p. 50. Retrieved 1 November 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ Schallert, Edwin. "Steve Cochran Plans Directing Career; 'Space Station' Put on Roster", Los Angeles Times, 22 May 1953: B9.
- ^ Hedda Hopper, "Steve Cochran to Do First Film in Europe", Los Angeles Times, 20 May 1953, p. 22.
- ^ "Ann Sheridan, Steve Cochran Starring in Arkansas Story By John Beaufort", Christian Science Monitor, March 19, 1956, p. 7.
- ^ a b HOWARD THOMPSON (Oct 20, 1962). "PLANS DISCUSSED BY STEVE COCHRAN: Film Actor-Producer, Here on Visit, Talks of Future". New York Times. p. 13.
- ^ Profile of Steve Cochran at Google Books
- ^ p.142 Parrish, Robert & DeCarl, Lennard Hollywood Players: The Forties 1976 Arlington House Publishers
- ^ "Steve Cochran at Brian's Drive-In Theater".
- ^ Clemens, Samuel. "Barbara Wilson", Classic Images. October 2022
- ^ O'Brian, Jack (March 15, 1970). "Goading Them A New Sport". Spartanburg Herald-Journal. South Carolina, Spartanburg. p. B 10. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
- ^ Cavna, Michael (2010-08-13). "Remembering 'FUTURAMA' producer Alex Johns, 43". Washington Post. Archived from the original on October 5, 2012. Retrieved 2010-09-05.
- ^ "Search | 1950 Census".
- ^ "Shot stopped actor's car". The Argus. No. 33, 443. Melbourne. 10 November 1953. p. 1. Retrieved 1 November 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "FILM GOSSIP". The Sun. No. 2618. New South Wales, Australia. 28 June 1953. p. 53. Retrieved 1 November 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "SEA PUZZLE Inquiry into actor's death". The Canberra Times. Vol. 39, no. 11, 194. 29 June 1965. p. 5. Retrieved 1 November 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "SEA PUZZLE Inquiry into actor's death". Canberra Times. 29 June 1965.
- ^ "Steve Cochran".
- ^ "sfgate".
- ^ "Steve Cochran Widow Given Half of Estate", Los Angeles Times, October 13, 1965, p. 22.
- ^ Wilson, Scott (August 22, 2016). Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed. McFarland. p. 144. ISBN 9780786479924 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Steve Cochran". Hollywood Walk of Fame. Archived from the original on 29 April 2017. Retrieved 29 April 2017.