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Burt Lancaster

Burton Stephen Lancaster (November 2, 1913 – October 20, 1994) was an American actor and producer. Initially known for playing tough guys with a tender heart, he went on to achieve success with more complex and challenging roles over a 45-year career in film and, later, television. He was a four-time nominee for the Academy Award for Best Actor (winning once), and he also won two BAFTA Awards and one Golden Globe Award for Best Lead Actor. The American Film Institute ranks Lancaster as #19 of the greatest male stars of classic Hollywood cinema.[1]

Burt Lancaster
Lancaster in Desert Fury (1947)
Born
Burton Stephen Lancaster

(1913-11-02)November 2, 1913
DiedOctober 20, 1994(1994-10-20) (aged 80)
Resting placeWestwood Memorial Park
Occupations
  • Actor
  • film producer
Years active1935–1991
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)
June Ernst
(m. 1935; div. 1946)

Norma Anderson
(m. 1946; div. 1969)

Susan Martin
(m. 1990)
Children5; including Bill

Lancaster performed as a circus acrobat in the 1930s. After serving in World War II, the 33-year-old Lancaster landed a role in a Broadway play and drew the attention of a Hollywood agent. His breakthrough role was in the film noir The Killers in 1946 alongside Ava Gardner. A critical success, it launched both of their careers. Not long after in 1948, Lancaster starred alongside Barbara Stanwyck in the commercially and critically acclaimed film Sorry, Wrong Number where he portrayed the husband to her bedridden, invalid character. In 1953, Lancaster played the illicit lover of Deborah Kerr in the military drama From Here to Eternity. A box office smash, it won eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, and landed a Best Actor nomination for Lancaster.

Later in the 1950s, he starred in The Rainmaker (1956), with Katharine Hepburn, earning a Best Actor Golden Globe nomination, and in 1957 he starred in Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957) with frequent co-star Kirk Douglas. During the 1950s, his production company, Hecht-Hill-Lancaster, was highly successful, with Lancaster acting in films such as: Trapeze (1956), a box office smash in which he used his acrobatic skills and for which he won the Silver Bear for Best Actor; Sweet Smell of Success (1957), a dark drama today considered a classic; Run Silent, Run Deep (1958), a WWII submarine drama with Clark Gable; and Separate Tables (1958), a hotel-set drama which received seven Oscar nominations.

In the early 1960s, Lancaster starred in a string of critically successful films, each in very disparate roles. Playing a charismatic biblical con-man in Elmer Gantry in 1960 won him the Academy Award and the Golden Globe for Best Actor. He played a Nazi war criminal in 1961 in the all-star, war-crime-trial film, Judgment at Nuremberg. Playing a bird expert prisoner in Birdman of Alcatraz in 1962, he earned the BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actor and his third Oscar nomination. In 1963, Lancaster traveled to Italy to star as an Italian prince in the epic period drama The Leopard. In 1964, he played a US Air Force General who, opposed by a Colonel played by Douglas, tries to overthrow the President in Seven Days in May. Then, in 1966, he played an explosives expert in the western The Professionals. Although the reception to his 1968 film The Swimmer was initially lackluster upon release, in the years after it has grown in stature critically and attained a cult following.

In 1970, Lancaster starred in the box-office hit, air-disaster drama Airport. He experienced a career resurgence in 1980 with the crime-romance Atlantic City, winning the BAFTA for Best Actor and landing his fourth Oscar nomination. Starting in the late 1970s, he also appeared in television mini-series, including the award-winning Separate but Equal with Sidney Poitier. He continued acting into his late 70s, until a stroke in 1990 forced him to retire; four years later he died from a heart attack. His final film role was in the Oscar-nominated Field of Dreams.

Early life

Lancaster was born on November 2, 1913, in Manhattan, New York, at his parents' home at 209 East 106th Street, the son of Elizabeth (née Roberts) and mailman James Lancaster.[2] Both of his parents were Protestants of working-class origin. All four of his grandparents were emigrants from Ireland to the United States, from the province of Ulster; his maternal grandparents were from Belfast and were descendants of English dissenters who had emigrated to Ireland as part of the Plantation of Ulster.[2]

Lancaster grew up in East Harlem and spent much of his time on the streets. He developed a great interest and skill in gymnastics while attending DeWitt Clinton High School, where he was a basketball star. Before he graduated from DeWitt Clinton, his mother died of a cerebral hemorrhage. Lancaster was accepted by New York University with an athletic scholarship, but subsequently dropped out.[3]

Circus career

 
Lancaster and Nick Cravat, performing with the Federal Theatre Project Circus (1935–38)
 
Cravat and Lancaster performing on the horizontal bars

At the age of 9, Lancaster met Nick Cravat with whom he developed a lifelong partnership.[4] Together, they learned to act in local theatre productions and circus arts at Union Settlement, one of the city's oldest settlement houses.[4] In the 1930s, they formed the acrobat duo Lang and Cravat and soon joined the Kay Brothers circus. However, in 1939, an injury forced Lancaster to give up the profession, with great regret. He then found temporary work, first as a salesman for Marshall Fields and then as a singing waiter in various restaurants.[5]

World War II service

After the United States entered World War II, Lancaster joined the United States Army in January 1943 and performed with the Army's 21st Special Services Division, one of the military groups organized to follow the troops on the ground and provide USO entertainment to keep up morale. He served with General Mark Clark's Fifth Army in Italy from 1943 to 1945.[6] He was discharged October 1945 and was an entertainment specialist with the rank of technician fifth grade.[7]

Acting career

Broadway

Lancaster returned to New York after his Army service. Although initially unenthusiastic about acting, Lancaster was encouraged to audition for a Broadway play by a producer who saw him in an elevator while he was visiting his then-girlfriend at work.[8] The audition was successful and Lancaster was cast in Harry Brown's A Sound of Hunting (1945). The show only ran three weeks, but his performance attracted the interest of a Hollywood agent, Harold Hecht. Lancaster had other offers but Hecht promised him the opportunity to produce their own movies within five years of hitting Hollywood.

Through Hecht, Lancaster was brought to the attention of producer Hal B. Wallis, who signed him to a non-exclusive eight-movie contract.

Hal Wallis

 
With Ava Gardner in The Killers (1946)

Lancaster's first filmed movie was Desert Fury for Wallis in 1947, where Lancaster was billed after John Hodiak and Lizabeth Scott. It was directed by Lewis Allen.[9][10]

Then producer Mark Hellinger approached him to star in 1946's The Killers, which was completed and released prior to Desert Fury. Directed by Robert Siodmak, it was a great commercial and critical success[11][12] and launched Lancaster and his co-star Ava Gardner to stardom. It has since come to be regarded as a classic.[13][14]

Hellinger used Lancaster again on Brute Force in 1947, a prison drama written by Richard Brooks and directed by Jules Dassin. It was also well received.[9] Wallis released his films through Paramount, and so Lancaster and other Wallis contractees made cameos in Variety Girl in 1947.

Lancaster's next film was a thriller for Wallis in 1947, I Walk Alone, co-starring Lizabeth Scott and a young Kirk Douglas, who was also under contract to Wallis. Variety listed it as one of the top grossers of the year, taking in more than $2 million.[15]

In 1948, Lancaster had a change of pace with the film adaptation of Arthur Miller's All My Sons, made at Universal Pictures with Edward G. Robinson. His third film for Wallis was an adaptation of Sorry, Wrong Number in 1948, with Barbara Stanwyck.

Norma Productions

Hecht kept to his promise to Lancaster to turn producer. The two of them formed a company, Norma Productions, and did a deal with Universal to make a thriller about a disturbed G.I. in London, Kiss the Blood Off My Hands in 1948, with Joan Fontaine and directed by Norman Foster. It made a profit of only $50,000, but was critically acclaimed.[15]

Back in Hollywood, Lancaster made another film noir with Siodmak, Criss Cross, in 1949. It was originally going to be produced by Hellinger and when Hellinger died, another took over. Tony Curtis made an early appearance.

Lancaster appeared in a fourth picture for Wallis, Rope of Sand, in 1949.

Norma Productions signed a three-picture deal with Warner Bros. The first was 1950's The Flame and the Arrow, a swashbuckler movie, in which Lancaster drew on his circus skills. Nick Cravat had a supporting role and the film was a huge commercial success, making $6 million. It was Warners' most popular film of the year and established an entirely new image for Lancaster.[16]

Lancaster was borrowed by 20th Century Fox for Mister 880 in 1950, a comedy with Edmund Gwenn. MGM put him in a popular Western, Vengeance Valley in 1951,[17] then he went to Warners to play the title role in the biopic Jim Thorpe – All-American, also in 1951.

Halburt

Norma signed a deal with Columbia Pictures to make two films through a Norma subsidiary, Halburt. The first film was 1951's Ten Tall Men, where Lancaster was a member of the French Foreign Legion. Robert Aldrich worked on the movie as a production manager.

The second was 1952's The First Time, a comedy which was the directorial debut of Frank Tashlin. It was meant to star Lancaster but he wound up not appearing in the film – the first of their productions in which he did not act.[18]

Hecht-Lancaster Productions

In 1951, the actor/producer duo changed the company's name to Hecht-Lancaster Productions. The first film under the new name was another swashbuckler: 1952's The Crimson Pirate, directed by Siodmak. Co-starring Cravat, it was extremely popular.

Lancaster changed pace once more by doing a straight dramatic part in 1952's Come Back, Little Sheba, based on a Broadway hit, with Shirley Booth, produced by Wallis and directed by Daniel Mann.

Alternating with adventure films, he went into South Sea Woman in 1952 at Warners. Part of the Norma-Warners contract was that Lancaster had to appear in some non-Norma films, of which this was one.[19]

In 1954, for his own company, Lancaster produced and starred in His Majesty O'Keefe, a South Sea island tale shot in Fiji. It was co-written by James Hill, who would soon become a part of the Hecht-Lancaster partnership.[20]

United Artists

Hecht and Lancaster left Warners for United Artists, for what began as a two-picture deal, the first of which was to be 1954's Apache, starring Lancaster as a Native American.[21][22]

They followed it with another Western in 1954, Vera Cruz, co-starring Gary Cooper and produced by Hill. Both films were directed by Robert Aldrich and were hugely popular.

United Artists signed Hecht-Lancaster to a multi-picture contract, to make seven films over two years.[23] These included films in which Lancaster did not act. Their first was Marty in 1955, based on Paddy Chayefsky's TV play starring Ernest Borgnine and directed by Delbert Mann. It won both the Best Picture Oscar and the Palme d'Or award at Cannes and Borgnine an Best Actor Oscar. It also earned $2 million on a budget of $350,000.[24] Vera Cruz had been a huge success, but Marty secured Hecht-Lancaster as one of the most successful independent production companies in Hollywood at the time.[25] Marty star Borgnine was under contract to Hecht-Lancaster and was unhappy about his lack of upcoming roles, especially after only receiving some seven lines in 1957's Sweet Smell of Success and half of his normal pay for Marty.[26] He eventually sued for breach of contract to gain back some of this money in 1957.[27]

Without Hill, Hecht and Lancaster produced The Kentuckian in 1955. It was directed by Lancaster in his directorial debut, and he also played a lead role. Lancaster disliked directing and only did it once more, on 1974's The Midnight Man.[28]

Lancaster still had commitments with Wallis, and made The Rose Tattoo for him in 1955, starring with Anna Magnani and Daniel Mann directing. It was very popular at the box office and critically acclaimed, winning Magnani an Oscar.[29]

Hecht-Hill-Lancaster

In 1955, Hill was made an equal partner in Hecht-Lancaster, with his name added to the production company. Hecht-Hill-Lancaster (HHL) released their first film Trapeze in 1956, with Lancaster performing many of his own stunts. The film, co-starring Tony Curtis and Gina Lollobrigida, went on to become the production company's top box office success, and United Artists expanded its deal with HHL.[30]

In 1956, Lancaster and Hecht partnered with Loring Buzzell and entered the music industry with the music publishing companies Leigh Music, Hecht-Lancaster & Buzzell Music, Calyork Music and Colby Music and the record labels Calyork Records and Maine Records.[31]

The HHL team impressed Hollywood with its success; as Life wrote in 1957, "[a]fter the independent production of a baker's dozen of pictures, it has yet to have its first flop ... (They were also good pictures.)."[32] In late 1957, they announced they would make ten films worth $14 million in 1958.[33]

Lancaster made two films for Wallis to complete his eight-film commitment for that contract: The Rainmaker (1956) with Katharine Hepburn, which earned Lancaster a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor; and Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957) with Kirk Douglas, which was a huge commercial hit directed by John Sturges.

Lancaster re-teamed with Tony Curtis in 1957 for Sweet Smell of Success, a co-production between Hecht-Hill-Lancaster and Curtis' own company with wife Janet Leigh, Curtleigh Productions. The movie, directed by Alexander Mackendrick, was a critical success but a commercial disappointment. Over the years it has come to be regarded as one of Lancaster's greatest films.[34]

HHL produced seven additional films in the late 1950s. Four starred Lancaster: Run Silent, Run Deep (1958), a Robert Wise directed war film with Clark Gable, which was mildly popular; Separate Tables (1958) a hotel-set drama with Kerr and Rita Hayworth (who married James Hill), which received an Oscar nomination for Best Picture and Oscar awards for lead actor David Niven and supporting actress Wendy Hiller, and was both a critical and commercial success; The Devil's Disciple (1959), with Douglas and Laurence Olivier, which lost money (and saw Lancaster fire Mackendrick during shooting);[35] and the Western The Unforgiven (1960), with Audrey Hepburn, which was a critical and commercial disappointment.[36]

Three were made without Lancaster, all of which lost money: The Bachelor Party (1957), from another TV play by Chayefsky, and directed by Delbert Mann; Take a Giant Step (1959), about a black student; and Summer of the Seventeenth Doll (1960), from an Australian play, shot on location in Australia and Britain.

Additionally, HHL served as the production company for the 1960–61 TV series Whiplash.

The Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions company dissolved in 1960 after Hill ruptured his relationship with both Hecht and Lancaster. Hill went on to produce a single additional film, The Happy Thieves, in a new production company, Hillworth Productions, co-owned with his wife Rita Hayworth.

Hecht and Lancaster

 
Drawing of Lancaster after he won an Oscar for Elmer Gantry (1960). Artist: Nicholas Volpe

Lancaster played the title role in Elmer Gantry (1960), written and directed by Richard Brooks for United Artists. The film received five Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture and Best Actor. Lancaster won the 1960 Academy Award for Best Actor, a Golden Globe Award, and the New York Film Critics Award for his performance.

Hecht and Lancaster worked together on The Young Savages (1961), directed by John Frankenheimer and produced by Hecht. Sydney Pollack worked as a dialogue coach.

Lancaster starred in Judgment at Nuremberg (1961) for Stanley Kramer, alongside Spencer Tracy, Richard Widmark and a number of other stars. The film was both a commercial and critical success, receiving eleven Oscar nominations, including Best Picture.

He then did another film with Hecht and Frankenheimer (replacing Charles Crichton), Birdman of Alcatraz (1962), a largely fictionalized biography. In it he plays Robert Stroud, a federal prisoner incarcerated for life for two murders, who begins to collect birds and over time becomes an expert in bird diseases, even publishing a book. The film shows Stroud transferred to the maximum security Alcatraz prison where he is not allowed to keep birds and as he ages he gets married, markets bird remedies, helps stop a prison rebellion, and writes a book on the history of the U.S. penal system, but never gets paroled. The sympathetic performance earned Lancaster a Best Actor Oscar nomination, a BAFTA Award for Best Actor, and a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor in a Dramatic Role. Hecht went on to produce five films without Lancaster's assistance, through his company Harold Hecht Films Productions between 1961 and 1967, including another Academy Award winner, Cat Ballou, starring Lee Marvin and Jane Fonda.

Collaborations with younger filmmakers

Lancaster made A Child Is Waiting (1963) with Judy Garland. It was produced by Kramer and directed by John Cassavetes.[37]

He went to Italy to star in The Leopard (1963) for Luchino Visconti, co-starring Alain Delon and Claudia Cardinale. It was one of Lancaster's favourite films and was a big hit in France but failed in the US (though the version released was much truncated).[38]

He had a small role in The List of Adrian Messenger (1963) for producer/star Kirk Douglas, and then did two for Frankenheimer: Seven Days in May (1964), a political thriller with Douglas, and The Train (1964), a World War Two action film (Lancaster had Frankenheimer replace Arthur Penn several days into filming).

Lancaster starred in The Hallelujah Trail (1965), a comic Western produced and directed by John Sturges which failed to recoup its large cost.[39]

He had a big hit with The Professionals (1966), a Western directed by Brooks and also starring Lee Marvin.

In 1966, at the age of 53, Lancaster appeared nude in director Frank Perry's film The Swimmer (1968), in what the critic Roger Ebert called "his finest performance".[40] Prior to working on The Swimmer, Lancaster was terrified of the water because he did not know how to swim. In preparation for the film, he took swimming lessons from UCLA swim coach Bob Horn.[41] Filming was difficult and clashes between Lancaster and Perry led to Sydney Pollack coming in to do some filming.[42] The film was not released until 1968, when it proved to be a commercial failure, though Lancaster remained proud of the movie and his performance.

Norlan Productions

 

In 1967, Lancaster formed a new partnership with Roland Kibbee, who had already worked as a writer on five Lancaster projects: Ten Tall Men, The Crimson Pirate, Three Sailors and a Girl (in which Lancaster made a cameo appearance), Vera Cruz, and The Devil's Disciple.

Through Norlan Productions, Lancaster and Kibbee produced The Scalphunters in 1968, directed by Sydney Pollack.

Lancaster followed it with another film from Pollack, Castle Keep in 1969, which was a big flop. So was The Gypsy Moths, for Frankenheimer, also in 1969.[43]

1970s

 
With Soviet fighter pilot Alexander Pokryshkin during documentary filming "The Unknown War", episode 9 War in the Air. Moscow, USSR, 1978, photo: Leo Medvedev

Lancaster had one of the biggest successes of his career with Airport in 1970, starring alongside Dean Martin, George Kennedy, Van Heflin, Helen Hayes, Maureen Stapleton, Barbara Hale, Jean Seberg and Jacqueline Bisset. The Ross Hunter film received nine Academy Award nominations, including one for Best Picture. It became one of the biggest box-office hits of 1970 and, at that time, reportedly the highest-grossing film in the history of Universal Pictures.

He then went into a series of Westerns: Lawman in 1971, directed by Michael Winner; Valdez Is Coming in 1971, for Norlan; and Ulzana's Raid in 1972, directed by Aldrich and produced by himself and Hecht. None were particularly popular but Ulzana's Raid has become a cult film.[44]

Lancaster did two thrillers, both 1973: Scorpio with Winner and Executive Action.

Lancaster returned to directing in 1974 with The Midnight Man, which he also wrote and produced with Kibee.

He made a second film with Visconti, Conversation Piece in 1974 and played the title role in the TV series Moses the Lawgiver, also in 1974.

Lancaster was one of many names in 1975's 1900, directed by Bernardo Bertolucci, and he had a cameo in 1976's Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson for Robert Altman.

He played Shimon Peres in the TV movie Victory at Entebbe in 1977 and had a supporting role in The Cassandra Crossing in 1976. He made a fourth and final film with Aldrich, Twilight's Last Gleaming in 1977, and had the title role in 1977's The Island of Dr. Moreau.[45]

Lancaster was top-billed in Go Tell the Spartans in 1978, a Vietnam War film; Lancaster admired the script so much that he took a reduced fee and donated money to help the movie to be completed. He was in Zulu Dawn in 1979.[46]

1980s

Lancaster began the 1980s with a highly acclaimed performance alongside Susan Sarandon in Atlantic City in 1980, directed by Louis Malle. The film received five Oscar nominations, including Best Picture and a Best Actor nomination for Lancaster.

He had key roles in Cattle Annie and Little Britches in 1981, The Skin in 1982 with Cardinale, Marco Polo, also in 1982, and Local Hero in 1983.

By now, Lancaster was mostly a character actor in features, as in The Osterman Weekend in 1983, but he was the lead in the TV movie Scandal Sheet in 1985.

He was in Little Treasure in 1985, directed by Alan Sharp, who had written Ulzana's Raid; On Wings of Eagles for TV in 1986, as Bull Simons; 1986's made for TV Barnum starred him in the title role; Tough Guys reunited him on the big screen with Kirk Douglas in 1986; Fathers and Sons: A German Tragedy in 1986 for German TV; 1987's Control made in Italy; Rocket Gibraltar in 1988, and The Jeweller's Shop in 1989.

His first critical success in a while was Field of Dreams in 1989, in which he played a supporting role as Moonlight Graham. He was also in the miniseries The Betrothed in 1989.

Later career

Lancaster's final performances included TV miniseries The Phantom of the Opera (1990); Voyage of Terror: The Achille Lauro Affair (1990) as Leon Klinghoffer based on the 1985 MS Achille Lauro incident;[47] and Separate But Equal (1991) with Sidney Poitier.

Frequent collaborators

Lancaster appeared in a total of seventeen films produced by his agent, Harold Hecht. Eight of these were co-produced by James Hill. He also appeared in eight films produced by Hal B. Wallis and two with producer Mark Hellinger. Although Lancaster's work alongside Kirk Douglas was mostly known as a successful pair of actors, Douglas, in fact, produced four films for the pair, through his production companies Bryna Productions and Joel Productions. Roland Kibbee also produced three Lancaster films, and Lancaster was also cast in two Stanley Kramer productions.

Kirk Douglas

Kirk Douglas starred in seven films across the decades with Burt Lancaster: I Walk Alone (1948), Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), The Devil's Disciple (1959), The List of Adrian Messenger (1963), Seven Days in May (1964), Victory at Entebbe (1976) and Tough Guys (1986), which fixed the notion of the pair as something of a team in the public imagination. Douglas was always billed under Lancaster in these movies but, with the exception of I Walk Alone, in which Douglas played a villain, their roles were usually more or less the same size. Both actors arrived in Hollywood at about the same time, and first appeared together in the fourth film for each, albeit with Douglas in a supporting role. They both became actor-producers who sought out independent Hollywood careers.

John Frankenheimer

John Frankenheimer directed five films with Lancaster: The Young Savages (1961), Birdman of Alcatraz (1962), Seven Days in May (1964), The Train (1964), and The Gypsy Moths (1969).

Other repeat collaborators

He was directed four times by Robert Aldrich, three times each by Robert Siodmak and Sydney Pollack, and twice each by Byron Haskin, Daniel Mann, John Sturges, John Huston, Richard Brooks, Alexander Mackendrick, Luchino Visconti, and Michael Winner.

Roland Kibbee wrote for seven Lancaster films. Lancaster used makeup veteran Robert Schiffer in twenty credited films, hiring Schiffer on nearly all of the films he produced.

Political activism

Lancaster was a vocal supporter of progressive and liberal political causes.[48] He frequently spoke out in support of racial and other minorities. As a result, he was often a target of FBI investigations.[49][50] He was named in President Richard Nixon's 1973 "Enemies List".[51]

A vocal opponent of the Vietnam War, he helped pay for the successful defense of a soldier accused of "fragging" (i.e., murdering) another soldier during war-time.[52] In 1968, Lancaster actively supported the presidential candidacy of anti-war Senator Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota, and frequently spoke on his behalf during the Democratic primaries.[53]

Lancaster was also active in anti-death penalty activism.[54] He campaigned heavily for George McGovern in the 1972 United States presidential election.[55]

In 1985, Lancaster joined the fight against AIDS after fellow movie star Rock Hudson contracted the disease.[56] Lancaster delivered Hudson's last words at the Commitment to Life fundraiser at a time when the stigma surrounding AIDS was at its height. He was the only major male star who attended.[57][58]

Of his political opinions, frequent co-star Tony Curtis said: "Here's this great big aggressive guy that looks like a ding-dong athlete playing these big tough guys and he has the soul of—who were those first philosophers of equality?—Socrates, Plato. He was a Greek philosopher with a sense that everybody was equal."[58]

Actor and SAG president Ed Asner said he showed everybody in Hollywood "how to be a liberal with balls".[58]

Hollywood Ten

In 1947, Lancaster reportedly signed a statement release by the National Council of Arts, Sciences and Professions (NCASP) asking Congress to abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC).[49] He was also a member of the short-lived Committee for the First Amendment, formed in support of the Hollywood Ten. He was one of 26 movie stars who flew to Washington in October 1947 to protest against the HUAC hearings.[49] The committee's Hollywood Fights Back broadcasts on ABC Radio Network were two 30-minute programs that took place on October 27 and November 2, 1947, during which committee members voiced their opposition to the HUAC hearings.[59][60] Many members faced blacklisting and backlash due to their involvement in the committee. Lancaster was listed in anti-communist literature as a fellow traveler.[61]

Civil rights movement

He and his second wife, Norma, hosted a fundraiser for Martin Luther King Jr. and the Student Diversity Leadership Conference (SDLC) ahead of the historic March on Washington in 1963.[58] He attended the march, where he was one of the speakers.[62][63] He flew in from France for the event, where he was shooting The Train, and flew back again the next day, despite a reported fear of flying.[58][64]

ACLU

In 1968, Lancaster was elected to serve as chairman of the Roger Baldwin Foundation, a newly formed fund-raising arm of the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California. His co-chairs were Frank Sinatra and Irving L. Lichtenstein. In October 1968, he hosted a party at his home to raise money for the ACLU to use for the defense of the more than four hundred people at the 1968 Democratic National Convention.[58] Throughout the years, he remained an ardent supporter and a fundraiser for the organization.

While serving as a member of the five-person ACLU Foundation executive committee, he cast the key vote to retain Ramona Ripston as executive director of the Southern California affiliate, a position she would build into a powerful advocacy force in Los Angeles politics. Ripston later recalled: "There was a feeling that a woman couldn't run the ACLU foundation, nor have access to the books. The vote finally came down to two 'yes' and two 'no.' Who had the deciding vote? Burt. He had a scotch or two and finally he said, 'I think she should be executive director.' I always loved him for that."[58]

When President George H. W. Bush derided Democratic candidate Michael Dukakis as a "card-carrying member of the ACLU", Lancaster was one of the supporters featured in the organization's first television advertising campaign stating: "I'm a card-carrying member of the ACLU" and "No one agrees with every single thing they've done. But no one can disagree with the guiding principle—with liberty and justice for all.'"[65] He also campaigned for Michael Dukakis in the 1988 United States presidential election.[66]

Personal life

 
Lancaster's son Bill Lancaster in The Big Valley (1967): In adulthood, he became a screenwriter.

Marriages and relationships

Lancaster guarded his personal life and attempted to keep it private despite his stardom. He was married three times and had five children. He also had many affairs, male and female, according to his family.[67]

His first marriage was to June Ernst, a trapeze acrobat. Ernst was the daughter of a renowned female aerialist and an accomplished acrobat herself. After they were married, he performed with her family and her until their separation in the late 1930s. When they divorced is unclear; contemporary reports listed 1940, but subsequent biographers have suggested dates as late as 1946, thus delaying his marriage to his second wife.[68]

He met second wife Norma Anderson (1917–1988) when the stenographer substituted for an ill actress in a USO production for the troops in Italy. Reportedly, on seeing Lancaster in the crowd on her way to town from the airport, she turned to an officer and asked, "Who is that good-looking officer and is he married?" The officer set up a blind date between the two for that evening.[68] They married in 1946. Norma was active in political causes with an entire room in their Bel Air home devoted to her major interest, the League of Woman Voters, crammed with printing presses and all the necessary supplies for mass mailings.[68] She was a life-long member of the NAACP. The couple held a fundraiser for Martin Luther King Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference ahead of the 1963 March on Washington.[69] All five of his children were with Anderson: Bill (who became an actor and screenwriter), James, Susan, Joanna (who worked as a film producer), and Sighle (pronounced "Sheila"). However, it was a troubled marriage. The pair separated in 1966, and finally divorced in 1969.

In 1966, Lancaster began a long-term relationship with hairdresser Jackie Bone, who worked on The Professionals. The relationship was tempestuous, with Bone once smashing a wine bottle over Lancaster's head at a dinner with Sydney Pollack and Peter Falk. Reportedly, they eventually split up after her religious conversion, which Lancaster believed he could not share with her.[68]

His third marriage, to Susan Martin, lasted from September 1990 until his death in 1994.

According to biographer Kate Buford in Burt Lancaster: An American Life, Lancaster was devotedly loyal to his friends and family. Old friends from his childhood remained his friends for life.[70]

Possible affairs

Friends said he claimed he was romantically involved with Deborah Kerr during the filming of From Here to Eternity in 1953.[71] However, Kerr stated that while there was a spark of attraction,[72] nothing ever happened.

He reportedly had an affair with Joan Blondell.[73]

In her 1980 autobiography, Shelley Winters claimed to have had a two-year affair with him, during which time he was considering separation from his wife. In his Hollywood memoirs, friend Farley Granger recalled an incident when Lancaster and he had to come to Winters' rescue one evening when she had inadvertently overdosed on alcohol and sleeping pills.[74] She broke up with him for "cheating on her with his wife" after she heard reports of his wife's third or fourth pregnancy.[75] Lancaster and Winters performed together in the 1949 radio play adaptation of The Killers. They appeared in two films together: The Young Savages, where she played his character's former lover, and The Scalphunters.

Religion

Despite his Protestant background and upbringing,[76] Lancaster identified as an atheist later in life.[77]

Health problems

As Lancaster reached his 60s, he began to be affected by cardiovascular disease. In January 1980, he had complications from a routine gall bladder operation, and in 1983, following two minor heart attacks, he underwent an emergency quadruple coronary bypass. He continued to act, however, and to engage in public activism. In 1988, he attended a congressional hearing in Washington, DC, with former colleagues who included James Stewart and Ginger Rogers to protest against media magnate Ted Turner's plan to colorize various black-and-white films from the 1930s and 1940s. On November 30, 1990, when he was 77, a stroke left him partially paralyzed and largely unable to speak, ending his acting career.

Death

 
Lancaster's plaque under an oak tree in Westwood Memorial Park where his ashes were scattered

Lancaster died at his apartment in Century City, Los Angeles, after having a third heart attack at 4:50 am on October 20, 1994, about two weeks shy of his 81st birthday.[78] His body was cremated, and his ashes were scattered under a large oak tree in Westwood Memorial Park, which is located in Westwood Village, California. A small, square ground plaque amid several others, inscribed "Burt Lancaster 1913–1994", marks the location. As he had previously requested, upon his death, no memorial or funeral service was held for him.

Legacy

The centennial of Lancaster's birth was honored at New York City's Film Society of Lincoln Center in May 2013 with the screening of 12 of the actor's best-known films, from The Killers to Atlantic City.[79]

Lancaster has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 6801 Hollywood Boulevard.[80]


Filmography and awards

Lancaster was nominated for the Oscar for Best Actor in a Leading Role in 1954 for From Here to Eternity, in 1961 for Elmer Gantry, in 1964 for Birdman of Alcatraz, and in 1982 for Atlantic City and won the award in 1961. Lancaster's leading role in Luchino Visconti's 1963 canonical The Leopard began a series of roles with important European art film directors that included roles in Bernardo Bertolucci's 1900 and Louis Malle's Atlantic City as well as Visconti's Conversation Piece.

Box office ranking

For a number of years exhibitors voted Lancaster among the most popular stars:

Year US Rank UK Rank
1950 16th
1951 25th
1952 24th
1953 17th
1954 13th 7th
1955 16th
1956 4th 3rd
1957 15th 3rd
1958 20th
1960 19th
1961 11th
1962 10th

In other media

Spanish music group Hombres G released an album named La cagaste, Burt Lancaster (You messed up, Burt Lancaster) in 1986.

Thomas Hart Benton painted a scene from The Kentuckian as part of the film's marketing. Lancaster posed for the painting, also known as The Kentuckian.[81]

References

  1. ^ "AFI's 50 Greatest American Screen Legends" February 22, 2019, at the Wayback Machine American Film Institute. Retrieved: December 7, 2016.
  2. ^ a b Buford 2008, p. 12.
  3. ^ Buford 2008, p. 28.
  4. ^ a b Andreychuk 2005, p. 3.
  5. ^ Andreychuk 2005, p. 6.
  6. ^ Andreychuk 2005, p. 7.
  7. ^ "Enlisted Record and Report of Separation Honorable Discharge: Lancaster, Burton S.", United States War Department, WD AGO Form 53-55, available from National Archives and Records Administration.
  8. ^ Andreychuk, Ed. Burt Lancaster: A Filmography and Biography. p. 7. [Norma] was then working for radio producer Ray Knight at the RCA Building in New York City. Going up in an elevator there, Burt noticed he was being stared at by a smaller man. ...His name was Jack Mahlor and as an associate of Irving Jacobs he was looking for a big-framed actor ... to read for the role of the tough-minded sergeant.
  9. ^ a b "Top Grossers of 1947". Variety. New York: Variety Publishing Company. January 7, 1948. p. 63 – via Internet Archive.
  10. ^ "Desert Fury (1947)". AFI Catalog. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  11. ^ "Film reviews". Variety. New York: Variety Publishing Company. August 7, 1946. p. 13 – via Internet Archive.
  12. ^ "60 Top Grossers of 1946". Variety. New York: Variety Publishing Company. January 1, 1947. p. 55 – via Internet Archive.
  13. ^ "The Killers". Criterion.com. Retrieved October 30, 2019. Its first screen incarnation came in 1946, when director Robert Siodmak unleashed The Killers, helping to define the film noir style and launching the careers of Burt Lancaster and Ava Gardner in this archetypal masterpiece
  14. ^ "The Killers (1946)". britannica.com. Retrieved October 30, 2019. The film established Lancaster as a major talent, and it helped launch Gardner as one of the screen's legendary sex symbols. ...The film is regarded as one of the top crime sagas of 1940s cinema
  15. ^ a b "Top Grossers of 1948". Variety. New York Variety Publishing Company. January 5, 1949. p. 46 – via Internet Archive.
  16. ^ Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1–31 p. 30 doi:10.1080/01439689508604551
  17. ^ The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study
  18. ^ Film Actors' Union Extends Contract: Screen Guild Eases Pressure on Producers by Negotiating 6-Month Addition to Pact. Thomas F. Brady 14 Dec 1950: 51.
  19. ^ "Burt Breaks Mold When Typed: Burt Balks at Typed Film Roles" – Scheuer, Philip K. Los Angeles Times December 14, 1952: D1.
  20. ^ Lancaster to Star in Shipwreck Tale: Norma Productions Buys 'His Majesty O'Keefe' for the Actor's First '52 Role By thomas F. Brady The New York Times January 1, 1951: 14.
  21. ^ Burt Lancaster Makes U. A. Deal: Movie Star and His Partner, Harold Hecht, Find a New Outlet for Productions By Thomas M. Pryor New York Times June 24, 1953: 30.
  22. ^ Looking at Hollywood: Lancaster Gets Indian Role in 'Bronco Apache' Hopper, Hedda. Chicago Daily Tribune2 Dec 1952: a5.
  23. ^ Hollywood Surprise by Thomas M. Pryor. The New York Times February 14, 1954: X5.
  24. ^ Hollywood Dossier: 'Marty' Hits Jackpot – Team – On the Set By Oscar Godabout Hollywood. The New York Times September 11, 1955: X7.
  25. ^ Tino Balio, United Artists: The Company That Changed the Film Industry, University of Wisconsin Press, 1987 p. 82
  26. ^ "Ernest Borgnine (1917-2012): A Personal Remembrance and An Unforgettable Interview". The Hollywood Reporter. July 9, 2012. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
  27. ^ Andreychuk, Ed (2015). Burt Lancaster: A Filmography and Biography. McFarland. ISBN 978-1476606491.
  28. ^ ' The Top Box-Office Hits of 1955', Variety Weekly, January 25, 1956
  29. ^ ' The Top Box-Office Hits of 1956', Variety Weekly, January 2, 1957
  30. ^ Pryor, Thomas M. (1956). "Hecht-Lancaster Plans New Films: Producing Unit Signs Deal with United Artists – 5 Features Are Listed Lancaster to Act". The New York Times, April 13, 1956. p. 20.
  31. ^ "Buzzell Ties with Hecht & Lancaster" (PDF). Billboard. March 16, 1957. p. 8.
  32. ^ Hodgins, Eric. "Amid Ruins of an Empire a New Hollywood Arises." Life, June 10, 1957, p. 146. Retrieved: April 22, 2012.
  33. ^ "Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Planning Record Year: Group Will Produce $14,000,000 Worth of Motion Pictures in 1958". Los Angeles Times, December 16, 1957. p. B9.
  34. ^ Kate Buford, Burt Lancaster: An American Life, Da Capo 2000 p. 183
  35. ^ "1959: Probable Domestic Take", Variety, January 6, 1960 p. 34
  36. ^ pp. 151–152 Larkins, Bob & Magers, Boyd The Films of Audie Murphy McFarland, August 19, 2009
  37. ^ Balio, Tino (1987). United Artists: The Company That Changed the Film Industry. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 145. ISBN 978-0299114404.
  38. ^ Buford, Kate (2000). Burt Lancaster: An American Life. London: Aurum. pp. 222–227. ISBN 1854107402.
  39. ^ Glenn Lovell, Escape Artist: The Life and Films of John Sturges, University of Wisconsin Press, 2008 p. 250
  40. ^ Ebert, Roger (July 2, 1968). "Review: "The Swimmer"". Chicago Sun-Times. Chicago, Illinois: Sun-Times Media Group. Retrieved October 24, 2018 – via RogerEbert.com.
  41. ^ Innis, Chris. "The Story of The Swimmer". The Swimmer (Blu-ray/DVD) (2014 ed.). Los Angeles, California: Grindhouse Releasing.
  42. ^ Stafford, Jeff "The Swimmer" (article) on TCM.com
  43. ^ "Big Rental Films of 1969", Variety, January 7, 1970 p. 15
  44. ^ "I Can't Get Jimmy Carter to See My Movie!" Aldrich, Robert. Film Comment; New York Vol. 13, Iss. 2, (Mar/Apr 1977): 46–52.
  45. ^ A Bittersweet Burt Lancaster, Looking Back-and Forward--at 62: A Bittersweet Burt Lancaster By Kenneth Turan. The Washington Post May 23, 1976: 165.
  46. ^ Kate Buford, Burt Lancaster (Da Capo Press, 2000) ISBN 0306810190
  47. ^ O'Connor, John J. (May 2, 1990). "Review/Television; New Film on Achille Lauro Hijacking". The New York Times. from the original on May 25, 2015. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
  48. ^ Stanfield, Peter; Krutnik, Frank; Neve, Brian; Neale, Steve (2007). 'Un-American' Hollywood: Politics and Film in the Blacklist Era. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. p. 212. ISBN 978-0813543970.
  49. ^ a b c "ACLU HQ serial 1032". archive.org. Retrieved October 11, 2019.
  50. ^ "Series 70" [manuscript]. 1, Box: 1, File: 61-10149, ID: 810-1032. Marquette University: Marquette Archives.
  51. ^ "The Second Enemies List". enemieslist.info. from the original on October 6, 2009. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
  52. ^ Buford 2008, p. 266.
  53. ^ Wheeler, Mark (2013). Celebrity Politics. Cambridge: Polity. p. 48. ISBN 978-0745652498.
  54. ^ Mandery, Evan (2013). A Wild Justice. W.W. Norton. ISBN 978-0393240641. Retrieved June 27, 2022.
  55. ^ "The Daily News from Port Angeles, Washington". Peninsula Daily News. Port Angeles, Washington: Black Press Ltd. July 20, 1976. p. 4. Retrieved August 1, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
  56. ^ Schmich, Mary T.; Siskel, Gene (October 3, 1985). "Actor Rock Hudson, 59, Victim Of Aids". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois: Tronc. p. 2. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  57. ^ Harmetz, Aljean (September 20, 1985). "Hollywood Turns Out for AIDS Benefit". The New York Times. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
  58. ^ a b c d e f g "Burt Lancaster: An American Life".
  59. ^ Smith, Ronald L (2010). Horror Stars on Radio: The Broadcast Histories of 29 Chilling Hollywood Voices. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co. p. 168. ISBN 978-0786457298.
  60. ^ "Hollywood Fights Back - 10/26/1947 (1 of 2)" – via www.youtube.com.
  61. ^ Fagan, Myron (1948). Red Stars In Hollywood. p. 6.
  62. ^ Gray, Tim (August 28, 2015). "Hollywood Turned Out for Historic 'I Have a Dream' Speech". Variety. Penske Business Media, LLC. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  63. ^ Matthews, David (August 28, 2013). "Kennedy White House had jitters ahead of 1963 March on Washington". CNN Entertainment. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  64. ^ "Burt Lancaster speaks at the "March on Washington"". YouTube. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
  65. ^ "ACLU PSA with Burt Lancaster". YouTube. Retrieved October 23, 2019.
  66. ^ Elisa Leonelli (February 7, 2014). "Burt Lancaster". goldenglobes.com.
  67. ^ "Screen god Burt's sex life set the stage for Hollywood gay scene". Independent.ie. March 18, 2000. from the original on February 1, 2016. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
  68. ^ a b c d Buford 2008.
  69. ^ Darden, Robert (2016). Nothing but Love in God's Water: Volume 2: Black Sacred Music from Sit-Ins to Resurrection City. ISBN 978-0271080123.
  70. ^ Buford, Kate (2000). Burt Lancaster: An American Life. Knopf. ISBN 978-0679446033.[page needed]
  71. ^ Buford 2008, pp. 127–30.
  72. ^ "East Harlem's Burton Stephen "Burt" Lancaster". Harlem World Magazine. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
  73. ^ Goldbeck, MD, Larry O. (2016). Their Stars Shone Brightly. Xlibris. ISBN 978-1524532154. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  74. ^ Granger, Farley; Calhoun, Robert (2007). Include Me Out: My Life from Goldwyn to Broadway. ISBN 978-1429945448.
  75. ^ Winters 1980, p. 259.
  76. ^ Buford, Kate (2000). Burt Lancaster: An American Life. London: Aurum. p. 20. ISBN 1854107402.
  77. ^ Buford, Kate (2001). Burt Lancaster: An American Life. Boston, Massachusetts: Da Capo Press. p. 277. ISBN 978-0306810190.
  78. ^ "Oscar Winner Burt Lancaster Dies at 80". Los Angeles Times. October 24, 1994. Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  79. ^ Holden, Stephen (May 12, 2013). "Film: lots of Lancaster at Lincoln Center". The New York Times. New York City. Retrieved October 24, 2018.
  80. ^ "Burt Lancaster". Hollywood Walk of Fame. October 25, 2019. Retrieved June 22, 2022.
  81. ^ painted by Thomas Hart Benton (1954). "The Kentuckian (painting)". LACMA Collections.

Bibliography

  • Andreychuk, Ed. Burt Lancaster: A Filmography And Biography. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2005. ISBN 978-0-7864-2339-2.
  • Buford, Kate. Burt Lancaster: An American Life. London: Aurum Press, 2008. ISBN 1-84513-385-4.
  • Winters, Shelley. Shelley: Also known as Shirley. New York: Morrow, 1980. ISBN 978-0-688-03638-6.
  • Karney, Robyn. Burt Lancaster: A Singular Man. Trafalgar Square Pub, 1997 ISBN 1570760748

External links

burt, lancaster, burton, stephen, lancaster, november, 1913, october, 1994, american, actor, producer, initially, known, playing, tough, guys, with, tender, heart, went, achieve, success, with, more, complex, challenging, roles, over, year, career, film, later. Burton Stephen Lancaster November 2 1913 October 20 1994 was an American actor and producer Initially known for playing tough guys with a tender heart he went on to achieve success with more complex and challenging roles over a 45 year career in film and later television He was a four time nominee for the Academy Award for Best Actor winning once and he also won two BAFTA Awards and one Golden Globe Award for Best Lead Actor The American Film Institute ranks Lancaster as 19 of the greatest male stars of classic Hollywood cinema 1 Burt LancasterLancaster in Desert Fury 1947 BornBurton Stephen Lancaster 1913 11 02 November 2 1913New York City U S DiedOctober 20 1994 1994 10 20 aged 80 Los Angeles California U S Resting placeWestwood Memorial ParkOccupationsActorfilm producerYears active1935 1991Political partyDemocraticSpouse s June Ernst m 1935 div 1946 wbr Norma Anderson m 1946 div 1969 wbr Susan Martin m 1990 wbr Children5 including BillLancaster performed as a circus acrobat in the 1930s After serving in World War II the 33 year old Lancaster landed a role in a Broadway play and drew the attention of a Hollywood agent His breakthrough role was in the film noir The Killers in 1946 alongside Ava Gardner A critical success it launched both of their careers Not long after in 1948 Lancaster starred alongside Barbara Stanwyck in the commercially and critically acclaimed film Sorry Wrong Number where he portrayed the husband to her bedridden invalid character In 1953 Lancaster played the illicit lover of Deborah Kerr in the military drama From Here to Eternity A box office smash it won eight Academy Awards including Best Picture and landed a Best Actor nomination for Lancaster Later in the 1950s he starred in The Rainmaker 1956 with Katharine Hepburn earning a Best Actor Golden Globe nomination and in 1957 he starred in Gunfight at the O K Corral 1957 with frequent co star Kirk Douglas During the 1950s his production company Hecht Hill Lancaster was highly successful with Lancaster acting in films such as Trapeze 1956 a box office smash in which he used his acrobatic skills and for which he won the Silver Bear for Best Actor Sweet Smell of Success 1957 a dark drama today considered a classic Run Silent Run Deep 1958 a WWII submarine drama with Clark Gable and Separate Tables 1958 a hotel set drama which received seven Oscar nominations In the early 1960s Lancaster starred in a string of critically successful films each in very disparate roles Playing a charismatic biblical con man in Elmer Gantry in 1960 won him the Academy Award and the Golden Globe for Best Actor He played a Nazi war criminal in 1961 in the all star war crime trial film Judgment at Nuremberg Playing a bird expert prisoner in Birdman of Alcatraz in 1962 he earned the BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actor and his third Oscar nomination In 1963 Lancaster traveled to Italy to star as an Italian prince in the epic period drama The Leopard In 1964 he played a US Air Force General who opposed by a Colonel played by Douglas tries to overthrow the President in Seven Days in May Then in 1966 he played an explosives expert in the western The Professionals Although the reception to his 1968 film The Swimmer was initially lackluster upon release in the years after it has grown in stature critically and attained a cult following In 1970 Lancaster starred in the box office hit air disaster drama Airport He experienced a career resurgence in 1980 with the crime romance Atlantic City winning the BAFTA for Best Actor and landing his fourth Oscar nomination Starting in the late 1970s he also appeared in television mini series including the award winning Separate but Equal with Sidney Poitier He continued acting into his late 70s until a stroke in 1990 forced him to retire four years later he died from a heart attack His final film role was in the Oscar nominated Field of Dreams Contents 1 Early life 2 Circus career 3 World War II service 4 Acting career 4 1 Broadway 4 2 Hal Wallis 4 3 Norma Productions 4 4 Halburt 4 5 Hecht Lancaster Productions 4 6 United Artists 4 7 Hecht Hill Lancaster 4 8 Hecht and Lancaster 4 9 Collaborations with younger filmmakers 4 10 Norlan Productions 4 11 1970s 4 12 1980s 4 13 Later career 4 14 Frequent collaborators 4 14 1 Kirk Douglas 4 14 2 John Frankenheimer 4 14 3 Other repeat collaborators 5 Political activism 5 1 Hollywood Ten 5 2 Civil rights movement 5 3 ACLU 6 Personal life 6 1 Marriages and relationships 6 1 1 Possible affairs 6 2 Religion 7 Health problems 8 Death 9 Legacy 10 Filmography and awards 10 1 Box office ranking 10 2 In other media 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 External linksEarly life EditLancaster was born on November 2 1913 in Manhattan New York at his parents home at 209 East 106th Street the son of Elizabeth nee Roberts and mailman James Lancaster 2 Both of his parents were Protestants of working class origin All four of his grandparents were emigrants from Ireland to the United States from the province of Ulster his maternal grandparents were from Belfast and were descendants of English dissenters who had emigrated to Ireland as part of the Plantation of Ulster 2 Lancaster grew up in East Harlem and spent much of his time on the streets He developed a great interest and skill in gymnastics while attending DeWitt Clinton High School where he was a basketball star Before he graduated from DeWitt Clinton his mother died of a cerebral hemorrhage Lancaster was accepted by New York University with an athletic scholarship but subsequently dropped out 3 Circus career Edit Lancaster and Nick Cravat performing with the Federal Theatre Project Circus 1935 38 Cravat and Lancaster performing on the horizontal bars At the age of 9 Lancaster met Nick Cravat with whom he developed a lifelong partnership 4 Together they learned to act in local theatre productions and circus arts at Union Settlement one of the city s oldest settlement houses 4 In the 1930s they formed the acrobat duo Lang and Cravat and soon joined the Kay Brothers circus However in 1939 an injury forced Lancaster to give up the profession with great regret He then found temporary work first as a salesman for Marshall Fields and then as a singing waiter in various restaurants 5 World War II service EditAfter the United States entered World War II Lancaster joined the United States Army in January 1943 and performed with the Army s 21st Special Services Division one of the military groups organized to follow the troops on the ground and provide USO entertainment to keep up morale He served with General Mark Clark s Fifth Army in Italy from 1943 to 1945 6 He was discharged October 1945 and was an entertainment specialist with the rank of technician fifth grade 7 Acting career EditBroadway Edit Lancaster returned to New York after his Army service Although initially unenthusiastic about acting Lancaster was encouraged to audition for a Broadway play by a producer who saw him in an elevator while he was visiting his then girlfriend at work 8 The audition was successful and Lancaster was cast in Harry Brown s A Sound of Hunting 1945 The show only ran three weeks but his performance attracted the interest of a Hollywood agent Harold Hecht Lancaster had other offers but Hecht promised him the opportunity to produce their own movies within five years of hitting Hollywood Through Hecht Lancaster was brought to the attention of producer Hal B Wallis who signed him to a non exclusive eight movie contract Hal Wallis Edit With Ava Gardner in The Killers 1946 Lancaster s first filmed movie was Desert Fury for Wallis in 1947 where Lancaster was billed after John Hodiak and Lizabeth Scott It was directed by Lewis Allen 9 10 Then producer Mark Hellinger approached him to star in 1946 s The Killers which was completed and released prior to Desert Fury Directed by Robert Siodmak it was a great commercial and critical success 11 12 and launched Lancaster and his co star Ava Gardner to stardom It has since come to be regarded as a classic 13 14 Hellinger used Lancaster again on Brute Force in 1947 a prison drama written by Richard Brooks and directed by Jules Dassin It was also well received 9 Wallis released his films through Paramount and so Lancaster and other Wallis contractees made cameos in Variety Girl in 1947 Lancaster s next film was a thriller for Wallis in 1947 I Walk Alone co starring Lizabeth Scott and a young Kirk Douglas who was also under contract to Wallis Variety listed it as one of the top grossers of the year taking in more than 2 million 15 In 1948 Lancaster had a change of pace with the film adaptation of Arthur Miller s All My Sons made at Universal Pictures with Edward G Robinson His third film for Wallis was an adaptation of Sorry Wrong Number in 1948 with Barbara Stanwyck Norma Productions Edit Hecht kept to his promise to Lancaster to turn producer The two of them formed a company Norma Productions and did a deal with Universal to make a thriller about a disturbed G I in London Kiss the Blood Off My Hands in 1948 with Joan Fontaine and directed by Norman Foster It made a profit of only 50 000 but was critically acclaimed 15 Back in Hollywood Lancaster made another film noir with Siodmak Criss Cross in 1949 It was originally going to be produced by Hellinger and when Hellinger died another took over Tony Curtis made an early appearance Lancaster appeared in a fourth picture for Wallis Rope of Sand in 1949 Norma Productions signed a three picture deal with Warner Bros The first was 1950 s The Flame and the Arrow a swashbuckler movie in which Lancaster drew on his circus skills Nick Cravat had a supporting role and the film was a huge commercial success making 6 million It was Warners most popular film of the year and established an entirely new image for Lancaster 16 Lancaster was borrowed by 20th Century Fox for Mister 880 in 1950 a comedy with Edmund Gwenn MGM put him in a popular Western Vengeance Valley in 1951 17 then he went to Warners to play the title role in the biopic Jim Thorpe All American also in 1951 Halburt Edit Norma signed a deal with Columbia Pictures to make two films through a Norma subsidiary Halburt The first film was 1951 s Ten Tall Men where Lancaster was a member of the French Foreign Legion Robert Aldrich worked on the movie as a production manager The second was 1952 s The First Time a comedy which was the directorial debut of Frank Tashlin It was meant to star Lancaster but he wound up not appearing in the film the first of their productions in which he did not act 18 Hecht Lancaster Productions Edit In 1951 the actor producer duo changed the company s name to Hecht Lancaster Productions The first film under the new name was another swashbuckler 1952 s The Crimson Pirate directed by Siodmak Co starring Cravat it was extremely popular Lancaster changed pace once more by doing a straight dramatic part in 1952 s Come Back Little Sheba based on a Broadway hit with Shirley Booth produced by Wallis and directed by Daniel Mann Alternating with adventure films he went into South Sea Woman in 1952 at Warners Part of the Norma Warners contract was that Lancaster had to appear in some non Norma films of which this was one 19 With Deborah Kerr in From Here to Eternity 1953 In 1954 for his own company Lancaster produced and starred in His Majesty O Keefe a South Sea island tale shot in Fiji It was co written by James Hill who would soon become a part of the Hecht Lancaster partnership 20 United Artists Edit Hecht and Lancaster left Warners for United Artists for what began as a two picture deal the first of which was to be 1954 s Apache starring Lancaster as a Native American 21 22 They followed it with another Western in 1954 Vera Cruz co starring Gary Cooper and produced by Hill Both films were directed by Robert Aldrich and were hugely popular United Artists signed Hecht Lancaster to a multi picture contract to make seven films over two years 23 These included films in which Lancaster did not act Their first was Marty in 1955 based on Paddy Chayefsky s TV play starring Ernest Borgnine and directed by Delbert Mann It won both the Best Picture Oscar and the Palme d Or award at Cannes and Borgnine an Best Actor Oscar It also earned 2 million on a budget of 350 000 24 Vera Cruz had been a huge success but Marty secured Hecht Lancaster as one of the most successful independent production companies in Hollywood at the time 25 Marty star Borgnine was under contract to Hecht Lancaster and was unhappy about his lack of upcoming roles especially after only receiving some seven lines in 1957 s Sweet Smell of Success and half of his normal pay for Marty 26 He eventually sued for breach of contract to gain back some of this money in 1957 27 Without Hill Hecht and Lancaster produced The Kentuckian in 1955 It was directed by Lancaster in his directorial debut and he also played a lead role Lancaster disliked directing and only did it once more on 1974 s The Midnight Man 28 Lancaster still had commitments with Wallis and made The Rose Tattoo for him in 1955 starring with Anna Magnani and Daniel Mann directing It was very popular at the box office and critically acclaimed winning Magnani an Oscar 29 Hecht Hill Lancaster Edit In 1955 Hill was made an equal partner in Hecht Lancaster with his name added to the production company Hecht Hill Lancaster HHL released their first film Trapeze in 1956 with Lancaster performing many of his own stunts The film co starring Tony Curtis and Gina Lollobrigida went on to become the production company s top box office success and United Artists expanded its deal with HHL 30 In 1956 Lancaster and Hecht partnered with Loring Buzzell and entered the music industry with the music publishing companies Leigh Music Hecht Lancaster amp Buzzell Music Calyork Music and Colby Music and the record labels Calyork Records and Maine Records 31 The HHL team impressed Hollywood with its success as Life wrote in 1957 a fter the independent production of a baker s dozen of pictures it has yet to have its first flop They were also good pictures 32 In late 1957 they announced they would make ten films worth 14 million in 1958 33 Lancaster made two films for Wallis to complete his eight film commitment for that contract The Rainmaker 1956 with Katharine Hepburn which earned Lancaster a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor and Gunfight at the O K Corral 1957 with Kirk Douglas which was a huge commercial hit directed by John Sturges Lancaster re teamed with Tony Curtis in 1957 for Sweet Smell of Success a co production between Hecht Hill Lancaster and Curtis own company with wife Janet Leigh Curtleigh Productions The movie directed by Alexander Mackendrick was a critical success but a commercial disappointment Over the years it has come to be regarded as one of Lancaster s greatest films 34 HHL produced seven additional films in the late 1950s Four starred Lancaster Run Silent Run Deep 1958 a Robert Wise directed war film with Clark Gable which was mildly popular Separate Tables 1958 a hotel set drama with Kerr and Rita Hayworth who married James Hill which received an Oscar nomination for Best Picture and Oscar awards for lead actor David Niven and supporting actress Wendy Hiller and was both a critical and commercial success The Devil s Disciple 1959 with Douglas and Laurence Olivier which lost money and saw Lancaster fire Mackendrick during shooting 35 and the Western The Unforgiven 1960 with Audrey Hepburn which was a critical and commercial disappointment 36 Three were made without Lancaster all of which lost money The Bachelor Party 1957 from another TV play by Chayefsky and directed by Delbert Mann Take a Giant Step 1959 about a black student and Summer of the Seventeenth Doll 1960 from an Australian play shot on location in Australia and Britain Additionally HHL served as the production company for the 1960 61 TV series Whiplash The Hecht Hill Lancaster Productions company dissolved in 1960 after Hill ruptured his relationship with both Hecht and Lancaster Hill went on to produce a single additional film The Happy Thieves in a new production company Hillworth Productions co owned with his wife Rita Hayworth Hecht and Lancaster Edit Drawing of Lancaster after he won an Oscar for Elmer Gantry 1960 Artist Nicholas Volpe Lancaster played the title role in Elmer Gantry 1960 written and directed by Richard Brooks for United Artists The film received five Academy Award nominations including Best Picture and Best Actor Lancaster won the 1960 Academy Award for Best Actor a Golden Globe Award and the New York Film Critics Award for his performance Hecht and Lancaster worked together on The Young Savages 1961 directed by John Frankenheimer and produced by Hecht Sydney Pollack worked as a dialogue coach Lancaster starred in Judgment at Nuremberg 1961 for Stanley Kramer alongside Spencer Tracy Richard Widmark and a number of other stars The film was both a commercial and critical success receiving eleven Oscar nominations including Best Picture He then did another film with Hecht and Frankenheimer replacing Charles Crichton Birdman of Alcatraz 1962 a largely fictionalized biography In it he plays Robert Stroud a federal prisoner incarcerated for life for two murders who begins to collect birds and over time becomes an expert in bird diseases even publishing a book The film shows Stroud transferred to the maximum security Alcatraz prison where he is not allowed to keep birds and as he ages he gets married markets bird remedies helps stop a prison rebellion and writes a book on the history of the U S penal system but never gets paroled The sympathetic performance earned Lancaster a Best Actor Oscar nomination a BAFTA Award for Best Actor and a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor in a Dramatic Role Hecht went on to produce five films without Lancaster s assistance through his company Harold Hecht Films Productions between 1961 and 1967 including another Academy Award winner Cat Ballou starring Lee Marvin and Jane Fonda Collaborations with younger filmmakers Edit Lancaster made A Child Is Waiting 1963 with Judy Garland It was produced by Kramer and directed by John Cassavetes 37 He went to Italy to star in The Leopard 1963 for Luchino Visconti co starring Alain Delon and Claudia Cardinale It was one of Lancaster s favourite films and was a big hit in France but failed in the US though the version released was much truncated 38 He had a small role in The List of Adrian Messenger 1963 for producer star Kirk Douglas and then did two for Frankenheimer Seven Days in May 1964 a political thriller with Douglas and The Train 1964 a World War Two action film Lancaster had Frankenheimer replace Arthur Penn several days into filming Lancaster starred in The Hallelujah Trail 1965 a comic Western produced and directed by John Sturges which failed to recoup its large cost 39 He had a big hit with The Professionals 1966 a Western directed by Brooks and also starring Lee Marvin In 1966 at the age of 53 Lancaster appeared nude in director Frank Perry s film The Swimmer 1968 in what the critic Roger Ebert called his finest performance 40 Prior to working on The Swimmer Lancaster was terrified of the water because he did not know how to swim In preparation for the film he took swimming lessons from UCLA swim coach Bob Horn 41 Filming was difficult and clashes between Lancaster and Perry led to Sydney Pollack coming in to do some filming 42 The film was not released until 1968 when it proved to be a commercial failure though Lancaster remained proud of the movie and his performance Norlan Productions Edit With Audrey Hepburn in The Unforgiven 1960 In 1967 Lancaster formed a new partnership with Roland Kibbee who had already worked as a writer on five Lancaster projects Ten Tall Men The Crimson Pirate Three Sailors and a Girl in which Lancaster made a cameo appearance Vera Cruz and The Devil s Disciple Through Norlan Productions Lancaster and Kibbee produced The Scalphunters in 1968 directed by Sydney Pollack Lancaster followed it with another film from Pollack Castle Keep in 1969 which was a big flop So was The Gypsy Moths for Frankenheimer also in 1969 43 1970s Edit With Soviet fighter pilot Alexander Pokryshkin during documentary filming The Unknown War episode 9 War in the Air Moscow USSR 1978 photo Leo Medvedev Lancaster had one of the biggest successes of his career with Airport in 1970 starring alongside Dean Martin George Kennedy Van Heflin Helen Hayes Maureen Stapleton Barbara Hale Jean Seberg and Jacqueline Bisset The Ross Hunter film received nine Academy Award nominations including one for Best Picture It became one of the biggest box office hits of 1970 and at that time reportedly the highest grossing film in the history of Universal Pictures He then went into a series of Westerns Lawman in 1971 directed by Michael Winner Valdez Is Coming in 1971 for Norlan and Ulzana s Raid in 1972 directed by Aldrich and produced by himself and Hecht None were particularly popular but Ulzana s Raid has become a cult film 44 Lancaster did two thrillers both 1973 Scorpio with Winner and Executive Action Lancaster returned to directing in 1974 with The Midnight Man which he also wrote and produced with Kibee He made a second film with Visconti Conversation Piece in 1974 and played the title role in the TV series Moses the Lawgiver also in 1974 Lancaster was one of many names in 1975 s 1900 directed by Bernardo Bertolucci and he had a cameo in 1976 s Buffalo Bill and the Indians or Sitting Bull s History Lesson for Robert Altman He played Shimon Peres in the TV movie Victory at Entebbe in 1977 and had a supporting role in The Cassandra Crossing in 1976 He made a fourth and final film with Aldrich Twilight s Last Gleaming in 1977 and had the title role in 1977 s The Island of Dr Moreau 45 Lancaster was top billed in Go Tell the Spartans in 1978 a Vietnam War film Lancaster admired the script so much that he took a reduced fee and donated money to help the movie to be completed He was in Zulu Dawn in 1979 46 1980s Edit Lancaster began the 1980s with a highly acclaimed performance alongside Susan Sarandon in Atlantic City in 1980 directed by Louis Malle The film received five Oscar nominations including Best Picture and a Best Actor nomination for Lancaster He had key roles in Cattle Annie and Little Britches in 1981 The Skin in 1982 with Cardinale Marco Polo also in 1982 and Local Hero in 1983 By now Lancaster was mostly a character actor in features as in The Osterman Weekend in 1983 but he was the lead in the TV movie Scandal Sheet in 1985 He was in Little Treasure in 1985 directed by Alan Sharp who had written Ulzana s Raid On Wings of Eagles for TV in 1986 as Bull Simons 1986 s made for TV Barnum starred him in the title role Tough Guys reunited him on the big screen with Kirk Douglas in 1986 Fathers and Sons A German Tragedy in 1986 for German TV 1987 s Control made in Italy Rocket Gibraltar in 1988 and The Jeweller s Shop in 1989 His first critical success in a while was Field of Dreams in 1989 in which he played a supporting role as Moonlight Graham He was also in the miniseries The Betrothed in 1989 Later career Edit Lancaster s final performances included TV miniseries The Phantom of the Opera 1990 Voyage of Terror The Achille Lauro Affair 1990 as Leon Klinghoffer based on the 1985 MS Achille Lauro incident 47 and Separate But Equal 1991 with Sidney Poitier Frequent collaborators Edit In Judgment at Nuremberg 1961 Lancaster appeared in a total of seventeen films produced by his agent Harold Hecht Eight of these were co produced by James Hill He also appeared in eight films produced by Hal B Wallis and two with producer Mark Hellinger Although Lancaster s work alongside Kirk Douglas was mostly known as a successful pair of actors Douglas in fact produced four films for the pair through his production companies Bryna Productions and Joel Productions Roland Kibbee also produced three Lancaster films and Lancaster was also cast in two Stanley Kramer productions Kirk Douglas Edit Kirk Douglas starred in seven films across the decades with Burt Lancaster I Walk Alone 1948 Gunfight at the O K Corral 1957 The Devil s Disciple 1959 The List of Adrian Messenger 1963 Seven Days in May 1964 Victory at Entebbe 1976 and Tough Guys 1986 which fixed the notion of the pair as something of a team in the public imagination Douglas was always billed under Lancaster in these movies but with the exception of I Walk Alone in which Douglas played a villain their roles were usually more or less the same size Both actors arrived in Hollywood at about the same time and first appeared together in the fourth film for each albeit with Douglas in a supporting role They both became actor producers who sought out independent Hollywood careers John Frankenheimer Edit John Frankenheimer directed five films with Lancaster The Young Savages 1961 Birdman of Alcatraz 1962 Seven Days in May 1964 The Train 1964 and The Gypsy Moths 1969 Other repeat collaborators Edit He was directed four times by Robert Aldrich three times each by Robert Siodmak and Sydney Pollack and twice each by Byron Haskin Daniel Mann John Sturges John Huston Richard Brooks Alexander Mackendrick Luchino Visconti and Michael Winner Roland Kibbee wrote for seven Lancaster films Lancaster used makeup veteran Robert Schiffer in twenty credited films hiring Schiffer on nearly all of the films he produced Political activism EditLancaster was a vocal supporter of progressive and liberal political causes 48 He frequently spoke out in support of racial and other minorities As a result he was often a target of FBI investigations 49 50 He was named in President Richard Nixon s 1973 Enemies List 51 A vocal opponent of the Vietnam War he helped pay for the successful defense of a soldier accused of fragging i e murdering another soldier during war time 52 In 1968 Lancaster actively supported the presidential candidacy of anti war Senator Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota and frequently spoke on his behalf during the Democratic primaries 53 Lancaster was also active in anti death penalty activism 54 He campaigned heavily for George McGovern in the 1972 United States presidential election 55 In 1985 Lancaster joined the fight against AIDS after fellow movie star Rock Hudson contracted the disease 56 Lancaster delivered Hudson s last words at the Commitment to Life fundraiser at a time when the stigma surrounding AIDS was at its height He was the only major male star who attended 57 58 Of his political opinions frequent co star Tony Curtis said Here s this great big aggressive guy that looks like a ding dong athlete playing these big tough guys and he has the soul of who were those first philosophers of equality Socrates Plato He was a Greek philosopher with a sense that everybody was equal 58 Actor and SAG president Ed Asner said he showed everybody in Hollywood how to be a liberal with balls 58 Hollywood Ten Edit In 1947 Lancaster reportedly signed a statement release by the National Council of Arts Sciences and Professions NCASP asking Congress to abolish the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC 49 He was also a member of the short lived Committee for the First Amendment formed in support of the Hollywood Ten He was one of 26 movie stars who flew to Washington in October 1947 to protest against the HUAC hearings 49 The committee s Hollywood Fights Back broadcasts on ABC Radio Network were two 30 minute programs that took place on October 27 and November 2 1947 during which committee members voiced their opposition to the HUAC hearings 59 60 Many members faced blacklisting and backlash due to their involvement in the committee Lancaster was listed in anti communist literature as a fellow traveler 61 Civil rights movement Edit He and his second wife Norma hosted a fundraiser for Martin Luther King Jr and the Student Diversity Leadership Conference SDLC ahead of the historic March on Washington in 1963 58 He attended the march where he was one of the speakers 62 63 He flew in from France for the event where he was shooting The Train and flew back again the next day despite a reported fear of flying 58 64 ACLU Edit In 1968 Lancaster was elected to serve as chairman of the Roger Baldwin Foundation a newly formed fund raising arm of the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California His co chairs were Frank Sinatra and Irving L Lichtenstein In October 1968 he hosted a party at his home to raise money for the ACLU to use for the defense of the more than four hundred people at the 1968 Democratic National Convention 58 Throughout the years he remained an ardent supporter and a fundraiser for the organization While serving as a member of the five person ACLU Foundation executive committee he cast the key vote to retain Ramona Ripston as executive director of the Southern California affiliate a position she would build into a powerful advocacy force in Los Angeles politics Ripston later recalled There was a feeling that a woman couldn t run the ACLU foundation nor have access to the books The vote finally came down to two yes and two no Who had the deciding vote Burt He had a scotch or two and finally he said I think she should be executive director I always loved him for that 58 When President George H W Bush derided Democratic candidate Michael Dukakis as a card carrying member of the ACLU Lancaster was one of the supporters featured in the organization s first television advertising campaign stating I m a card carrying member of the ACLU and No one agrees with every single thing they ve done But no one can disagree with the guiding principle with liberty and justice for all 65 He also campaigned for Michael Dukakis in the 1988 United States presidential election 66 Personal life Edit Lancaster s son Bill Lancaster in The Big Valley 1967 In adulthood he became a screenwriter Marriages and relationships Edit Lancaster guarded his personal life and attempted to keep it private despite his stardom He was married three times and had five children He also had many affairs male and female according to his family 67 His first marriage was to June Ernst a trapeze acrobat Ernst was the daughter of a renowned female aerialist and an accomplished acrobat herself After they were married he performed with her family and her until their separation in the late 1930s When they divorced is unclear contemporary reports listed 1940 but subsequent biographers have suggested dates as late as 1946 thus delaying his marriage to his second wife 68 He met second wife Norma Anderson 1917 1988 when the stenographer substituted for an ill actress in a USO production for the troops in Italy Reportedly on seeing Lancaster in the crowd on her way to town from the airport she turned to an officer and asked Who is that good looking officer and is he married The officer set up a blind date between the two for that evening 68 They married in 1946 Norma was active in political causes with an entire room in their Bel Air home devoted to her major interest the League of Woman Voters crammed with printing presses and all the necessary supplies for mass mailings 68 She was a life long member of the NAACP The couple held a fundraiser for Martin Luther King Jr and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference ahead of the 1963 March on Washington 69 All five of his children were with Anderson Bill who became an actor and screenwriter James Susan Joanna who worked as a film producer and Sighle pronounced Sheila However it was a troubled marriage The pair separated in 1966 and finally divorced in 1969 In 1966 Lancaster began a long term relationship with hairdresser Jackie Bone who worked on The Professionals The relationship was tempestuous with Bone once smashing a wine bottle over Lancaster s head at a dinner with Sydney Pollack and Peter Falk Reportedly they eventually split up after her religious conversion which Lancaster believed he could not share with her 68 His third marriage to Susan Martin lasted from September 1990 until his death in 1994 According to biographer Kate Buford in Burt Lancaster An American Life Lancaster was devotedly loyal to his friends and family Old friends from his childhood remained his friends for life 70 Possible affairs Edit Friends said he claimed he was romantically involved with Deborah Kerr during the filming of From Here to Eternity in 1953 71 However Kerr stated that while there was a spark of attraction 72 nothing ever happened He reportedly had an affair with Joan Blondell 73 In her 1980 autobiography Shelley Winters claimed to have had a two year affair with him during which time he was considering separation from his wife In his Hollywood memoirs friend Farley Granger recalled an incident when Lancaster and he had to come to Winters rescue one evening when she had inadvertently overdosed on alcohol and sleeping pills 74 She broke up with him for cheating on her with his wife after she heard reports of his wife s third or fourth pregnancy 75 Lancaster and Winters performed together in the 1949 radio play adaptation of The Killers They appeared in two films together The Young Savages where she played his character s former lover and The Scalphunters Religion Edit Despite his Protestant background and upbringing 76 Lancaster identified as an atheist later in life 77 Health problems EditAs Lancaster reached his 60s he began to be affected by cardiovascular disease In January 1980 he had complications from a routine gall bladder operation and in 1983 following two minor heart attacks he underwent an emergency quadruple coronary bypass He continued to act however and to engage in public activism In 1988 he attended a congressional hearing in Washington DC with former colleagues who included James Stewart and Ginger Rogers to protest against media magnate Ted Turner s plan to colorize various black and white films from the 1930s and 1940s On November 30 1990 when he was 77 a stroke left him partially paralyzed and largely unable to speak ending his acting career Death Edit Lancaster s plaque under an oak tree in Westwood Memorial Park where his ashes were scattered Lancaster died at his apartment in Century City Los Angeles after having a third heart attack at 4 50 am on October 20 1994 about two weeks shy of his 81st birthday 78 His body was cremated and his ashes were scattered under a large oak tree in Westwood Memorial Park which is located in Westwood Village California A small square ground plaque amid several others inscribed Burt Lancaster 1913 1994 marks the location As he had previously requested upon his death no memorial or funeral service was held for him Legacy EditThe centennial of Lancaster s birth was honored at New York City s Film Society of Lincoln Center in May 2013 with the screening of 12 of the actor s best known films from The Killers to Atlantic City 79 Lancaster has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6801 Hollywood Boulevard 80 Filmography and awards EditMain article Burt Lancaster filmography Lancaster was nominated for the Oscar for Best Actor in a Leading Role in 1954 for From Here to Eternity in 1961 for Elmer Gantry in 1964 for Birdman of Alcatraz and in 1982 for Atlantic City and won the award in 1961 Lancaster s leading role in Luchino Visconti s 1963 canonical The Leopard began a series of roles with important European art film directors that included roles in Bernardo Bertolucci s 1900 and Louis Malle s Atlantic City as well as Visconti s Conversation Piece Box office ranking Edit For a number of years exhibitors voted Lancaster among the most popular stars Year US Rank UK Rank1950 16th1951 25th1952 24th1953 17th1954 13th 7th1955 16th1956 4th 3rd1957 15th 3rd1958 20th1960 19th1961 11th1962 10thIn other media Edit Spanish music group Hombres G released an album named La cagaste Burt Lancaster You messed up Burt Lancaster in 1986 Thomas Hart Benton painted a scene from The Kentuckian as part of the film s marketing Lancaster posed for the painting also known as The Kentuckian 81 References Edit AFI s 50 Greatest American Screen Legends Archived February 22 2019 at the Wayback Machine American Film Institute Retrieved December 7 2016 a b Buford 2008 p 12 Buford 2008 p 28 a b Andreychuk 2005 p 3 Andreychuk 2005 p 6 Andreychuk 2005 p 7 Enlisted Record and Report of Separation Honorable Discharge Lancaster Burton S United States War Department WD AGO Form 53 55 available from National Archives and Records Administration Andreychuk Ed Burt Lancaster A Filmography and Biography p 7 Norma was then working for radio producer Ray Knight at the RCA Building in New York City Going up in an elevator there Burt noticed he was being stared at by a smaller man His name was Jack Mahlor and as an associate of Irving Jacobs he was looking for a big framed actor to read for the role of the tough minded sergeant a b Top Grossers of 1947 Variety New York Variety Publishing Company January 7 1948 p 63 via Internet Archive Desert Fury 1947 AFI Catalog Retrieved October 30 2019 Film reviews Variety New York Variety Publishing Company August 7 1946 p 13 via Internet Archive 60 Top Grossers of 1946 Variety New York Variety Publishing Company January 1 1947 p 55 via Internet Archive The Killers Criterion com Retrieved October 30 2019 Its first screen incarnation came in 1946 when director Robert Siodmak unleashed The Killers helping to define the film noir style and launching the careers of Burt Lancaster and Ava Gardner in this archetypal masterpiece The Killers 1946 britannica com Retrieved October 30 2019 The film established Lancaster as a major talent and it helped launch Gardner as one of the screen s legendary sex symbols The film is regarded as one of the top crime sagas of 1940s cinema a b Top Grossers of 1948 Variety New York Variety Publishing Company January 5 1949 p 46 via Internet Archive Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger See Appendix 1 Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television 1995 15 sup1 1 31 p 30 doi 10 1080 01439689508604551 The Eddie Mannix Ledger Los Angeles Margaret Herrick Library Center for Motion Picture Study Film Actors Union Extends Contract Screen Guild Eases Pressure on Producers by Negotiating 6 Month Addition to Pact Thomas F Brady 14 Dec 1950 51 Burt Breaks Mold When Typed Burt Balks at Typed Film Roles Scheuer Philip K Los Angeles Times December 14 1952 D1 Lancaster to Star in Shipwreck Tale Norma Productions Buys His Majesty O Keefe for the Actor s First 52 Role By thomas F Brady The New York Times January 1 1951 14 Burt Lancaster Makes U A Deal Movie Star and His Partner Harold Hecht Find a New Outlet for Productions By Thomas M Pryor New York Times June 24 1953 30 Looking at Hollywood Lancaster Gets Indian Role in Bronco Apache Hopper Hedda Chicago Daily Tribune2 Dec 1952 a5 Hollywood Surprise by Thomas M Pryor The New York Times February 14 1954 X5 Hollywood Dossier Marty Hits Jackpot Team On the Set By Oscar Godabout Hollywood The New York Times September 11 1955 X7 Tino Balio United Artists The Company That Changed the Film Industry University of Wisconsin Press 1987 p 82 Ernest Borgnine 1917 2012 A Personal Remembrance and An Unforgettable Interview The Hollywood Reporter July 9 2012 Retrieved September 25 2019 Andreychuk Ed 2015 Burt Lancaster A Filmography and Biography McFarland ISBN 978 1476606491 The Top Box Office Hits of 1955 Variety Weekly January 25 1956 The Top Box Office Hits of 1956 Variety Weekly January 2 1957 Pryor Thomas M 1956 Hecht Lancaster Plans New Films Producing Unit Signs Deal with United Artists 5 Features Are Listed Lancaster to Act The New York Times April 13 1956 p 20 Buzzell Ties with Hecht amp Lancaster PDF Billboard March 16 1957 p 8 Hodgins Eric Amid Ruins of an Empire a New Hollywood Arises Life June 10 1957 p 146 Retrieved April 22 2012 Hecht Hill Lancaster Planning Record Year Group Will Produce 14 000 000 Worth of Motion Pictures in 1958 Los Angeles Times December 16 1957 p B9 Kate Buford Burt Lancaster An American Life Da Capo 2000 p 183 1959 Probable Domestic Take Variety January 6 1960 p 34 pp 151 152 Larkins Bob amp Magers Boyd The Films of Audie Murphy McFarland August 19 2009 Balio Tino 1987 United Artists The Company That Changed the Film Industry University of Wisconsin Press p 145 ISBN 978 0299114404 Buford Kate 2000 Burt Lancaster An American Life London Aurum pp 222 227 ISBN 1854107402 Glenn Lovell Escape Artist The Life and Films of John Sturges University of Wisconsin Press 2008 p 250 Ebert Roger July 2 1968 Review The Swimmer Chicago Sun Times Chicago Illinois Sun Times Media Group Retrieved October 24 2018 via RogerEbert com Innis Chris The Story of The Swimmer The Swimmer Blu ray DVD 2014 ed Los Angeles California Grindhouse Releasing Stafford Jeff The Swimmer article on TCM com Big Rental Films of 1969 Variety January 7 1970 p 15 I Can t Get Jimmy Carter to See My Movie Aldrich Robert Film Comment New York Vol 13 Iss 2 Mar Apr 1977 46 52 A Bittersweet Burt Lancaster Looking Back and Forward at 62 A Bittersweet Burt Lancaster By Kenneth Turan The Washington Post May 23 1976 165 Kate Buford Burt Lancaster Da Capo Press 2000 ISBN 0306810190 O Connor John J May 2 1990 Review Television New Film on Achille Lauro Hijacking The New York Times Archived from the original on May 25 2015 Retrieved July 5 2021 Stanfield Peter Krutnik Frank Neve Brian Neale Steve 2007 Un American Hollywood Politics and Film in the Blacklist Era New Brunswick New Jersey Rutgers University Press p 212 ISBN 978 0813543970 a b c ACLU HQ serial 1032 archive org Retrieved October 11 2019 Series 70 manuscript 1 Box 1 File 61 10149 ID 810 1032 Marquette University Marquette Archives The Second Enemies List enemieslist info Archived from the original on October 6 2009 Retrieved July 5 2021 Buford 2008 p 266 Wheeler Mark 2013 Celebrity Politics Cambridge Polity p 48 ISBN 978 0745652498 Mandery Evan 2013 A Wild Justice W W Norton ISBN 978 0393240641 Retrieved June 27 2022 The Daily News from Port Angeles Washington Peninsula Daily News Port Angeles Washington Black Press Ltd July 20 1976 p 4 Retrieved August 1 2018 via Newspapers com Schmich Mary T Siskel Gene October 3 1985 Actor Rock Hudson 59 Victim Of Aids Chicago Tribune Chicago Illinois Tronc p 2 Retrieved August 1 2018 Harmetz Aljean September 20 1985 Hollywood Turns Out for AIDS Benefit The New York Times Retrieved October 23 2019 a b c d e f g Burt Lancaster An American Life Smith Ronald L 2010 Horror Stars on Radio The Broadcast Histories of 29 Chilling Hollywood Voices Jefferson NC McFarland amp Co p 168 ISBN 978 0786457298 Hollywood Fights Back 10 26 1947 1 of 2 via www youtube com Fagan Myron 1948 Red Stars In Hollywood p 6 Gray Tim August 28 2015 Hollywood Turned Out for Historic I Have a Dream Speech Variety Penske Business Media LLC Retrieved August 1 2018 Matthews David August 28 2013 Kennedy White House had jitters ahead of 1963 March on Washington CNN Entertainment Turner Broadcasting System Inc Retrieved August 1 2018 Burt Lancaster speaks at the March on Washington YouTube Retrieved October 23 2019 ACLU PSA with Burt Lancaster YouTube Retrieved October 23 2019 Elisa Leonelli February 7 2014 Burt Lancaster goldenglobes com Screen god Burt s sex life set the stage for Hollywood gay scene Independent ie March 18 2000 Archived from the original on February 1 2016 Retrieved July 5 2021 a b c d Buford 2008 Darden Robert 2016 Nothing but Love in God s Water Volume 2 Black Sacred Music from Sit Ins to Resurrection City ISBN 978 0271080123 Buford Kate 2000 Burt Lancaster An American Life Knopf ISBN 978 0679446033 page needed Buford 2008 pp 127 30 East Harlem s Burton Stephen Burt Lancaster Harlem World Magazine Retrieved October 26 2022 Goldbeck MD Larry O 2016 Their Stars Shone Brightly Xlibris ISBN 978 1524532154 Retrieved October 18 2017 Granger Farley Calhoun Robert 2007 Include Me Out My Life from Goldwyn to Broadway ISBN 978 1429945448 Winters 1980 p 259 Buford Kate 2000 Burt Lancaster An American Life London Aurum p 20 ISBN 1854107402 Buford Kate 2001 Burt Lancaster An American Life Boston Massachusetts Da Capo Press p 277 ISBN 978 0306810190 Oscar Winner Burt Lancaster Dies at 80 Los Angeles Times October 24 1994 Retrieved October 18 2017 Holden Stephen May 12 2013 Film lots of Lancaster at Lincoln Center The New York Times New York City Retrieved October 24 2018 Burt Lancaster Hollywood Walk of Fame October 25 2019 Retrieved June 22 2022 painted by Thomas Hart Benton 1954 The Kentuckian painting LACMA Collections Bibliography Edit Andreychuk Ed Burt Lancaster A Filmography And Biography Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers 2005 ISBN 978 0 7864 2339 2 Buford Kate Burt Lancaster An American Life London Aurum Press 2008 ISBN 1 84513 385 4 Winters Shelley Shelley Also known as Shirley New York Morrow 1980 ISBN 978 0 688 03638 6 Karney Robyn Burt Lancaster A Singular Man Trafalgar Square Pub 1997 ISBN 1570760748External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Burt Lancaster Burt Lancaster at IMDb Burt Lancaster at the TCM Movie Database Burt Lancaster at AllMovie Burt Lancaster at the Internet Broadway Database Literature on Burt Lancaster The Rainmaker a poem for Lancaster Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Burt Lancaster amp oldid 1143263584, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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