fbpx
Wikipedia

Broderick Crawford

William Broderick Crawford (December 9, 1911 – April 26, 1986) was an American stage, film, radio, and television actor, often cast in tough-guy roles and best known for his Oscar- and Golden Globe-winning portrayal of Willie Stark in All the King's Men (1949) and for his starring role as Dan Mathews in the television series Highway Patrol (1955–1959).[1]

Broderick Crawford
Crawford in The Interns (1971)
Born
William Broderick Crawford

(1911-12-09)December 9, 1911
DiedApril 26, 1986(1986-04-26) (aged 74)
OccupationActor
Years active1931–1985
Spouse(s)
(m. 1940; div. 1958)

(m. 1962; div. 1967)

Mary Alice Moore
(m. 1973)
Children2

Until filming All the King's Men, Crawford's career had been largely limited to "B films" in supporting or character roles. He realized he did not fit the role of a handsome leading man, once describing himself as looking like a "retired pugilist".

Early life

Crawford was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Lester Crawford ( Lester Crawford Pendergast) and Helen Broderick, who were both vaudeville performers, as his grandparents had been.[2] Lester appeared in films in the 1920s and 1930s. Helen Broderick had a career in Hollywood comedies, including memorable appearances in the Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers musicals Top Hat and Swing Time.

Young William joined his parents on the stage, working for producer Max Gordon. After graduating from preparatory high school Dean Academy (now Dean College) in Franklin, Massachusetts, Crawford was accepted by Harvard College where he enrolled. However, after only three weeks at Harvard he dropped out to work as a stevedore on the New York docks.[2]

Acting career

 
Wallace Ford and Crawford (right) in the original 1938 Broadway production Of Mice and Men

Crawford returned to vaudeville and radio, which included a period with the Marx Brothers in the radio comedy show Flywheel, Shyster, and Flywheel.[2]

He played his first serious character as a footballer in She Loves Me Not at the Adelphi Theatre, London in 1932. Crawford was originally stereotyped as a fast-talking tough guy early in his career and often played villainous parts.

He gained fame in 1937 as Lenny in Of Mice and Men on Broadway. He moved to Hollywood and began working in films.

Early films

Crawford made his film debut for Sam Goldwyn in Woman Chases Man (1937). He was in Start Cheering (1938) at Columbia but missed out on reprising his stage performance as Lenny in the film version of Of Mice and Men, losing it to Lon Chaney Jr.

Paramount

[[File:Broderick Crawford David Niven Loretta Young Eternally Yours.jpg|thumb|right|Crawford, David Niven and Loretta Young in Eternally Yours (1939) Crawford signed a contract with Paramount. He appeared in some "B" films: Ambush (1939), Sudden Money (1939) and Undercover Doctor (1939). He had a good role in the prestigious Beau Geste with Gary Cooper, Ray Milland, Robert Preston, Brian Donlevy and Susan Hayward and directed by William A. Wellman.

After appearing in Island of Lost Men (1939) starring Anna May Wong, Crawford had a Beau Geste-style role in The Real Glory (1939) with Gary Cooper and David Niven. He appeared in two films for Walter Wanger and Tay Garnett, Eternally Yours (1939) with David Niven and Loretta Young and Slightly Honorable (1939) with Pat O'Brien and Edward Arnold.

Universal

Crawford moved over to Universal, where he was given his first starring role, in the "B" picture I Can't Give You Anything But Love, Baby (1940).

He had support parts in When the Daltons Rode (1940); Seven Sinners (1940), for Garnett; and Trail of the Vigilantes (1940). He went back to Paramount for Texas Rangers Ride Again (1940) then returned to Universal for The Black Cat (1941), Tight Shoes (1941), and Badlands of Dakota (1941).

Crawford had one of the leads in South of Tahiti (1941) and North to the Klondike (1941). He supported Edward G. Robinson in Larceny, Inc. (1942) and George Raft in Broadway (1942), and co-starred with Robert Stack in Men of Texas (1942) and Constance Bennett in Sin Town (1942).

During World War II, Crawford enlisted in the United States Army Air Corps. Assigned to the Armed Forces Network, he was sent to Britain in 1944 as a sergeant, he served as an announcer for the Glenn Miller American Band. He was one of two announcers on Miller's weekly program I Sustain the Wings, prior to Miller and the band being shipped to England.

He returned to films with roles in the film noir Black Angel (1946) with Dan Duryea and Peter Lorre and Slave Girl (1947) with Yvonne de Carlo.

Freelance actor

Crawford made The Flame (1947) for Republic, and The Time of Your Life (1948) for James Cagney's company. He went back to Paramount for Sealed Verdict (1948) and had a co-starring role in Bad Men of Tombstone (1949) for the King Brothers.

At Warner Bros Crawford was in A Kiss in the Dark (1949) with David Niven and Jane Wyman and Night Unto Night (1949) with Ronald Reagan and Viveca Lindfors. He was also in Monogram's Anna Lucasta (1949) with Paulette Goddard.

All the King's Men and stardom

[[File:All-the-King's-Men-Willie-Stark.jpg|thumb|left|Crawford as Willie Stark in All the King's Men (1949)]] In 1949, Crawford reached the pinnacle of his acting career when he was cast as Willie Stark, a character inspired by and closely patterned after the life of Louisiana politician Huey Long, in All the King's Men, a film based on the popular novel by Robert Penn Warren. The film was a huge hit, and Crawford's performance as the bullying, blustering, yet insecure Governor Stark won him the Academy Award for Best Actor.

The film was made by Columbia who put Crawford under contract. He co-starred with Glenn Ford in Convicted (1950), then starred in another hit 'A'-list production with William Holden and Judy Holliday, Born Yesterday (1950), directed by George Cukor.

Crawford starred in The Mob (1951), a crime drama. Under the direction of Phil Karlson he starred in Scandal Sheet (1952), based on a novel by Sam Fuller.

MGM borrowed him to play the villain in Lone Star (1952), opposite Clark Gable and Ava Gardner. He went to Warner Bros. to star in a comedy, Stop, You're Killing Me (1952).

Crawford returned to Columbia to star in some Westerns, Last of the Comanches (1953), and The Last Posse (1954). 20th Century Fox borrowed him to co-star with Gregory Peck in Nunnally Johnson's Night People (1954).

Crawford was reunited with Glenn Ford in Human Desire (1954), directed by Fritz Lang. Edward Small used him in Down Three Dark Streets (1954) and New York Confidential (1955).

In 1955, Crawford assumed the starring role as Rollo Lamar, the most violent of convicts in Big House, U.S.A.. In the film, Crawford's character is a hardened convict so violent he commands the obedience of even the most violent and psychotic prisoners in the prison yard, including those portrayed by such famous tough-guy actors as Charles Bronson, Ralph Meeker, William Talman, and Lon Chaney Jr.

Stanley Kramer cast him in a good supporting role in Not as a Stranger (1955) with Robert Mitchum and Frank Sinatra, which was a big hit. He received an offer in Italy to star in Il bidone (1955), directed by Federico Fellini.

Highway Patrol

In 1955, television producer Frederick Ziv of ZIV Television Productions offered Crawford the lead role as "Dan Mathews" in the police drama Highway Patrol, which dramatized law enforcement activities of the California Highway Patrol (CHP). ZIV Television Productions operated on an extremely low budget of $25,000 per episode of Highway Patrol with ten percent of gross receipts going to Crawford as per his contract. While the show's scripts were largely fictional, the use of realistic, rapid-fire dialogue, stark film noir styled feel and Crawford's convincing portrayal of a hard-as-nails police official helped make the show an instant success. Highway Patrol remained popular during its four years (1955–1959) of first-run syndication, and would continue in repeat syndication on local stations across the United States for many years after. For much of the period from 1955 until 1965 most of Crawford's television roles involved ZIV Television, which was among the relative handful of producers willing to accept the frequent challenges inherent with working with the hard-living and hard-drinking Crawford. Years later, Frederick Ziv admitted in an interview, "To be honest, Broderick could be a handful!"[3]

Highway Patrol helped revive Crawford's career and cement his tough-guy persona, which he used successfully in numerous movie and TV roles for the rest of his life.

During the series' run he appeared in The Fastest Gun Alive (1956) with Ford at MGM, a successful Western; Between Heaven and Hell (1956) with Robert Wagner at Fox, directed by Richard Fleischer; and The Decks Ran Red (1958) with James Mason for Andrew L. Stone.

Fed up with the show's hectic shooting schedule, Crawford quit Highway Patrol at the end of 1959 in order to make a film in Spain, and try to get his drinking under control.[4]

Europe

Crawford relocated to Europe where he starred in Vittorio Cottafavi's La vendetta di Ercole (1960), known in the U.S. as Goliath and the Dragon.

Crawford's successful run as Dan Mathews in Highway Patrol earned him some two million dollars under his contract with ZIV, which eventually paid him in exchange for his agreement to sign for the pilot and subsequent production of a new ZIV production, King of Diamonds. Recently back from Europe, and having temporarily stopped drinking, Crawford was signed to play the starring role as diamond industry security chief John King.[4] King of Diamonds was picked up for syndication in 1961, but was a failure, the show lasting only one season.

In 1962, after the end of King of Diamonds, Crawford returned to acting in motion pictures: Square of Violence (1962); Convicts 4 (1962); Javier Setó's The Castilian (1963); A House Is Not a Home (1964); Up from the Beach (1965); Kid Rodelo (1966); The Oscar (1966); The Texican (1966) with Audie Murphy; The Vulture (1967); Red Tomahawk (1967).

1970s

After 1970, Crawford again returned to television. From 1970 to 1971, he played the role of Dr. Peter Goldstone in The Interns.

In 1977, he starred as J. Edgar Hoover in The Private Files of J. Edgar Hoover. He would eventually make a series of guest appearances on several TV programs, while starring in several made-for-TV movies.

He wore the trademark fedora and black suit when he made an appearance as guest host of a 1977 episode of NBC's Saturday Night Live that included a spoof of Highway Patrol.

In an episode of CHiPs Crawford appeared as himself, recognized after being stopped by Officer Poncherello, who presses a reluctant Crawford to give his trademark line from Highway Patrol ("Twenty-One-Fifty to Headquarters!").

Musician Webb Wilder's instrumental, "Ruff Rider" (on the album It Came From Nashville), is dedicated to Broderick Crawford in admiration of his Highway Patrol character's ability to solve any crime committed in California by setting up a road block.

Crawford worked in 140 motion pictures and television series during his career and remained an especially durable presence in television.

Crawford is referenced in the 1977 film Smokey and the Bandit in the scene where an Alabama State Patrol officer angrily confronts Sheriff Buford T. Justice (Jackie Gleason) and his damaged vehicle with its horn that won't stop blaring. When Justice starts to introduce himself, the trooper interrupts him and barks, "I don't care if your name is Broderick Crawford!"

In 1979, Crawford had a cameo as himself in the film A Little Romance in which he referenced his hard-drinking persona.

His last role was as a film producer who is murdered in a 1982 episode of the Simon & Simon television series. The actor who played the part of the suspected murderer was Stuart Whitman, who had played the recurring part of Sergeant Walters on Highway Patrol.

Personal life

Throughout his adult life, Crawford was prone to bouts of heavy drinking, and was known for eating large meals. These habits contributed to a serious weight gain for Crawford during the 1950s. His weight and penchant for heavy drinking contributed to several injuries suffered on the set of Highway Patrol. It became particularly difficult for Crawford to perform certain scenes, such as when he had to enter and exit a police helicopter. In 1958, Crawford broke his ankle while exiting the helicopter and was forced to wear an ankle cast, which may be seen in some episodes.[citation needed]

Crawford's drinking increased during the filming of Highway Patrol, eventually resulting in several arrests and stops for driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI), which eventually gained him a suspended driving license.[5] While representing the California Highway Patrol as "Chief Matthews", Crawford was known with considerable embarrassment by the CHP as "Old 502" due to his habit of driving under the influence of alcohol ("Code 502" was the CHP police radio code for drunken driving). According to the show's creator, Guy Daniels, "We got all the dialogue in by noon, or else we wouldn't get it done at all. He [Crawford] would bribe people to bring him booze on the set." The show used their CHP technical advisor, Officer Frank Runyon, to keep Crawford sober: "I was told to keep that son of a bitch away from a bottle. I think his license was suspended. Some scenes had to be shot on private roads so that Brod could drive."[citation needed] Eventually the drinking strained the show's relationship with the CHP as well as Crawford's relationship with ZIV.[5]

Fellow actor Stuart Whitman became a close friend of Crawford. In an interview Whitman said they both clicked upon meeting when cast in an episode of Highway Patrol. According to Whitman, who was going through hard financial times, they became fast friends. Crawford would ask Whitman to play his character whenever he was low on cash, so that Whitman would do the dialogue while he was drinking. Whitman said that later down the line he helped to cast Crawford in The Decks Ran Red (1958). Whitman promised the production that Crawford would stay sober throughout the shoot, and he did.[6][7][8][9]

Crawford married three times. His first marriage was to actress Kay Griffith in 1940; the couple had two sons together, Christopher Broderick Crawford and Kelly Griffith Crawford. Through his elder son, Christopher, Crawford has one grandchild, Katherine Lee Crawford. Crawford's second marriage was to Joan Tabor in 1962; they divorced in 1967. His third and final marriage, which lasted until Crawford's death in 1986, was to Mary Alice Moore in 1973.[citation needed]

Death

Crawford died following a series of strokes in 1986 at the age of 74 in Rancho Mirage, California.[citation needed]

Legacy

Crawford has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, one for motion pictures at 6901 Hollywood Boulevard and another for television at 6734 Hollywood Boulevard.

His popularity on "Highway Patrol" also led to him being memorialized in the poker game of Texas Hold 'em, in that a starting hand of a 10-4 (a common police radio code) is nicknamed a "Broderick Crawford".

Filmography

Radio appearances

Year Program Episode/source
1952 Hollywood Star Playhouse Santa Is No Saint[10]
1953 Cavalcade of America Star and Shield[11]
1954 Suspense Parole to Panic[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ Broderick Crawford obituary, Variety, April 30, 1986.
  2. ^ a b c Wiggins, Victoria, ed. (2007). 501 Movie Stars. Hauppage, New York: Quintessence. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-7641-6021-9.
  3. ^ "Highway Patrol with Broderick Crawford / TVparty!". www.tvparty.com. Retrieved January 31, 2021.
  4. ^ a b Jason, Rick, Scrapbooks of My Mind: A Hollywood Autobiography (2000)
  5. ^ a b Huffman, John P., '55 Highway Patrol Buick, Motor Trend (June 1997)
  6. ^ Petkovich, Anthony (2013). "Interview with Stuart Whitman (part 1)". Shock Cinema. 44: 10-11 – via Archive.
  7. ^ Petkovich, Anthony (2013). "Interview with Stuart Whitman (part 2)". Shock Cinema. 44: 12-13 – via Archive.
  8. ^ Petkovich, Anthony (2013). "Interview with Stuart Whitman (part 3)". Shock Cinema. 44: 14-15 – via Archive.
  9. ^ Petkovich, Anthony (2013). "Interview with Stuart Whitman (part 4)". Shock Cinema. 44: 48 – via Archive.
  10. ^ Kirby, Walter (December 21, 1952). "Better Radio Programs for the Week". The Decatur Daily Review. p. 44. Retrieved June 8, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.  
  11. ^ Kirby, Walter (March 1, 1953). "Better Radio Programs for the Week". The Decatur Daily Review. p. 46. Retrieved June 23, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.  
  12. ^ "Radio's Golden Age". Nostalgia Digest. 41 (3): 40–41. Summer 2015.

External links

broderick, crawford, william, december, 1911, april, 1986, american, stage, film, radio, television, actor, often, cast, tough, roles, best, known, oscar, golden, globe, winning, portrayal, willie, stark, king, 1949, starring, role, mathews, television, series. William Broderick Crawford December 9 1911 April 26 1986 was an American stage film radio and television actor often cast in tough guy roles and best known for his Oscar and Golden Globe winning portrayal of Willie Stark in All the King s Men 1949 and for his starring role as Dan Mathews in the television series Highway Patrol 1955 1959 1 Broderick CrawfordCrawford in The Interns 1971 BornWilliam Broderick Crawford 1911 12 09 December 9 1911Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S DiedApril 26 1986 1986 04 26 aged 74 Rancho Mirage California U S OccupationActorYears active1931 1985Spouse s Kay Griffith m 1940 div 1958 wbr Joan Tabor m 1962 div 1967 wbr Mary Alice Moore m 1973 wbr Children2Until filming All the King s Men Crawford s career had been largely limited to B films in supporting or character roles He realized he did not fit the role of a handsome leading man once describing himself as looking like a retired pugilist Contents 1 Early life 2 Acting career 2 1 Early films 2 2 Paramount 2 3 Universal 2 4 Freelance actor 2 5 All the King s Men and stardom 2 6 Highway Patrol 2 7 Europe 2 8 1970s 3 Personal life 4 Death 5 Legacy 6 Filmography 7 Radio appearances 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEarly life EditCrawford was born in Philadelphia Pennsylvania to Lester Crawford ne Lester Crawford Pendergast and Helen Broderick who were both vaudeville performers as his grandparents had been 2 Lester appeared in films in the 1920s and 1930s Helen Broderick had a career in Hollywood comedies including memorable appearances in the Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers musicals Top Hat and Swing Time Young William joined his parents on the stage working for producer Max Gordon After graduating from preparatory high school Dean Academy now Dean College in Franklin Massachusetts Crawford was accepted by Harvard College where he enrolled However after only three weeks at Harvard he dropped out to work as a stevedore on the New York docks 2 Acting career Edit Wallace Ford and Crawford right in the original 1938 Broadway production Of Mice and Men Crawford returned to vaudeville and radio which included a period with the Marx Brothers in the radio comedy show Flywheel Shyster and Flywheel 2 He played his first serious character as a footballer in She Loves Me Not at the Adelphi Theatre London in 1932 Crawford was originally stereotyped as a fast talking tough guy early in his career and often played villainous parts He gained fame in 1937 as Lenny in Of Mice and Men on Broadway He moved to Hollywood and began working in films Early films Edit Crawford made his film debut for Sam Goldwyn in Woman Chases Man 1937 He was in Start Cheering 1938 at Columbia but missed out on reprising his stage performance as Lenny in the film version of Of Mice and Men losing it to Lon Chaney Jr Paramount Edit File Broderick Crawford David Niven Loretta Young Eternally Yours jpg thumb right Crawford David Niven and Loretta Young in Eternally Yours 1939 Crawford signed a contract with Paramount He appeared in some B films Ambush 1939 Sudden Money 1939 and Undercover Doctor 1939 He had a good role in the prestigious Beau Geste with Gary Cooper Ray Milland Robert Preston Brian Donlevy and Susan Hayward and directed by William A Wellman After appearing in Island of Lost Men 1939 starring Anna May Wong Crawford had a Beau Geste style role in The Real Glory 1939 with Gary Cooper and David Niven He appeared in two films for Walter Wanger and Tay Garnett Eternally Yours 1939 with David Niven and Loretta Young and Slightly Honorable 1939 with Pat O Brien and Edward Arnold Universal Edit Crawford moved over to Universal where he was given his first starring role in the B picture I Can t Give You Anything But Love Baby 1940 He had support parts in When the Daltons Rode 1940 Seven Sinners 1940 for Garnett and Trail of the Vigilantes 1940 He went back to Paramount for Texas Rangers Ride Again 1940 then returned to Universal for The Black Cat 1941 Tight Shoes 1941 and Badlands of Dakota 1941 Crawford had one of the leads in South of Tahiti 1941 and North to the Klondike 1941 He supported Edward G Robinson in Larceny Inc 1942 and George Raft in Broadway 1942 and co starred with Robert Stack in Men of Texas 1942 and Constance Bennett in Sin Town 1942 During World War II Crawford enlisted in the United States Army Air Corps Assigned to the Armed Forces Network he was sent to Britain in 1944 as a sergeant he served as an announcer for the Glenn Miller American Band He was one of two announcers on Miller s weekly program I Sustain the Wings prior to Miller and the band being shipped to England He returned to films with roles in the film noir Black Angel 1946 with Dan Duryea and Peter Lorre and Slave Girl 1947 with Yvonne de Carlo Freelance actor Edit Crawford made The Flame 1947 for Republic and The Time of Your Life 1948 for James Cagney s company He went back to Paramount for Sealed Verdict 1948 and had a co starring role in Bad Men of Tombstone 1949 for the King Brothers At Warner Bros Crawford was in A Kiss in the Dark 1949 with David Niven and Jane Wyman and Night Unto Night 1949 with Ronald Reagan and Viveca Lindfors He was also in Monogram s Anna Lucasta 1949 with Paulette Goddard All the King s Men and stardom Edit File All the King s Men Willie Stark jpg thumb left Crawford as Willie Stark in All the King s Men 1949 In 1949 Crawford reached the pinnacle of his acting career when he was cast as Willie Stark a character inspired by and closely patterned after the life of Louisiana politician Huey Long in All the King s Men a film based on the popular novel by Robert Penn Warren The film was a huge hit and Crawford s performance as the bullying blustering yet insecure Governor Stark won him the Academy Award for Best Actor The film was made by Columbia who put Crawford under contract He co starred with Glenn Ford in Convicted 1950 then starred in another hit A list production with William Holden and Judy Holliday Born Yesterday 1950 directed by George Cukor Crawford starred in The Mob 1951 a crime drama Under the direction of Phil Karlson he starred in Scandal Sheet 1952 based on a novel by Sam Fuller MGM borrowed him to play the villain in Lone Star 1952 opposite Clark Gable and Ava Gardner He went to Warner Bros to star in a comedy Stop You re Killing Me 1952 Crawford returned to Columbia to star in some Westerns Last of the Comanches 1953 and The Last Posse 1954 20th Century Fox borrowed him to co star with Gregory Peck in Nunnally Johnson s Night People 1954 Crawford was reunited with Glenn Ford in Human Desire 1954 directed by Fritz Lang Edward Small used him in Down Three Dark Streets 1954 and New York Confidential 1955 In 1955 Crawford assumed the starring role as Rollo Lamar the most violent of convicts in Big House U S A In the film Crawford s character is a hardened convict so violent he commands the obedience of even the most violent and psychotic prisoners in the prison yard including those portrayed by such famous tough guy actors as Charles Bronson Ralph Meeker William Talman and Lon Chaney Jr Stanley Kramer cast him in a good supporting role in Not as a Stranger 1955 with Robert Mitchum and Frank Sinatra which was a big hit He received an offer in Italy to star in Il bidone 1955 directed by Federico Fellini Highway Patrol Edit In 1955 television producer Frederick Ziv of ZIV Television Productions offered Crawford the lead role as Dan Mathews in the police drama Highway Patrol which dramatized law enforcement activities of the California Highway Patrol CHP ZIV Television Productions operated on an extremely low budget of 25 000 per episode of Highway Patrol with ten percent of gross receipts going to Crawford as per his contract While the show s scripts were largely fictional the use of realistic rapid fire dialogue stark film noir styled feel and Crawford s convincing portrayal of a hard as nails police official helped make the show an instant success Highway Patrol remained popular during its four years 1955 1959 of first run syndication and would continue in repeat syndication on local stations across the United States for many years after For much of the period from 1955 until 1965 most of Crawford s television roles involved ZIV Television which was among the relative handful of producers willing to accept the frequent challenges inherent with working with the hard living and hard drinking Crawford Years later Frederick Ziv admitted in an interview To be honest Broderick could be a handful 3 Highway Patrol helped revive Crawford s career and cement his tough guy persona which he used successfully in numerous movie and TV roles for the rest of his life During the series run he appeared in The Fastest Gun Alive 1956 with Ford at MGM a successful Western Between Heaven and Hell 1956 with Robert Wagner at Fox directed by Richard Fleischer and The Decks Ran Red 1958 with James Mason for Andrew L Stone Fed up with the show s hectic shooting schedule Crawford quit Highway Patrol at the end of 1959 in order to make a film in Spain and try to get his drinking under control 4 Europe Edit Crawford relocated to Europe where he starred in Vittorio Cottafavi s La vendetta di Ercole 1960 known in the U S as Goliath and the Dragon Crawford s successful run as Dan Mathews in Highway Patrol earned him some two million dollars under his contract with ZIV which eventually paid him in exchange for his agreement to sign for the pilot and subsequent production of a new ZIV production King of Diamonds Recently back from Europe and having temporarily stopped drinking Crawford was signed to play the starring role as diamond industry security chief John King 4 King of Diamonds was picked up for syndication in 1961 but was a failure the show lasting only one season In 1962 after the end of King of Diamonds Crawford returned to acting in motion pictures Square of Violence 1962 Convicts 4 1962 Javier Seto s The Castilian 1963 A House Is Not a Home 1964 Up from the Beach 1965 Kid Rodelo 1966 The Oscar 1966 The Texican 1966 with Audie Murphy The Vulture 1967 Red Tomahawk 1967 1970s Edit After 1970 Crawford again returned to television From 1970 to 1971 he played the role of Dr Peter Goldstone in The Interns In 1977 he starred as J Edgar Hoover in The Private Files of J Edgar Hoover He would eventually make a series of guest appearances on several TV programs while starring in several made for TV movies He wore the trademark fedora and black suit when he made an appearance as guest host of a 1977 episode of NBC s Saturday Night Live that included a spoof of Highway Patrol In an episode of CHiPs Crawford appeared as himself recognized after being stopped by Officer Poncherello who presses a reluctant Crawford to give his trademark line from Highway Patrol Twenty One Fifty to Headquarters Musician Webb Wilder s instrumental Ruff Rider on the album It Came From Nashville is dedicated to Broderick Crawford in admiration of his Highway Patrol character s ability to solve any crime committed in California by setting up a road block Crawford worked in 140 motion pictures and television series during his career and remained an especially durable presence in television Crawford is referenced in the 1977 film Smokey and the Bandit in the scene where an Alabama State Patrol officer angrily confronts Sheriff Buford T Justice Jackie Gleason and his damaged vehicle with its horn that won t stop blaring When Justice starts to introduce himself the trooper interrupts him and barks I don t care if your name is Broderick Crawford In 1979 Crawford had a cameo as himself in the film A Little Romance in which he referenced his hard drinking persona His last role was as a film producer who is murdered in a 1982 episode of the Simon amp Simon television series The actor who played the part of the suspected murderer was Stuart Whitman who had played the recurring part of Sergeant Walters on Highway Patrol Personal life EditThroughout his adult life Crawford was prone to bouts of heavy drinking and was known for eating large meals These habits contributed to a serious weight gain for Crawford during the 1950s His weight and penchant for heavy drinking contributed to several injuries suffered on the set of Highway Patrol It became particularly difficult for Crawford to perform certain scenes such as when he had to enter and exit a police helicopter In 1958 Crawford broke his ankle while exiting the helicopter and was forced to wear an ankle cast which may be seen in some episodes citation needed Crawford s drinking increased during the filming of Highway Patrol eventually resulting in several arrests and stops for driving under the influence of alcohol DUI which eventually gained him a suspended driving license 5 While representing the California Highway Patrol as Chief Matthews Crawford was known with considerable embarrassment by the CHP as Old 502 due to his habit of driving under the influence of alcohol Code 502 was the CHP police radio code for drunken driving According to the show s creator Guy Daniels We got all the dialogue in by noon or else we wouldn t get it done at all He Crawford would bribe people to bring him booze on the set The show used their CHP technical advisor Officer Frank Runyon to keep Crawford sober I was told to keep that son of a bitch away from a bottle I think his license was suspended Some scenes had to be shot on private roads so that Brod could drive citation needed Eventually the drinking strained the show s relationship with the CHP as well as Crawford s relationship with ZIV 5 Fellow actor Stuart Whitman became a close friend of Crawford In an interview Whitman said they both clicked upon meeting when cast in an episode of Highway Patrol According to Whitman who was going through hard financial times they became fast friends Crawford would ask Whitman to play his character whenever he was low on cash so that Whitman would do the dialogue while he was drinking Whitman said that later down the line he helped to cast Crawford in The Decks Ran Red 1958 Whitman promised the production that Crawford would stay sober throughout the shoot and he did 6 7 8 9 Crawford married three times His first marriage was to actress Kay Griffith in 1940 the couple had two sons together Christopher Broderick Crawford and Kelly Griffith Crawford Through his elder son Christopher Crawford has one grandchild Katherine Lee Crawford Crawford s second marriage was to Joan Tabor in 1962 they divorced in 1967 His third and final marriage which lasted until Crawford s death in 1986 was to Mary Alice Moore in 1973 citation needed Death EditCrawford died following a series of strokes in 1986 at the age of 74 in Rancho Mirage California citation needed Legacy EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Crawford has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame one for motion pictures at 6901 Hollywood Boulevard and another for television at 6734 Hollywood Boulevard His popularity on Highway Patrol also led to him being memorialized in the poker game of Texas Hold em in that a starting hand of a 10 4 a common police radio code is nicknamed a Broderick Crawford Filmography EditWoman Chases Man 1937 as Hunk Start Cheering 1938 as Biff Gordon Ambush 1939 as Randall Sudden Money 1939 as Archibald Doc Finney Undercover Doctor 1939 as Eddie Krator Beau Geste 1939 as Hank Miller Island of Lost Men 1939 as Tex Ballister The Real Glory 1939 as Lieut Larson Eternally Yours 1939 as Don Burns Slightly Honorable 1939 as Russ Sampson I Can t Give You Anything But Love Baby 1940 as Michael G Sonny McGann When the Daltons Rode 1940 as Bob Dalton Seven Sinners 1940 as Little Ned Trail of the Vigilantes 1940 as Swanee Texas Rangers Ride Again 1940 as Mace Townsley The Black Cat 1941 as Hubert A Gilmore Gil Smith Tight Shoes 1941 as Speedy Miller Badlands of Dakota 1941 as Bob Holliday South of Tahiti 1941 as Chuck North to the Klondike 1942 as John Thorn Butch Minds the Baby 1942 as Aloysius Butch Grogan Larceny Inc 1942 as Jug Martin Broadway 1942 as Steve Crandall Men of Texas 1942 as Henry Clay Jackson Sin Town 1942 as Dude McNair Keeping Fit 1942 as Brod Factory Worker The Runaround 1946 as Louis Prentiss Black Angel 1946 as Capt Flood Slave Girl 1947 as Chips Jackson The Flame 1947 as Ernie Hicks The Time of Your Life 1948 as Krupp a bewildered policeman Sealed Verdict 1948 as Capt Kinsella Bad Men of Tombstone 1949 as William Morgan A Kiss in the Dark 1949 as Mr Botts Night Unto Night 1949 as C L Shawn Anna Lucasta 1949 as Frank All the King s Men 1949 as Willie Stark Cargo to Capetown 1950 as Johnny Phelan Convicted 1950 as George Knowland Born Yesterday 1950 as Harry Brock Screen Snapshots Hollywood Awards 1951 as Himself The Mob 1951 as Johnny Damico Scandal Sheet 1952 as Mark Chapman aka George Grant Lone Star 1952 as Thomas Craden Rainbow Round My Shoulder 1952 as Broderick Crawford uncredited Stop You re Killing Me 1952 as Remy Marko Last of the Comanches 1953 as Sgt Matt Trainor The Last Posse 1953 as Sheriff John Frazier Night People 1954 as Charles Leatherby Human Desire 1954 as Carl Buckley Down Three Dark Streets 1954 as FBI Agent John Rip Ripley New York Confidential 1955 as Charlie Lupo Big House U S A 1955 as Rollo Lamar Not as a Stranger 1955 as Dr Aarons Il bidone 1955 as Augusto Man on a Bus 1955 as Bus driver The Fastest Gun Alive 1956 as Vinnie Harold Between Heaven and Hell 1956 as Capt Waco Grimes G Co CO The Decks Ran Red 1958 as Henry Scott Goliath and the Dragon 1960 as King Eurystheus Square of Violence 1961 as Dr Stefan Bernardi Convicts 4 1962 as Warden The Virginian 1963 episode A Killer in Town as George Wolfe The Castilian 1963 as Don Sancho No temas a la ley 1963 as Man in hotel uncredited A House Is Not a Home 1964 as Harrigan Rawhide 1964 episode Incident at Deadhorse as condemned man Jud Hammerklein Up from the Beach 1965 as MP Major Kid Rodelo 1966 as Joe Harbin Mutiny at Fort Sharpe 1966 as Colonel Lenox The Oscar 1966 as Sheriff The Texican 1966 as Luke Starr The Vulture 1966 as Brian F Stroud Red Tomahawk 1967 as Columbus Smith Ransom Money 1970 as Inspector Joseph Medford Hell s Bloody Devils 1970 as Gavin The Naughty Cheerleader 1970 as B J Hankins Gregorio and His Angel 1970 as Gregorio The Yin and the Yang of Mr Go 1970 as Parker Embassy 1972 as Frank Dunniger The Candidate 1972 as Jarmon as Narrator voice uncredited Terror in the Wax Museum 1973 as Amos Burns The Phantom of Hollywood 1974 as Capt O Neal Won Ton Ton the Dog Who Saved Hollywood 1976 as Special Effects Man Look What s Happened to Rosemary s Baby 1976 as Sheriff Holtzman Mayday at 40 000 Feet 1976 as Marshal Riese Proof of the Man 1977 as Police Captain O Brien The Private Files of J Edgar Hoover 1977 as J Edgar Hoover The Hughes Mystery 1979 A Little Romance 1979 as Broderick Brod Crawford Harlequin 1980 as Doc Wheelan There Goes the Bride 1980 as Gas Station Attendant Liar s Moon 1982 as Col Tubman The Uppercrust de 1982 as Mike Carrady The Creature Wasn t Nice 1983 as Max the Computer voice uncredited final film role Maharlika 1987 also known as Guerilla Strike Force as Gen HadleyRadio appearances EditYear Program Episode source1952 Hollywood Star Playhouse Santa Is No Saint 10 1953 Cavalcade of America Star and Shield 11 1954 Suspense Parole to Panic 12 See also Edit Biography portalReferences Edit Broderick Crawford obituary Variety April 30 1986 a b c Wiggins Victoria ed 2007 501 Movie Stars Hauppage New York Quintessence p 219 ISBN 978 0 7641 6021 9 Highway Patrol with Broderick Crawford TVparty www tvparty com Retrieved January 31 2021 a b Jason Rick Scrapbooks of My Mind A Hollywood Autobiography 2000 a b Huffman John P 55 Highway Patrol Buick Motor Trend June 1997 Petkovich Anthony 2013 Interview with Stuart Whitman part 1 Shock Cinema 44 10 11 via Archive Petkovich Anthony 2013 Interview with Stuart Whitman part 2 Shock Cinema 44 12 13 via Archive Petkovich Anthony 2013 Interview with Stuart Whitman part 3 Shock Cinema 44 14 15 via Archive Petkovich Anthony 2013 Interview with Stuart Whitman part 4 Shock Cinema 44 48 via Archive Kirby Walter December 21 1952 Better Radio Programs for the Week The Decatur Daily Review p 44 Retrieved June 8 2015 via Newspapers com Kirby Walter March 1 1953 Better Radio Programs for the Week The Decatur Daily Review p 46 Retrieved June 23 2015 via Newspapers com Radio s Golden Age Nostalgia Digest 41 3 40 41 Summer 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Broderick Crawford Broderick Crawford at IMDb Broderick Crawford at the Internet Broadway Database Watch Highway Patrol Broderick Crawford in Il Bidone Profile Turner Classic Movies Broderick Crawford at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Broderick Crawford amp oldid 1134602214, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.