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Humphrey Bogart

Humphrey DeForest Bogart (/ˈbɡɑːrt/ BOH-gart;[1] December 25, 1899 – January 14, 1957), colloquially nicknamed Bogie, was an American actor. His performances in classic Hollywood cinema films made him an American cultural icon.[2] In 1999, the American Film Institute selected Bogart as the greatest male star of classic American cinema.[3]

Humphrey Bogart
Bogart in 1940
Born
Humphrey DeForest Bogart

(1899-12-25)December 25, 1899
New York City, U.S.
DiedJanuary 14, 1957(1957-01-14) (aged 57)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, California
OccupationActor
Years active1921–1956
Political partyDemocratic
Spouses
(m. 1926; div. 1927)
(m. 1928; div. 1937)
(m. 1938; div. 1945)
(m. 1945)
Children2, including Stephen Humphrey
Parent
AwardsBest ActorAcademy Awards
1952 The African Queen
Military career
Service/branchUnited States Navy
Years of service1918–1919
Battles/warsWorld War I
Signature

Bogart began acting in Broadway shows.[4] Debuting in film in The Dancing Town (1928), he appeared in supporting roles for more than a decade, regularly portraying gangsters. He was praised for his work as Duke Mantee in The Petrified Forest (1936). Bogart also received positive reviews for his performance as gangster Hugh "Baby Face" Martin, in Dead End (1937), directed by William Wyler.

His breakthrough came in High Sierra (1941), and he catapulted to stardom as the lead in The Maltese Falcon (1941), considered one of the first great noir films.[5] Bogart's private detectives, Sam Spade (in The Maltese Falcon) and Philip Marlowe (in 1946's The Big Sleep), became the models for detectives in other noir films. In 1947, he played a War hero in another "noir" film, Dead Reckoning, tangled in a dangerous Web of brutality and violence as he investigates his friend's murder, co-starring Lizabeth Scott. His first romantic lead role was a memorable one, pairing him with Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca (1942), which earned him his first nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor. Raymond Chandler, in a 1946 letter, wrote that "Like Edward G. Robinson when he was younger, all he has to do to dominate a scene is to enter it."[6]

Forty-four-year-old Bogart and nineteen-year-old Lauren Bacall fell in love during filming of To Have and Have Not (1944). In 1945, a few months after principal photography for The Big Sleep, their second film together, he divorced his third wife and married Bacall. After their marriage, they played each other's love interest in the mystery thrillers Dark Passage (1947) and Key Largo (1948). Regarding her husband's enduring popularity, Bacall later said, "There was something that made him able to be a man of his own and it showed through his work. There was also a purity, which is amazing considering the parts he played. Something solid too. I think as time goes by we all believe less and less. Here was someone who believed in something."[7]

Bogart's performances in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948) and In a Lonely Place (1950) are now considered among his best, although they were not recognized as such when the films were released.[8] He reprised those unsettled, unstable characters as a World War II naval-vessel commander in The Caine Mutiny (1954), which was a critical and commercial hit and earned him another Best Actor nomination. He won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of a cantankerous river steam launch skipper opposite Katharine Hepburn's missionary in the World War I African adventure The African Queen (1951). Other significant roles in his later years included The Barefoot Contessa (1954) with Ava Gardner and his on-screen competition with William Holden for Audrey Hepburn in Sabrina (1954). A heavy smoker and drinker, Bogart died from esophageal cancer in January 1957.

Early life and education edit

 
Plaque commemorating Bogart's birthplace, 245 W. 103rd St., New York City

Humphrey DeForest Bogart was born on Christmas Day 1899 in New York City, the eldest child of Belmont DeForest Bogart and Maud Humphrey.[9][10] Belmont was the only child of the unhappy marriage of Adam Welty Bogart (a Canandaigua, New York, innkeeper) and Julia Augusta Stiles, a wealthy heiress.[11] The name "Bogart" derives from the Dutch surname, "Bogaert".[12] Belmont and Maud married in June 1898. He was a Presbyterian, of English and Dutch descent, and a descendant of Sarah Rapelje (the first female European Christian child born in New Netherland). Maud was an Episcopalian of English heritage, and a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland. Humphrey was raised Episcopalian, but was non-practicing for most of his adult life.[13]

The date of Bogart's birth has been disputed. Clifford McCarty wrote that Warner Bros. publicity department had altered it to January 23, 1900, "to foster the view that a man born on Christmas Day couldn't really be as villainous as he appeared to be on screen".[further explanation needed][14] The "corrected" January birthdate subsequently appeared—and in some cases, remains—in many otherwise-authoritative sources.[15][16] According to biographers Ann M. Sperber and Eric Lax, Bogart always celebrated his birthday on December 25 and listed it on official records (including his marriage license).[17]

Lauren Bacall wrote in her autobiography that Bogart's birthday was always celebrated on Christmas Day, saying that he joked about being cheated out of a present every year.[18] Sperber and Lax noted that a birth announcement in the Ontario County Times of January 10, 1900, rules out the possibility of a January 23 birthdate;[19] state and federal census records from 1900 also report a Christmas 1899 birthdate.[20] Bogart's birth record confirms he was actually born on December 25, 1899.[21][22]

 
Maud Humphrey in the 1897 book American Women

Belmont, Bogart's father, was a cardiopulmonary surgeon. Maud was a commercial illustrator who received her art training in New York and France, including study with James Abbott McNeill Whistler. She later became art director of the fashion magazine The Delineator and a militant suffragette.[23] Maud used a drawing of baby Humphrey in an advertising campaign for Mellins Baby Food.[24] She earned over $50,000 a year at the peak of her career – a very large sum of money at the time, and considerably more than her husband's $20,000.[25] The Bogarts lived in an Upper West Side apartment, and had a cottage on a 55-acre estate on Canandaigua Lake in upstate New York. When he was young, Bogart's group of friends at the lake would put on plays.[26]

He had two younger sisters: Frances ("Pat") and Catherine Elizabeth ("Kay").[24] Bogart's parents were busy in their careers, and frequently fought. Very formal, they showed little emotion towards their children. Maud told her offspring to call her "Maud" instead of "Mother", and showed little, if any, physical affection for them. When she was pleased, she "[c]lapped you on the shoulder, almost the way a man does", Bogart recalled.[27] "I was brought up very unsentimentally but very straightforwardly. A kiss, in our family, was an event. Our mother and father didn't glug over my two sisters and me."[28]

Bogart was teased as a boy for his curls, tidiness, the "cute" pictures his mother had him pose for, the Little Lord Fauntleroy clothes in which she dressed him, and for his first name.[29] He inherited from his father a tendency to needle, a fondness for fishing, a lifelong love of boating, and an attraction to strong-willed women.[30]

Bogart attended the private Delancey School until the fifth grade and then attended the prestigious Trinity School.[31] He was an indifferent, sullen student who showed no interest in after-school activities.[30] Bogart later attended Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, a boarding school to which he was admitted based on family connections.[32] Although his parents hoped that he would go on to Yale University, Bogart left Phillips in 1918 after one semester (although the Phillips Academy website claims he was in the graduating class of 1920).[33] He failed four out of six classes.[34] Several reasons have been given; according to one, he was expelled for throwing the headmaster (or a groundskeeper) into Rabbit Pond on campus. Another cited smoking, drinking, poor academic performance, and (possibly) inappropriate comments made to the staff. In a third scenario, Bogart was withdrawn by his father for failing to improve his grades. His parents were deeply disappointed in their failed plans for his future.[35]

Navy edit

 
Enlisting at 18 in the US Navy in 1918, Bogart was recorded as a model sailor.

With no viable career options, Bogart enlisted in the United States Navy in the spring of 1918 (during World War I), and served as a coxswain.[36] He recalled later, "At eighteen, war was great stuff. Paris! Sexy French girls! Hot damn!"[37] Bogart was recorded as a model sailor, who spent most of his sea time after the armistice ferrying troops back from Europe.[38] Bogart left the service on June 18, 1919,[39] at the rank of boatswain's mate third class.[40] During the Second World War, Bogart attempted to re-enlist in the Navy but was rejected due to his age. He then volunteered for the Coast Guard Temporary Reserve in 1944, patrolling the California coastline in his yacht, the Santana.[36]

He may have received his trademark scar and developed his characteristic lisp during his naval stint. There are several conflicting stories. In one, his lip was cut by shrapnel when his ship (the USS Leviathan) was shelled. The ship was never shelled, however, and Bogart may not have been at sea before the armistice. Another story, held by longtime friend Nathaniel Benchley, was that Bogart was injured while taking a prisoner to Portsmouth Naval Prison in Kittery, Maine. While changing trains in Boston, the handcuffed prisoner reportedly asked Bogart for a cigarette. When Bogart looked for a match, the prisoner smashed him across the mouth with the cuffs (cutting Bogart's lip) and fled before being recaptured and imprisoned. In an alternative version, Bogart was struck in the mouth by a handcuff loosened while freeing his charge; the other handcuff was still around the prisoner's wrist.[41] By the time Bogart was treated by a doctor, a scar had formed. David Niven said that when he first asked Bogart about his scar, however, he said that it was caused by a childhood accident. "Goddamn doctor", Bogart later told Niven. "Instead of stitching it up, he screwed it up." According to Niven, the stories that Bogart got the scar during wartime were made up by the studios. His post-service physical did not mention the lip scar, although it noted many smaller scars.[38] When actress Louise Brooks met Bogart in 1924, he had scar tissue on his upper lip which Brooks said Bogart may have had partially repaired before entering the film industry in 1930.[35] Brooks said that his "lip wound gave him no speech impediment, either before or after it was mended."[42]

Acting edit

First performances edit

Bogart returned home to find his father in poor health, his medical practice faltering, and much of the family's wealth lost in bad timber investments.[43] His character and values developed separately from his family during his navy days, and he began to rebel. Bogart became a liberal who disliked pretension, phonies and snobs, sometimes defying conventional behavior and authority; he was also well-mannered, articulate, punctual, self-effacing and standoffish.[44] After his naval service, he worked as a shipper and a bond salesman,[45] joining the Coast Guard Reserve.

 
Bogart was praised in an October 15, 1922, newspaper review of the play Swifty: "Humphrey Bogart as the erring young man, Tom Proctor, did an excellent bit of work in the main".[46]

Frank Kelly Rich writes that Bogart "dove headfirst into the Jazz Age lifestyle, always up for late night revels... When his meager wages were exhausted, he'd play chess against all comers in arcades for a dollar a match (he was a brilliant player) to fund his outings." Mike Doyle of Chess.com writes that "Before he made any money from acting, he would hustle players for dimes and quarters, playing in New York parks and at Coney Island."[47] Bogart resumed his friendship with Bill Brady Jr. (whose father had show-business connections), and obtained an office job with William A. Brady's new World Films company.[48] Although he wanted to try his hand at screenwriting, directing, and production, he excelled at none. Bogart was stage manager for Brady's daughter Alice's play A Ruined Lady. He made his stage debut a few months later as a Japanese butler in Alice's 1921 play Drifting (nervously delivering one line of dialogue), and appeared in several of her subsequent plays.[49]

Although Bogart had been raised to believe that acting was a lowly profession, he liked the late hours actors kept and the attention they received: "I was born to be indolent and this was the softest of rackets."[45] He spent much of his free time in speakeasies, drinking heavily. A bar-room brawl at this time was also a purported cause of Bogart's lip damage, dovetailing with Louise Brooks' account.[50]

Preferring to learn by doing, he never took acting lessons. Bogart was persistent and worked steadily at his craft, appearing in at least 18 Broadway productions between 1922 and 1935, 11 of which were comedies.[51] He played juveniles or romantic supporting roles in drawing-room comedies and is reportedly the first actor to say, "Tennis, anyone?" on stage.[52] According to Alexander Woollcott, Bogart "is what is usually and mercifully described as inadequate."[53] Other critics were kinder. Heywood Broun, reviewing Nerves, wrote: "Humphrey Bogart gives the most effective performance ... both dry and fresh, if that be possible".[54] He played a juvenile lead (reporter Gregory Brown) in Lynn Starling's comedy Meet the Wife, which had a successful 232-performance run at the Klaw Theatre from November 1923 through July 1924. Bogart disliked his trivial, effeminate early-career parts, calling them "White Pants Willie" roles.[55]

While playing a double role in Drifting at the Playhouse Theatre in 1922, he met actress Helen Menken; they were married on May 20, 1926, at the Gramercy Park Hotel in New York City. Divorced on November 18, 1927, they remained friends.[56] Menken said in her divorce filing that Bogart valued his career more than marriage, citing neglect and abuse.[57] He married actress Mary Philips on April 3, 1928, at her mother's apartment in Hartford, Connecticut; Bogart and Philips had worked together in the play Nerves during its brief run at the Comedy Theatre in 1924.

Theatrical production dropped off sharply after the Wall Street Crash of 1929, and many of the more-photogenic actors headed for Hollywood. Bogart debuted on film with Helen Hayes in the 1928 two-reeler The Dancing Town, which survives intact.[58] He also appeared with Joan Blondell and Ruth Etting in a Vitaphone short, Broadway's Like That (1930), which was rediscovered in 1963.[59]

 
Claire Luce and Bogart in Up the River (1930)

Broadway to Hollywood edit

Bogart signed a contract with the Fox Film Corporation for $750 a week. There he met Spencer Tracy, a Broadway actor whom Bogart liked and admired, and the two men became close friends and drinking companions. In 1930, Tracy first called him "Bogie".[60] Tracy made his feature film debut in his only movie with Bogart, John Ford's early sound film Up the River (1930), in which their leading roles were as inmates. Tracy received top billing, but Bogart's picture appeared on the film's posters.[61] He was billed fourth behind Tracy, Claire Luce and Warren Hymer but his role was almost as large as Tracy's and much larger than Luce's or Hymer's. A quarter of a century later, the two men planned to make The Desperate Hours together. Both insisted upon top billing, however; Tracy dropped out, and was replaced by Fredric March.[62]

Bogart then had a supporting role in Bad Sister (1931) with Bette Davis.[63] Bogart shuttled back and forth between Hollywood and the New York stage from 1930 to 1935, out of work for long periods. His parents had separated; his father died in 1934 in debt, which Bogart eventually paid off. He inherited his father's gold ring, which he wore in many of his films. At his father's deathbed, Bogart finally told him how much he loved him.[64] Bogart's second marriage was rocky; dissatisfied with his acting career, depressed and irritable, he drank heavily.[19]

In Hollywood permanently: The Petrified Forest edit

 
Bogart, Leslie Howard, and Bette Davis in The Petrified Forest, 1936

In 1934, Bogart starred in the Broadway play Invitation to a Murder at the Theatre Masque (renamed the John Golden Theatre in 1937). Its producer, Arthur Hopkins, heard the play from offstage; he sent for Bogart and offered him the role of escaped murderer Duke Mantee in Robert E. Sherwood's forthcoming play, The Petrified Forest.[19] Hopkins later recalled:

When I saw the actor I was somewhat taken aback, for [I realized] he was the one I never much admired. He was an antiquated juvenile who spent most of his stage life in white pants swinging a tennis racquet. He seemed as far from a cold-blooded killer as one could get, but the voice[,] dry and tired[,] persisted, and the voice was Mantee's.[65]

The play had 197 performances at the Broadhurst Theatre in New York in 1935.[66] Although Leslie Howard was the star, The New York Times critic Brooks Atkinson said that the play was "a peach ... a roaring Western melodrama ... Humphrey Bogart does the best work of his career as an actor."[67] Bogart said that the play "marked my deliverance from the ranks of the sleek, sybaritic, stiff-shirted, swallow-tailed 'smoothies' to which I seemed condemned to life." However, he still felt insecure.[66] Warner Bros. bought the screen rights to The Petrified Forest in 1935.[68] The play seemed ideal for the studio, which was known for its socially-realistic pictures for a public entranced by real-life criminals such as John Dillinger[69] and Dutch Schultz.[70] Bette Davis and Leslie Howard were cast. Howard, who held the production rights, made it clear that he wanted Bogart to star with him.

 
The Petrified Forest trailer (1936)

The studio tested several Hollywood veterans for the Duke Mantee role and chose Edward G. Robinson, who had star appeal and was due to make a film to fulfill his contract. Bogart cabled news of this development to Howard in Scotland, who replied: "Att: Jack Warner Insist Bogart Play Mantee No Bogart No Deal L.H.". When Warner Bros. saw that Howard would not budge, they gave in and cast Bogart.[71] Jack Warner wanted Bogart to use a stage name but Bogart declined, having built a reputation with his name in Broadway theater.[72][73] The film version of The Petrified Forest was released in 1936. According to Variety, "Bogart's menace leaves nothing wanting".[74] Frank S. Nugent wrote for The New York Times that the actor "can be a psychopathic gangster more like Dillinger than the outlaw himself."[75] The film was successful at the box office, earning $500,000 in rentals, and made Bogart a star.[76] He never forgot Howard's favor and named his only daughter, Leslie Howard Bogart, after him in 1952.

Supporting gangster and villain roles edit

Despite his success in The Petrified Forest (an "A movie"), Bogart signed a tepid 26-week contract at $550 per week and was typecast as a gangster in a series of B movie crime dramas.[77] Although he was proud of his success, the fact that it derived from gangster roles weighed on him: "I can't get in a mild discussion without turning it into an argument. There must be something in my tone of voice, or this arrogant face—something that antagonizes everybody. Nobody likes me on sight. I suppose that's why I'm cast as the heavy."[78]

In spite of his success, Warner Bros. had no interest in raising Bogart's profile. His roles were repetitive and physically demanding; studios were not yet air-conditioned, and his tightly scheduled job at Warners was anything but the indolent and "peachy" actor's life he hoped for.[79] Although Bogart disliked the roles chosen for him, he worked steadily. "In the first 34 pictures" for Warner's, he told journalist George Frazier, "I was shot in 12, electrocuted or hanged in 8, and was a jailbird in 9".[80] He averaged a film every two months between 1936 and 1940, sometimes working on two films at the same time. Bogart used these years to begin developing his film persona: a wounded, stoical, cynical, charming, vulnerable, self-mocking loner with a code of honor.

Amenities at Warners were few, compared to the prestigious Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Bogart thought that the Warners wardrobe department was cheap, and often wore his own suits in his films. He chose his own dog named Zero, to play Pard (his character's dog) in High Sierra. His disputes with Warner Bros. over roles and money were similar to those waged by the studio with more established and less malleable stars such as Bette Davis and James Cagney.[81]

 
Taking a back seat to James Cagney in The Roaring Twenties (1939), the last film they made together

Leading men at Warner Bros. included George Raft, James Cagney and Edward G. Robinson. Most of the studio's better scripts went to them or others, leaving Bogart with what was left: films like San Quentin (1937), Racket Busters (1938), and You Can't Get Away with Murder (1939). His only leading role during this period was in Dead End (1937, on loan to Samuel Goldwyn), as a gangster modeled after Baby Face Nelson.[82]

Bogart played violent roles so often that in Nevil Shute's 1939 novel, What Happened to the Corbetts, the protagonist replies "I've seen Humphrey Bogart with one often enough" when asked if he knows how to operate an automatic weapon.[83] Although he played a variety of supporting roles in films such as Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), Bogart's roles were either rivals of characters played by Cagney and Robinson or a secondary member of their gang.[80] In Black Legion (1937), a movie Graham Greene described as "intelligent and exciting, if rather earnest",[84] he played a good man who was caught up with (and destroyed by) a racist organization.

The studio cast Bogart as a wrestling promoter in Swing Your Lady (1938), a "hillbilly musical" which he reportedly considered his worst film performance.[85] He played a rejuvenated, formerly-dead scientist in The Return of Doctor X (1939), his only horror film: "If it'd been Jack Warner's blood ... I wouldn't have minded so much. The trouble was they were drinking mine and I was making this stinking movie."[86] His wife, Mary, had a stage hit in A Touch of Brimstone and refused to abandon her Broadway career for Hollywood. After the play closed, Mary relented; she insisted on continuing her career, however, and they divorced in 1937.[87]

 
Mayo Methot and Bogart with their dogs (1944)

On August 21, 1938, Bogart entered a turbulent third marriage to actress Mayo Methot, a lively, friendly woman when sober but paranoid and aggressive when drunk. She became convinced that Bogart was unfaithful to her (which he eventually was, with Lauren Bacall, while filming To Have and Have Not in 1944).[88] They drifted apart; Methot's drinking increased, and she threw plants, crockery and other objects at Bogart. She set their house afire, stabbed him with a knife, and slashed her wrists several times. Bogart needled her; apparently enjoying confrontation, he was sometimes violent as well. The press called them "the Battling Bogarts".[89]

According to their friend, Julius Epstein, "The Bogart-Methot marriage was the sequel to the Civil War".[90] Bogart bought a motor launch which he named Sluggy, his nickname for Methot: "I like a jealous wife .. We get on so well together (because) we don't have illusions about each other ... I wouldn't give you two cents for a dame without a temper." Louise Brooks said that "except for Leslie Howard, no one contributed as much to Humphrey's success as his third wife, Mayo Methot."[91] Methot's influence was increasingly destructive, however,[91] and Bogart also continued to drink.[88]

He had a lifelong disdain for pretension and phoniness,[92] and was again irritated by his inferior films. Bogart rarely watched his own films and avoided premieres, issuing fake press releases about his private life to satisfy journalistic and public curiosity.[93] When he thought an actor, director or studio had done something shoddy, he spoke up publicly about it. Bogart advised Robert Mitchum that the only way to stay alive in Hollywood was to be an "againster". He was not the most popular of actors, and some in the Hollywood community shunned him privately to avoid trouble with the studios.[94] Bogart once said,[95]

All over Hollywood, they are continually advising me, "Oh, you mustn't say that. That will get you in a lot of trouble," when I remark that some picture or writer or director or producer is no good. I don't get it. If he isn't any good, why can't you say so? If more people would mention it, pretty soon it might start having some effect. The local idea that anyone making a thousand dollars a week is sacred and is beyond the realm of criticism never strikes me as particularly sound.

The Hollywood press, unaccustomed to such candor, was delighted.[96]

Early stardom edit

High Sierra edit

High Sierra (1941, directed by Raoul Walsh) featured a screenplay written by John Huston, Bogart's friend and drinking partner, adapted from a novel by W. R. Burnett, author of the novel on which Little Caesar was based.[97] Paul Muni, George Raft, Cagney and Robinson turned down the lead role,[80] giving Bogart the opportunity to play a character with some depth. Walsh initially opposed Bogart's casting, preferring Raft for the part. It was Bogart's last major film as a gangster; a supporting role followed in The Big Shot, released in 1942. He worked well with Ida Lupino, sparking jealousy from Mayo Methot.[98]

The film cemented a strong personal and professional connection between Bogart and Huston. Bogart admired (and somewhat envied) Huston for his skill as a writer; a poor student, Bogart was a lifelong reader. He could quote Plato, Alexander Pope, Ralph Waldo Emerson and over a thousand lines of Shakespeare, and subscribed to the Harvard Law Review.[99] Bogart admired writers; some of his best friends were screenwriters, including Louis Bromfield, Nathaniel Benchley, and Nunnally Johnson. He enjoyed intense, provocative conversation (accompanied by stiff drinks), as did Huston. Both were rebellious and enjoyed playing childish pranks. Huston was reportedly easily bored during production and admired Bogart (also bored easily off-camera) for his acting talent and his intense concentration on-set.[100]

 
Bogart in a publicity picture with the prop Maltese Falcon

The Maltese Falcon edit

Now regarded as a classic film noir, The Maltese Falcon (1941) was John Huston's directorial debut. Based on the Dashiell Hammett novel, it was first serialized in the pulp magazine Black Mask in 1929 and was the basis of two earlier film versions; the second was Satan Met a Lady (1936), starring Bette Davis.[101] Producer Hal B. Wallis initially offered to cast George Raft as the leading man, but Raft (then better known than Bogart) had a contract stipulating he was not required to appear in remakes. Fearing that it would be nothing more than a sanitized version of the pre-Production Code The Maltese Falcon (1931), Raft turned down the role to make Manpower with director Raoul Walsh, with whom he had worked on The Bowery in 1933. Huston then eagerly accepted Bogart as his Sam Spade.

Complementing Bogart were co-stars Sydney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre, Elisha Cook Jr., and Mary Astor as the treacherous female foil.[102] Bogart's sharp timing and facial expressions were praised by the cast and director as vital to the film's quick action and rapid-fire dialogue.[99] It was a commercial hit, and a major triumph for Huston. Bogart was unusually happy with the film: "It is practically a masterpiece. I don't have many things I'm proud of ... but that's one".[103]

Casablanca edit

 
With Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca (1942), which earned Bogart the first of three Oscar nominations

Bogart played his first romantic lead in Casablanca (1942): Rick Blaine, an expatriate nightclub owner hiding from a suspicious past and negotiating a fine line among Nazis, the French underground, the Vichy prefect and unresolved feelings for his ex-girlfriend. Bosley Crowther wrote in his November 1942 New York Times review that Bogart's character was used "to inject a cold point of tough resistance to evil forces afoot in Europe today".[104] The film, directed by Michael Curtiz and produced by Hal Wallis, featured Ingrid Bergman, Claude Rains, Sydney Greenstreet, Paul Henreid, Conrad Veidt, Peter Lorre and Dooley Wilson.

Bogart and Bergman's on-screen relationship was based on professionalism rather than actual rapport, although Mayo Methot assumed otherwise. Off the set, the co-stars hardly spoke. Bergman (who had a reputation for affairs with her leading men)[105] later said about Bogart, "I kissed him but I never knew him."[106] Because she was taller, Bogart had 3-inch (76 mm) blocks attached to his shoes in some scenes.[105]

Bogart is reported to have been responsible for the notion that Rick Blaine should be portrayed as a chess player, a metaphor for the relationships he maintained with friends, enemies, and allies. He played tournament-level chess (one division below master) in real life,[107] often enjoying games with crew members and cast but finding his better in Paul Henreid.[108]

Casablanca won the Academy Award for Best Picture at the 16th Academy Awards for 1943. Bogart was nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role, but lost to Paul Lukas for his performance in Watch on the Rhine. The film vaulted Bogart from fourth place to first in the studio's roster, however, finally overtaking James Cagney. He more than doubled his annual salary to over $460,000 by 1946, making him the world's highest-paid actor.[109]

Bogart went on United Service Organizations and War Bond tours with Methot in 1943 and 1944, making arduous trips to Italy and North Africa (including Casablanca).[109] He was still required to perform in films with weak scripts, leading to conflicts with the front office. He starred in Conflict (1945,[110] again with Greenstreet), but turned down God Is My Co-Pilot that year.[111]

Bogart and Bacall edit

To Have and Have Not edit

 
With Lauren Bacall and Marcel Dalio in To Have and Have Not (1944)
 
Bogart and Bacall in The Big Sleep (1946)

Howard Hawks introduced Bogart and Lauren Bacall while Bogart was filming Passage to Marseille (1944).[112] The three subsequently collaborated on To Have and Have Not (1944), a loose adaptation of the Ernest Hemingway novel, and Bacall's film debut. It has several similarities to Casablanca: the same kind of hero and enemies, and a piano player (portrayed this time by Hoagy Carmichael) as a supporting character.[113] When they met, Bacall was 19 and Bogart 44; he nicknamed her "Baby." A model since age 16, she had appeared in two failed plays. Bogart was attracted by Bacall's high cheekbones, green eyes, tawny blond hair, lean body, maturity, poise and earthy, outspoken honesty;[114] he reportedly said, "I just saw your test. We'll have a lot of fun together".[115]

Their emotional bond was strong from the start, their difference in age and acting-experience encouraged a mentor-student dynamic. In contrast to the Hollywood norm, their affair was Bogart's first with a leading lady.[116] His early meetings with Bacall were discreet and brief, their separations bridged by love letters.[117] The relationship made it easier for Bacall to make her first film, and Bogart did his best to put her at ease with jokes and quiet coaching.[88] He encouraged her to steal scenes; Howard Hawks also did his best to highlight her role, and found Bogart easy to direct.[118]

However, Hawks began to disapprove of the relationship.[88] He considered himself Bacall's protector and mentor, and Bogart was usurping that role. Not usually drawn to his starlets, the married director also fell for Bacall; he told her that she meant nothing to Bogart and threatened to send her to the poverty-row studio Monogram Pictures. Bogart calmed her down, and then went after Hawks; Jack Warner settled the dispute, and filming resumed.[119] Hawks said about Bacall, "Bogie fell in love with the character she played, so she had to keep playing it the rest of her life."[120]

The Big Sleep edit

Months after wrapping To Have and Have Not, Bogart and Bacall were reunited for an encore: the film noir The Big Sleep (1946), based on the novel by Raymond Chandler with script help from William Faulkner. Chandler admired the actor's performance: "Bogart can be tough without a gun. Also, he has a sense of humor that contains that grating undertone of contempt."[121] Although the film was completed and scheduled for release in 1945, it was withdrawn and re-edited to add scenes exploiting Bogart and Bacall's box-office chemistry in To Have and Have Not and the publicity surrounding their offscreen relationship. At the insistence of director Howard Hawks, production partner Charles K. Feldman agreed to a rewrite of Bacall's scenes to heighten the "insolent" quality which had intrigued critics such as James Agee and audiences of the earlier film, and a memo was sent to studio head Jack Warner.[122]

The dialogue, especially in the added scenes supplied by Hawks, was full of sexual innuendo. The film was successful, although some critics found its plot confusing and overly complicated.[123] According to Chandler, Hawks and Bogart argued about who killed the chauffeur; when Chandler received an inquiry by telegram, he could not provide an answer.[124][125]

 
Bogart and Bacall's wedding in 1945

Marriage to Bacall edit

Bogart filed for divorce from Methot in February 1945. He and Bacall married in a small ceremony at the country home of Bogart's close friend, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Louis Bromfield,[88] at Malabar Farm (near Lucas, Ohio) on May 21, 1945.[76]

They moved into a $160,000 ($2,600,000 in 2022) white brick mansion in an exclusive neighborhood of Los Angeles' Holmby Hills.[126] At the time of the 1950 United States census, the couple was living at 2707 Benedict Canyon Drive in Beverly Hills with their son and nursemaid. Bacall is listed as Betty Bogart.[127] The marriage was a mostly happy one but not without its troubles. Bogart's drinking was sometimes problematic and he initially wasn't happy about having his first child. He was a homebody, and Bacall liked the nightlife; he loved the sea, which made her seasick.[88] Bogart and Bacall both had affairs but they never stopped loving each other, a fact Bacall mentions throughout her memoir By Myself.[128] In a 1997 Parade magazine cover story, she told reporter Dotson Rader that Bogart said "'If you want a career more than anything, I will do everything I can to help you, and I will send you on your way, but I will not marry you. I've been through it, and I know it doesn't work.' He was right. He loved me and wanted me with him. I made the deal, and I stuck to it, and I'm damn glad that I did."[129][130][131]

Bogart bought the Santana, a 55-foot (17 m) sailing yacht, from actor Dick Powell in 1945. He found the sea a sanctuary[132] and spent about thirty weekends a year on the water, with a particular fondness for sailing around Catalina Island: "An actor needs something to stabilize his personality, something to nail down what he really is, not what he is currently pretending to be."[133] Bogart joined the Coast Guard Temporary Reserve (a forerunner of the modern Coast Guard Auxiliary), offering the Coast Guard use of the Santana.[134] He reportedly attempted to enlist, but was turned down due to his age.[135]

Dark Passage and Key Largo edit

 
In Dark Passage (1947)

The suspenseful Dark Passage (1947) was Bogart and Bacall's next collaboration.[88] Vincent Parry (Bogart) is intent on finding the real murderer for a crime of which he was convicted and sentenced to prison.[136] According to Bogart's biographer, Stefan Kanfer, it was "a production line film noir with no particular distinction".[137]

Bogart and Bacall's last pairing in a film was in Key Largo (1948). Directed by John Huston, Edward G. Robinson was billed second (behind Bogart) as gangster Johnny Rocco: a seething, older synthesis of many of his early bad-guy roles. The billing question was hard-fought and at the end of at least one of the trailers, Robinson is listed above Bogart in a list of the actors' names in the last frame; and in the film itself, Robinson's name, appearing between Bogart's and Bacall's, is pictured slightly higher onscreen than the other two. Robinson had top billing over Bogart in their four previous films together: Bullets or Ballots (1936), Kid Galahad (1937), The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse (1938) and Brother Orchid (1940). In some posters for Key Largo, Robinson's picture is substantially larger than Bogart's, and in the foreground manhandling Bacall while Bogart is in the background. The characters are trapped during a hurricane in a hotel owned by Bacall's father-in-law, portrayed by Lionel Barrymore. Claire Trevor won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance as Rocco's physically abused, alcoholic girlfriend.

Later career edit

The Treasure of the Sierra Madre edit

 
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948)

Riding high in 1947 with a new contract which provided limited script refusal and the right to form his own production company, Bogart rejoined with John Huston for The Treasure of the Sierra Madre: a stark tale of greed among three gold prospectors in Mexico. Lacking a love interest or a happy ending, it was considered a risky project.[138] Bogart later said about co-star (and John Huston's father) Walter Huston, "He's probably the only performer in Hollywood to whom I'd gladly lose a scene."[139]

The film was shot in the heat of summer for greater realism and atmosphere and was grueling to make.[140] James Agee wrote, "Bogart does a wonderful job with this character ... miles ahead of the very good work he has done before." Although John Huston won the Academy Award for Best Director and screenplay and his father won the Best Supporting Actor award, the film had mediocre box-office results. Bogart complained, "An intelligent script, beautifully directed—something different—and the public turned a cold shoulder on it."[141]

House Un-American Activities Committee edit

Bogart, a liberal Democrat,[142] organized the Committee for the First Amendment (a delegation to Washington, D.C.) opposing what he saw as the House Un-American Activities Committee's harassment of Hollywood screenwriters and actors. He later wrote an article, "I'm No Communist", for the March 1948 issue of Photoplay magazine distancing himself from the Hollywood Ten to counter negative publicity resulting from his appearance. Bogart wrote, "The ten men cited for contempt by the House Un-American Activities Committee were not defended by us."[143]

Santana Productions edit

Bogart created his film company, Santana Productions (named after his yacht and the cabin cruiser in Key Largo), in 1948.[144] The right to create his own company had left Jack Warner furious, fearful that other stars would do the same and further erode the major studios' power. In addition to pressure from freelancing actors such as Bogart, James Stewart, and Henry Fonda, they were beginning to buckle from the impact of television and the enforcement of antitrust laws which broke up theater chains.[145] Bogart appeared in his final films for Warners, Chain Lightning (1950) and The Enforcer (1951).

 
With Gloria Grahame in In A Lonely Place (1950)

Except for Beat the Devil (1953), originally distributed in the United States by United Artists,[146] the company released its films through Columbia Pictures; Columbia re-released Beat the Devil a decade later.[146] In quick succession, Bogart starred in Knock on Any Door (1949), Tokyo Joe (1949), In a Lonely Place (1950), and Sirocco (1951). Santana also made two films without him: And Baby Makes Three (1949) and The Family Secret (1951).

Although most lost money at the box office (ultimately forcing Santana's sale), at least two retain a reputation; In a Lonely Place is considered a film-noir high point. Bogart plays Dixon Steele, an embittered writer with a violent reputation who is the primary suspect in the murder of a young woman and falls in love with failed actress Laurel Gray (Gloria Grahame).[147] Several Bogart biographers, and actress-writer Louise Brooks, have felt that this role is closest to the real Bogart. According to Brooks, the film "gave him a role that he could play with complexity, because the film character's pride in his art, his selfishness, drunkenness, lack of energy stabbed with lightning strokes of violence were shared by the real Bogart". The character mimics some of Bogart's personal habits, twice ordering the actor's favorite meal (ham and eggs).[148]

A parody of sorts of The Maltese Falcon, Beat the Devil was the final film for Bogart and John Huston. Co-written by Truman Capote, the eccentrically filmed story follows an amoral group of rogues, one of whom was portrayed by Peter Lorre, chasing an unattainable treasure.[149] Bogart sold his interest in Santana to Columbia for over $1 million in 1955.[150]

The African Queen edit

 
Hepburn and Bogart in The African Queen (1951)

Outside Santana Productions, Bogart starred with Katharine Hepburn in the John Huston-directed The African Queen in 1951. The C. S. Forester novel on which it was based was overlooked and left undeveloped for 15 years until producer Sam Spiegel and Huston bought the rights. Spiegel sent Katharine Hepburn the book; she suggested Bogart for the male lead, believing that "he was the only man who could have played that part".[151] Huston's love of adventure, his deep, longstanding friendship (and success) with Bogart, and the chance to work with Hepburn convinced the actor to leave Hollywood for a difficult shoot on location in the Belgian Congo. Bogart was to get 30 percent of the profits and Hepburn 10 percent, plus a relatively small salary for both. The stars met in London and announced that they would work together.

Bacall came for the over-four-month duration, leaving their young son in Los Angeles. The Bogarts began the trip with a junket through Europe, including a visit with Pope Pius XII.[152] Bacall later made herself useful as a cook, nurse and clothes washer; her husband said: "I don't know what we'd have done without her. She Luxed my undies in darkest Africa."[153] Nearly everyone in the cast developed dysentery except Bogart and Huston, who subsisted on canned food and alcohol; Bogart said, "All I ate was baked beans, canned asparagus and Scotch whisky. Whenever a fly bit Huston or me, it dropped dead."[154] Hepburn (a teetotaler) fared worse in the difficult conditions, losing weight and at one point becoming very ill. Bogart resisted Huston's insistence on using real leeches in a key scene where Charlie has to drag his steam launch through an infested marsh, and reasonable fakes were employed.[155] The crew overcame illness, army-ant infestations, leaky boats, poor food, attacking hippos, poor water filters, extreme heat, isolation, and a boat fire to complete the film.[156] Despite the discomfort of jumping from the boat into swamps, rivers and marshes, The African Queen apparently rekindled Bogart's early love of boats; when he returned to California, he bought a classic mahogany Hacker-Craft runabout which he kept until his death.

His performance as cantankerous skipper Charlie Allnut earned Bogart an Academy Award for Best Actor in 1951 (his only award of three nominations), and he considered it the best of his film career.[157] Promising friends that if he won his speech would break the convention of thanking everyone in sight, Bogart advised Claire Trevor when she was nominated for Key Largo to "just say you did it all yourself and don't thank anyone". When Bogart won, however, he said: "It's a long way from the Belgian Congo to the stage of this theatre. It's nicer to be here. Thank you very much ... No one does it alone. As in tennis, you need a good opponent or partner to bring out the best in you. John and Katie helped me to be where I am now." Despite the award and its accompanying recognition, Bogart later said: "The way to survive an Oscar is never to try to win another one ... too many stars ... win it and then figure they have to top themselves ... they become afraid to take chances. The result: A lot of dull performances in dull pictures."[158] The African Queen was Bogart's first starring Technicolor role.

The Caine Mutiny edit

 
In The Caine Mutiny trailer with Fred MacMurray, Robert Francis and Van Johnson

Bogart dropped his asking price to obtain the role of Captain Queeg in Edward Dmytryk's drama, The Caine Mutiny (1954). Though he retained some of his old bitterness about having to do so,[159] he delivered a strong performance in the lead; he received his final Oscar nomination and was the subject of a June 7, 1954, Time magazine cover story.

Despite his success, Bogart was still melancholy; he grumbled to (and feuded with) the studio, while his health began to deteriorate. Like his portrayal of Fred C. Dobbs in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, Bogart's Queeg is a paranoid, self-pitying character whose small-mindedness eventually destroys him. Henry Fonda played a different role in the Broadway version of The Caine Mutiny, generating publicity for the film.[160]

Final roles edit

 
With Audrey Hepburn in Sabrina trailer

For Sabrina (1954), Billy Wilder wanted Cary Grant for the older male lead and chose Bogart to play the conservative brother who competes with his younger, playboy sibling (William Holden) for the affection of the Cinderella-like Sabrina (Audrey Hepburn). Although Bogart was lukewarm about the part, he agreed to it on a handshake with Wilder without a finished script but with the director's assurance that he would take good care of Bogart during filming.[161] The actor, however, got along poorly with his director and co-stars; he complained about the script's last-minute drafting and delivery, and accused Wilder of favoring Hepburn and Holden on and off the set. Wilder was the opposite of Bogart's ideal director (John Huston) in style and personality; Bogart complained to the press that Wilder was "overbearing" and "is [a] kind of Prussian German with a riding crop. He is the type of director I don't like to work with ... the picture is a crock of crap. I got sick and tired of who gets Sabrina."[162] Wilder later said, "We parted as enemies but finally made up." Despite the acrimony, the film was successful; according to a review in The New York Times, Bogart was "incredibly adroit ... the skill with which this old rock-ribbed actor blends the gags and such duplicities with a manly manner of melting is one of the incalculable joys of the show".[163]

Joseph L. Mankiewicz's The Barefoot Contessa (1954) was filmed in Rome. In this Hollywood backstory, Bogart is a broken-down man, a cynical director-narrator who saves his career by making a star of a flamenco dancer modeled on Rita Hayworth. He was uneasy with Ava Gardner in the female lead; she had just broken up with his Rat Pack buddy Frank Sinatra, and Bogart was annoyed by her inexperienced performance. The actor was generally praised as the film's strongest part.[164] During filming and while Bacall was home, Bogart resumed his discreet affair with Verita Bouvaire-Thompson (his long-time studio assistant, whom he drank with and took sailing). When Bacall found them together, she extracted an expensive shopping spree from her husband; the three traveled together after the shooting.[165]

 
With Mike Lane in The Harder They Fall (1956)

Bogart could be generous with actors, particularly those who were blacklisted, down on their luck or having personal problems. During the filming of the Edward Dmytryk-directed The Left Hand of God (1955), he noticed his co-star Gene Tierney having a hard time remembering her lines and behaving oddly; he coached her, feeding Tierney her lines. Familiar with mental illness because of his sister's bouts of depression, Bogart encouraged Tierney to seek treatment.[166][167] He also stood behind Joan Bennett and insisted on her as his co-star in Michael Curtiz's We're No Angels (1955) when a scandal made her persona non grata with studio head Jack Warner.[168]

Bogart had already been diagnosed with terminal cancer when shooting The Harder They Fall, a boxing drama with Rod Steiger in a supporting role. Steiger later mentioned Bogart's courage and geniality during his final performance:

"Bogey and I got on very well. Unlike some other stars, when they had closeups, you might have been relegated to a two-shot, or cut out altogether. Bogey didn't play those games. He was a professional and had tremendous authority. He'd come in exactly at 9am and leave at precisely 6pm. I remember once walking to lunch in between takes and seeing Bogey on the lot. I shouldn't have because his work was finished for the day. I asked him why he was still on the lot, and he said, 'They want to shoot some retakes of my closeups because my eyes are too watery'. A little while later, after the film, somebody came up to me with word of Bogey's death. Then it struck me. His eyes were watery because he was in pain with the cancer. I thought: 'How dumb can you be, Rodney'!"[169]

Television and radio edit

 
With Bacall and Henry Fonda in the televised version of The Petrified Forest, 1955

Bogart rarely performed on television, but he and Bacall appeared on Edward R. Murrow's Person to Person and disagreed on the answer to every question. He also appeared on The Jack Benny Program, where a surviving kinescope of the live telecast captures him in his only TV sketch-comedy performance (October 25, 1953).

Bogart and Bacall worked on an early color telecast in 1955, an NBC adaptation of "The Petrified Forest" for Producers' Showcase. Bogart received top billing, Henry Fonda played Leslie Howard's role and Bacall played Bette Davis's part. Jack Klugman, Richard Jaeckel, and Jack Warden played supporting roles. In the late 1990s, Bacall donated the only known kinescope of the 1955 performance (in black and white) to the Museum of Television & Radio (now the Paley Center for Media), where it remains archived for viewing in New York City and Los Angeles. It is now in the public domain.

Bogart also performed radio adaptations of some of his best-known films, such as Casablanca and The Maltese Falcon, and recorded a radio series entitled Bold Venture with Bacall.

Personal life edit

Children edit

Bogart became a father at age 49, when Bacall gave birth to their son Stephen Humphrey Bogart on January 6, 1949, during the filming of Tokyo Joe.[88] The name was taken from Steve, Bogart's character's nickname in To Have and Have Not.[170] Stephen became an author and biographer and hosted a television special about his father on Turner Classic Movies. The couple's second child and daughter, Leslie Howard Bogart, was born on August 23, 1952. Her first and middle names honor Leslie Howard, Bogart's friend and co-star in The Petrified Forest.[76][88]

Rat Pack edit

Bogart was a founding member and the original leader of the Hollywood Rat Pack. In the spring of 1955, after a long party in Las Vegas attended by Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland and her husband Sidney Luft, Michael Romanoff and his wife Gloria, David Niven, Angie Dickinson and others, Bacall surveyed the wreckage and said: "You look like a goddamn rat pack."[171]

The name stuck and was made official at Romanoff's in Beverly Hills. Sinatra was dubbed pack president; Bacall den mother; Bogart director of public relations, and Sid Luft acting cage manager.[172] Asked by columnist Earl Wilson what the group's purpose was, Bacall replied: "To drink a lot of bourbon and stay up late."[171]

Illness and death edit

 
Bogart's niche in the Columbarium of Eternal Light, Garden of Memory of Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California

After signing a long-term deal with Warner Bros., Bogart predicted with glee that his teeth and hair would fall out before the contract ended. In 1955, however, his health was failing. In the wake of Santana, Bogart had formed a new company and had plans for a film (Melville Goodwin, U.S.A.) in which he would play a general and Bacall a press magnate. His persistent cough and difficulty eating became too serious to ignore, though, and he dropped the project.[173]

A heavy smoker and drinker, Bogart had developed esophageal cancer. He did not talk about his health and visited a doctor in late January 1956 after considerable persuasion from Bacall. The disease worsened and several weeks later, on March 1, Bogart had surgery to remove his esophagus, two lymph nodes and a rib. The surgery was unsuccessful, and chemotherapy followed.[174] He had additional surgery in November 1956, when the cancer had metastasized.[76] Although he became too weak to walk up and down stairs, he joked despite the pain: "Put me in the dumbwaiter and I'll ride down to the first floor in style." It was then altered to accommodate his wheelchair.[175] Frank Sinatra, Katharine Hepburn, and Spencer Tracy visited him on January 13, 1957. In an interview, Hepburn said:

Spence patted him on the shoulder and said, "Goodnight, Bogie." Bogie turned his eyes to Spence very quietly and with a sweet smile covered Spence's hand with his own and said, "Goodbye, Spence." Spence's heart stood still. He understood.[176]

Bogart lapsed into a coma and died the following day, at the time of his death he weighed only 80 pounds (36 kg). A simple funeral was held at All Saints Episcopal Church, with music by Bogart's favorite composers: Johann Sebastian Bach and Claude Debussy. In attendance were many of Hollywood's biggest stars and most powerful people: Don Ameche, Jean Arthur, Mary Astor, Jack Benny, Ingrid Bergman, Joan Blondell, Walter Brennan, James Cagney, Cyd Charisse, Lee J. Cobb, Harry Cohn, Ronald Colman, Gary Cooper, Joan Crawford, Bing Crosby, Michael Curtiz, Bette Davis, Olivia de Havilland, Marlene Dietrich, José Ferrer, Errol Flynn, Henry Fonda, Joan Fontaine, Judy Garland, Greer Garson, Audrey Hepburn, Katharine Hepburn, Bob Hope, Miriam Hopkins, Lena Horne, John Huston, Jennifer Jones, Danny Kaye, Gene Kelly, Veronica Lake, Charles Laughton, Myrna Loy, Ida Lupino, Fredric March, James Mason, Raymond Massey, Joel McCrea, Adolphe Menjou, Marilyn Monroe, David Niven, Laurence Olivier, Louella Parsons, Gregory Peck, Mary Pickford, George Raft, Claude Rains, Ronald Reagan, Edward G. Robinson, Rosalind Russell, Randolph Scott, David O. Selznick, Norma Shearer, Barbara Stanwyck, Jimmy Stewart, Robert Taylor, Gene Tierney, Spencer Tracy, Lana Turner, Jack L. Warner, John Wayne, Billy Wilder, William Wyler, Jane Wyman, and others. Bacall asked Tracy to give the eulogy; he was too upset, however, and John Huston spoke instead:

Himself, he never took his work too seriously. He regarded the somewhat gaudy figure of Bogart, the star, with an amused cynicism; Bogart, the actor, he held in deep respect ... In each of the fountains at Versailles there is a pike which keeps all the carp active; otherwise they would grow over-fat and die. Bogie took rare delight in performing a similar duty in the fountains of Hollywood. Yet his victims seldom bore him any malice, and when they did, not for long. His shafts were fashioned only to stick into the outer layer of complacency, and not to penetrate through to the regions of the spirit where real injuries are done ... He is quite irreplaceable. There will never be another like him.[177]

Bogart was cremated, and his ashes were interred in Forest Lawn Memorial Park's Columbarium of Eternal Light in its Garden of Memory in Glendale, California. He was buried with a small, gold whistle that had been part of a charm bracelet he had given to Bacall before they married. On it was inscribed, "If you want anything, just whistle." This alluded to a scene in To Have and Have Not when Bacall's character says to Bogart shortly after their first meeting, "You know how to whistle, don't you, Steve? You just put your lips together and blow."[178] Bogart's estate had a gross value of $910,146 and a net value of $737,668 ($9.5 million and $7.7 million, respectively, in 2022).[179]

Awards and honors edit

 
Bogart's star on the Walk of Fame, at 6322 Hollywood Boulevard

On August 21, 1946, he recorded his hand- and footprints in cement in a ceremony at Grauman's Chinese Theatre. On February 8, 1960, Bogart was posthumously inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame with a motion-picture star at 6322 Hollywood Boulevard.[180]

Academy Awards
Year Award Film Result
1943 Best Actor Casablanca Nominated
1951 The African Queen Won
1954 The Caine Mutiny Nominated

Legacy and tributes edit

 
2015 street art of Bogart and Bacall in Spain

After his death, a "Bogie cult" formed at the Brattle Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts,[181] in Greenwich Village, and in France; this contributed to his increased popularity during the late 1950s and 1960s. In 1997, Entertainment Weekly magazine ranked Bogart the number-one movie legend of all time; two years later, the American Film Institute rated him the greatest male screen legend.

Jean-Luc Godard's Breathless (1960) was the first film to pay tribute to Bogart. Over a decade later, in Woody Allen's comic paean Play It Again, Sam (1972), Bogart's ghost aids Allen's character: a film critic having difficulties with women who says that his "sex life has turned into the 'Petrified Forest'".[182]

The United States Postal Service honored Bogart with a stamp in its "Legends of Hollywood" series in 1997, the third figure recognized.[183] At a ceremony attended by Lauren Bacall and the Bogart children, Stephen and Leslie, USPS governing-board chair Tirso del Junco delivered a tribute:

"Today, we mark another chapter in the Bogart legacy. With an image that is small and yet as powerful as the ones he left in celluloid, we will begin today to bring his artistry, his power, his unique star quality, to the messages that travel the world."[184]

On June 24, 2006, 103rd Street between Broadway and West End Avenue in New York City was renamed Humphrey Bogart Place. Lauren Bacall and her son, Stephen Bogart, attended the ceremony. "Bogie would never have believed it", she said to the assembled city officials and onlookers.[185]

In popular culture edit

Bogart has inspired multiple artists.

Filmography edit

Notable radio appearances edit

 
Magazine ad in 1954
 
Trailer for Dark Victory, 1939
 
Jennifer Jones, Gina Lollobrigida and Bogart in Beat the Devil (1953)
Date Program Episode
April 17, 1939 Lux Radio Theatre Bullets or Ballots[192]
1940 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater The Petrified Forest
1941 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater If Only She Could Cook
1941 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse
1941 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater If You Could Only Cook
January 4, 1942 The Screen Guild Theater High Sierra[193][194]
1943 The Screen Guild Theater Casablanca[195]
September 20, 1943 The Screen Guild Theater The Maltese Falcon[196][197]
1944 Screen Guild Players High Sierra[198]
April 30, 1945 Lux Radio Theatre Moontide
July 3, 1946 Academy Award Theater The Maltese Falcon[197]
1946 Lux Radio Theatre To Have and Have Not[199]
April 18, 1949 Lux Radio Theatre Treasure of the Sierra Madre
1951–52 Bold Venture 78-episode series
1952 Stars in the Air The House on 92nd Street[200]
1952 Lux Radio Theatre The African Queen[201]

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ "Bogart." Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary. Retrieved: March 13, 2014.
  2. ^ Sragow, Michael. "Spring Films/Revivals; How One Role Made Bogart Into an Icon". The New York Times, January 16, 2000. Retrieved: February 22, 2009.
  3. ^ . American Film Institute. Archived from the original on October 10, 2018. Retrieved March 15, 2019.
  4. ^ "Humphrey Bogart". www.rottentomatoes.com. Retrieved August 16, 2017.
  5. ^ Sklar, Robert (1993). Film: An International History of the Medium. London, England: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 978-0-13-034049-8.
  6. ^ Chandler, Raymond (1981). Selected Letters. College Trustees, Ltd.
  7. ^ Bogdanovich, Peter (September 1, 1964). "Bogie in Excelsis". Esquire.
  8. ^ Steven Jay Scheider, Ed. pp. 244 and 263; 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die, Quintessence Editions Limited, 2003. pp. 244 and 263. ISBN 0-7641-5907-0.
  9. ^ Ontario County Times birth announcement, January 10, 1900.
  10. ^ Birthday of Reckoning.
  11. ^ . www.andover.edu. Archived from the original on October 27, 2016. Retrieved November 1, 2016.
  12. ^ Meyers 1997, p. 5.
  13. ^ . Adherents.com. Retrieved: January 25, 2011.
  14. ^ McCarty, C. The Complete Films of Humphrey Bogart. Citadel Press (1965), p. 34. ISBN 0-8065-0955-4.
  15. ^ Humphrey DeForest Bogart at "Humphrey DeForest Bogart." encyclopedia.com. Retrieved October 30, 2014.
  16. ^ Barron, James. "And a merry birthday to you, too!; Lifetimes of coping with ghost of Christmas present." The New York Times archive, December 25, 2000. Retrieved: October 30, 2014.
  17. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, p. 44.
  18. ^ Bacall 1978, p. 134.
  19. ^ a b c Sperber and Lax 1997, p. 45.
  20. ^ Bogart 1995, pp. 43–44.
  21. ^ "How to Research the Vital Records Collection". NYC Department of Records & Information Services. May 21, 2021.
  22. ^ "Official certificate and record of birth of Humphrey DeForest Bogart".
  23. ^ Meyers 1997, pp. 6–7.
  24. ^ a b Meyers 1997, p. 8.
  25. ^ Meyers 1997, p. 6.
  26. ^ Meyers 1997, pp. 10–11.
  27. ^ Sperber & Lax, pp. 5–7.
  28. ^ Meyers 1997, pp. 9–10.
  29. ^ Meyers 1997, p. 9.
  30. ^ a b Meyers 1997, p. 22.
  31. ^ Hyams 1975, p. 12.
  32. ^ Meyers 1997, p. 13
  33. ^ "Alumni". Andover | An independent and inclusive coed boarding high school. Retrieved March 6, 2023.
  34. ^ Wallechinsky and Wallace 2005, p. 9.
  35. ^ a b Meyers 1997, pp. 18–19.
  36. ^ a b Celebrities and Other Famous People: A list of people that once served in or was associated with the U.S. Coast Guard. uscg.mil. Retrieved April 16, 2021.
  37. ^ Meyers 1997, p. 19.
  38. ^ a b Sperber and Lax 1997, p. 27.
  39. ^ Famous Veteran: Humphrey Bogart. Military.com. Retrieved April 16, 2021.
  40. ^ Bogart, Humphrey Deforest, PO3 navy.togetherweserved.com. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  41. ^ Citro et al. 2005, pp. 240–241.
  42. ^ Eyles, Allen (1975). Bogart. Macmillan. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-333-18020-4.
  43. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, p. 28.
  44. ^ Meyers 1997, pp. 22, 31.
  45. ^ a b Meyers 1997, p. 23.
  46. ^ "Chronicling America". New-York Tribune. October 17, 1922 – via Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress.
  47. ^ Bell, Steve (December 1, 2016). "Which Famous Actor Hustled Chess Games in New York City?". The New York Times.
  48. ^ Meyers 1997, pp. 24, 31.
  49. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, pp. 29–31.
  50. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, p. 35.
  51. ^ Humphrey Bogart at the Internet Broadway Database.
  52. ^ Meyers 1997, p. 28.
  53. ^ Time Magazine, June 7, 1954.
  54. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, p. 33.
  55. ^ Williams, Joe (October 15, 2012). Hollywood Myths: The Shocking Truths Behind Film's Most Incredible Secrets and Scandals. Voyageur Press. pp. 32–34. ISBN 978-0-7603-4241-1.
  56. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, p. 36.
  57. ^ Staff (December 12, 1927). "Actress Seeks Divorce". The Evening Star. Washington, DC. Retrieved February 4, 2018 – via Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress.
  58. ^ "The dancing town / Daniel Frohman presents ; Paramount Famous Lasky Corp. ; produced by Eugene Spitz ; directed by Edmund Lawrence ; scenario by Adeline Leitzbach". UCLA Film and Television Archive.
  59. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, pp. 39–39.
  60. ^ "letter from Bogart to John Huston," displayed in the documentary John Huston: The Man, the Movies, the Maverick (1989).
  61. ^ Meyers 1997, p. 41.
  62. ^ Macksoud, Meredith C.; Smith, Craig R.; Lohrke, Jackie (November 25, 2002). Arthur Kennedy, Man of Characters: A Stage and Cinema Biography. McFarland. pp. 90. ISBN 978-0-7864-1384-3.
  63. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, p. 41.
  64. ^ Meyers 1997, p. 48.
  65. ^ Meyers 1997, p. 49.
  66. ^ a b Meyers 1997, p. 51.
  67. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, p. 46.
  68. ^ Lebo, Harlan (1992). Casablanca: Behind the Scenes: The Illustrated History of One of the Favorite Films of All Time. New York City: Simon & Schuster. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-671-76981-9.
  69. ^ "The Petrified Forest". TCM. April 14, 2019. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
  70. ^ Meyers 1997, p. 52.
  71. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, pp. 52–54.
  72. ^ Sperber and Lax 1997, p. 57.
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Bibliography

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  • Youngkin, Stephen D. The Lost One: A Life of Peter Lorre. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky, 2005, ISBN 0-8131-2360-7.

External links edit

humphrey, bogart, bogart, redirects, here, other, uses, bogart, disambiguation, bogie, disambiguation, humphrey, deforest, bogart, ɑːr, gart, december, 1899, january, 1957, colloquially, nicknamed, bogie, american, actor, performances, classic, hollywood, cine. Bogart redirects here For other uses see Bogart disambiguation and Bogie disambiguation Humphrey DeForest Bogart ˈ b oʊ ɡ ɑːr t BOH gart 1 December 25 1899 January 14 1957 colloquially nicknamed Bogie was an American actor His performances in classic Hollywood cinema films made him an American cultural icon 2 In 1999 the American Film Institute selected Bogart as the greatest male star of classic American cinema 3 Humphrey BogartBogart in 1940BornHumphrey DeForest Bogart 1899 12 25 December 25 1899New York City U S DiedJanuary 14 1957 1957 01 14 aged 57 Los Angeles California U S Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park Glendale CaliforniaOccupationActorYears active1921 1956Political partyDemocraticSpousesHelen Menken m 1926 div 1927 wbr Mary Philips m 1928 div 1937 wbr Mayo Methot m 1938 div 1945 wbr Lauren Bacall m 1945 wbr Children2 including Stephen HumphreyParentMaud Humphrey mother AwardsBest Actor Academy Awards 1952 The African QueenMilitary careerService wbr branchUnited States NavyYears of service1918 1919Battles warsWorld War ISignatureBogart began acting in Broadway shows 4 Debuting in film in The Dancing Town 1928 he appeared in supporting roles for more than a decade regularly portraying gangsters He was praised for his work as Duke Mantee in The Petrified Forest 1936 Bogart also received positive reviews for his performance as gangster Hugh Baby Face Martin in Dead End 1937 directed by William Wyler His breakthrough came in High Sierra 1941 and he catapulted to stardom as the lead in The Maltese Falcon 1941 considered one of the first great noir films 5 Bogart s private detectives Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon and Philip Marlowe in 1946 s The Big Sleep became the models for detectives in other noir films In 1947 he played a War hero in another noir film Dead Reckoning tangled in a dangerous Web of brutality and violence as he investigates his friend s murder co starring Lizabeth Scott His first romantic lead role was a memorable one pairing him with Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca 1942 which earned him his first nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor Raymond Chandler in a 1946 letter wrote that Like Edward G Robinson when he was younger all he has to do to dominate a scene is to enter it 6 Forty four year old Bogart and nineteen year old Lauren Bacall fell in love during filming of To Have and Have Not 1944 In 1945 a few months after principal photography for The Big Sleep their second film together he divorced his third wife and married Bacall After their marriage they played each other s love interest in the mystery thrillers Dark Passage 1947 and Key Largo 1948 Regarding her husband s enduring popularity Bacall later said There was something that made him able to be a man of his own and it showed through his work There was also a purity which is amazing considering the parts he played Something solid too I think as time goes by we all believe less and less Here was someone who believed in something 7 Bogart s performances in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre 1948 and In a Lonely Place 1950 are now considered among his best although they were not recognized as such when the films were released 8 He reprised those unsettled unstable characters as a World War II naval vessel commander in The Caine Mutiny 1954 which was a critical and commercial hit and earned him another Best Actor nomination He won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of a cantankerous river steam launch skipper opposite Katharine Hepburn s missionary in the World War I African adventure The African Queen 1951 Other significant roles in his later years included The Barefoot Contessa 1954 with Ava Gardner and his on screen competition with William Holden for Audrey Hepburn in Sabrina 1954 A heavy smoker and drinker Bogart died from esophageal cancer in January 1957 Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 Navy 2 Acting 2 1 First performances 2 2 Broadway to Hollywood 2 3 In Hollywood permanently The Petrified Forest 2 4 Supporting gangster and villain roles 3 Early stardom 3 1 High Sierra 3 2 The Maltese Falcon 3 3 Casablanca 4 Bogart and Bacall 4 1 To Have and Have Not 4 2 The Big Sleep 4 3 Marriage to Bacall 4 4 Dark Passage and Key Largo 5 Later career 5 1 The Treasure of the Sierra Madre 5 2 House Un American Activities Committee 5 3 Santana Productions 5 4 The African Queen 5 5 The Caine Mutiny 5 6 Final roles 5 7 Television and radio 6 Personal life 6 1 Children 6 2 Rat Pack 6 3 Illness and death 7 Awards and honors 8 Legacy and tributes 8 1 In popular culture 9 Filmography 10 Notable radio appearances 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksEarly life and education edit nbsp Plaque commemorating Bogart s birthplace 245 W 103rd St New York CityHumphrey DeForest Bogart was born on Christmas Day 1899 in New York City the eldest child of Belmont DeForest Bogart and Maud Humphrey 9 10 Belmont was the only child of the unhappy marriage of Adam Welty Bogart a Canandaigua New York innkeeper and Julia Augusta Stiles a wealthy heiress 11 The name Bogart derives from the Dutch surname Bogaert 12 Belmont and Maud married in June 1898 He was a Presbyterian of English and Dutch descent and a descendant of Sarah Rapelje the first female European Christian child born in New Netherland Maud was an Episcopalian of English heritage and a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Howland Humphrey was raised Episcopalian but was non practicing for most of his adult life 13 The date of Bogart s birth has been disputed Clifford McCarty wrote that Warner Bros publicity department had altered it to January 23 1900 to foster the view that a man born on Christmas Day couldn t really be as villainous as he appeared to be on screen further explanation needed 14 The corrected January birthdate subsequently appeared and in some cases remains in many otherwise authoritative sources 15 16 According to biographers Ann M Sperber and Eric Lax Bogart always celebrated his birthday on December 25 and listed it on official records including his marriage license 17 Lauren Bacall wrote in her autobiography that Bogart s birthday was always celebrated on Christmas Day saying that he joked about being cheated out of a present every year 18 Sperber and Lax noted that a birth announcement in the Ontario County Times of January 10 1900 rules out the possibility of a January 23 birthdate 19 state and federal census records from 1900 also report a Christmas 1899 birthdate 20 Bogart s birth record confirms he was actually born on December 25 1899 21 22 nbsp Maud Humphrey in the 1897 book American WomenBelmont Bogart s father was a cardiopulmonary surgeon Maud was a commercial illustrator who received her art training in New York and France including study with James Abbott McNeill Whistler She later became art director of the fashion magazine The Delineator and a militant suffragette 23 Maud used a drawing of baby Humphrey in an advertising campaign for Mellins Baby Food 24 She earned over 50 000 a year at the peak of her career a very large sum of money at the time and considerably more than her husband s 20 000 25 The Bogarts lived in an Upper West Side apartment and had a cottage on a 55 acre estate on Canandaigua Lake in upstate New York When he was young Bogart s group of friends at the lake would put on plays 26 He had two younger sisters Frances Pat and Catherine Elizabeth Kay 24 Bogart s parents were busy in their careers and frequently fought Very formal they showed little emotion towards their children Maud told her offspring to call her Maud instead of Mother and showed little if any physical affection for them When she was pleased she c lapped you on the shoulder almost the way a man does Bogart recalled 27 I was brought up very unsentimentally but very straightforwardly A kiss in our family was an event Our mother and father didn t glug over my two sisters and me 28 Bogart was teased as a boy for his curls tidiness the cute pictures his mother had him pose for the Little Lord Fauntleroy clothes in which she dressed him and for his first name 29 He inherited from his father a tendency to needle a fondness for fishing a lifelong love of boating and an attraction to strong willed women 30 Bogart attended the private Delancey School until the fifth grade and then attended the prestigious Trinity School 31 He was an indifferent sullen student who showed no interest in after school activities 30 Bogart later attended Phillips Academy in Andover Massachusetts a boarding school to which he was admitted based on family connections 32 Although his parents hoped that he would go on to Yale University Bogart left Phillips in 1918 after one semester although the Phillips Academy website claims he was in the graduating class of 1920 33 He failed four out of six classes 34 Several reasons have been given according to one he was expelled for throwing the headmaster or a groundskeeper into Rabbit Pond on campus Another cited smoking drinking poor academic performance and possibly inappropriate comments made to the staff In a third scenario Bogart was withdrawn by his father for failing to improve his grades His parents were deeply disappointed in their failed plans for his future 35 Navy edit nbsp Enlisting at 18 in the US Navy in 1918 Bogart was recorded as a model sailor With no viable career options Bogart enlisted in the United States Navy in the spring of 1918 during World War I and served as a coxswain 36 He recalled later At eighteen war was great stuff Paris Sexy French girls Hot damn 37 Bogart was recorded as a model sailor who spent most of his sea time after the armistice ferrying troops back from Europe 38 Bogart left the service on June 18 1919 39 at the rank of boatswain s mate third class 40 During the Second World War Bogart attempted to re enlist in the Navy but was rejected due to his age He then volunteered for the Coast Guard Temporary Reserve in 1944 patrolling the California coastline in his yacht the Santana 36 He may have received his trademark scar and developed his characteristic lisp during his naval stint There are several conflicting stories In one his lip was cut by shrapnel when his ship the USS Leviathan was shelled The ship was never shelled however and Bogart may not have been at sea before the armistice Another story held by longtime friend Nathaniel Benchley was that Bogart was injured while taking a prisoner to Portsmouth Naval Prison in Kittery Maine While changing trains in Boston the handcuffed prisoner reportedly asked Bogart for a cigarette When Bogart looked for a match the prisoner smashed him across the mouth with the cuffs cutting Bogart s lip and fled before being recaptured and imprisoned In an alternative version Bogart was struck in the mouth by a handcuff loosened while freeing his charge the other handcuff was still around the prisoner s wrist 41 By the time Bogart was treated by a doctor a scar had formed David Niven said that when he first asked Bogart about his scar however he said that it was caused by a childhood accident Goddamn doctor Bogart later told Niven Instead of stitching it up he screwed it up According to Niven the stories that Bogart got the scar during wartime were made up by the studios His post service physical did not mention the lip scar although it noted many smaller scars 38 When actress Louise Brooks met Bogart in 1924 he had scar tissue on his upper lip which Brooks said Bogart may have had partially repaired before entering the film industry in 1930 35 Brooks said that his lip wound gave him no speech impediment either before or after it was mended 42 Acting editFirst performances edit Bogart returned home to find his father in poor health his medical practice faltering and much of the family s wealth lost in bad timber investments 43 His character and values developed separately from his family during his navy days and he began to rebel Bogart became a liberal who disliked pretension phonies and snobs sometimes defying conventional behavior and authority he was also well mannered articulate punctual self effacing and standoffish 44 After his naval service he worked as a shipper and a bond salesman 45 joining the Coast Guard Reserve nbsp Bogart was praised in an October 15 1922 newspaper review of the play Swifty Humphrey Bogart as the erring young man Tom Proctor did an excellent bit of work in the main 46 Frank Kelly Rich writes that Bogart dove headfirst into the Jazz Age lifestyle always up for late night revels When his meager wages were exhausted he d play chess against all comers in arcades for a dollar a match he was a brilliant player to fund his outings Mike Doyle of Chess com writes that Before he made any money from acting he would hustle players for dimes and quarters playing in New York parks and at Coney Island 47 Bogart resumed his friendship with Bill Brady Jr whose father had show business connections and obtained an office job with William A Brady s new World Films company 48 Although he wanted to try his hand at screenwriting directing and production he excelled at none Bogart was stage manager for Brady s daughter Alice s play A Ruined Lady He made his stage debut a few months later as a Japanese butler in Alice s 1921 play Drifting nervously delivering one line of dialogue and appeared in several of her subsequent plays 49 Although Bogart had been raised to believe that acting was a lowly profession he liked the late hours actors kept and the attention they received I was born to be indolent and this was the softest of rackets 45 He spent much of his free time in speakeasies drinking heavily A bar room brawl at this time was also a purported cause of Bogart s lip damage dovetailing with Louise Brooks account 50 Preferring to learn by doing he never took acting lessons Bogart was persistent and worked steadily at his craft appearing in at least 18 Broadway productions between 1922 and 1935 11 of which were comedies 51 He played juveniles or romantic supporting roles in drawing room comedies and is reportedly the first actor to say Tennis anyone on stage 52 According to Alexander Woollcott Bogart is what is usually and mercifully described as inadequate 53 Other critics were kinder Heywood Broun reviewing Nerves wrote Humphrey Bogart gives the most effective performance both dry and fresh if that be possible 54 He played a juvenile lead reporter Gregory Brown in Lynn Starling s comedy Meet the Wife which had a successful 232 performance run at the Klaw Theatre from November 1923 through July 1924 Bogart disliked his trivial effeminate early career parts calling them White Pants Willie roles 55 While playing a double role in Drifting at the Playhouse Theatre in 1922 he met actress Helen Menken they were married on May 20 1926 at the Gramercy Park Hotel in New York City Divorced on November 18 1927 they remained friends 56 Menken said in her divorce filing that Bogart valued his career more than marriage citing neglect and abuse 57 He married actress Mary Philips on April 3 1928 at her mother s apartment in Hartford Connecticut Bogart and Philips had worked together in the play Nerves during its brief run at the Comedy Theatre in 1924 Theatrical production dropped off sharply after the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and many of the more photogenic actors headed for Hollywood Bogart debuted on film with Helen Hayes in the 1928 two reeler The Dancing Town which survives intact 58 He also appeared with Joan Blondell and Ruth Etting in a Vitaphone short Broadway s Like That 1930 which was rediscovered in 1963 59 nbsp Claire Luce and Bogart in Up the River 1930 Broadway to Hollywood edit Bogart signed a contract with the Fox Film Corporation for 750 a week There he met Spencer Tracy a Broadway actor whom Bogart liked and admired and the two men became close friends and drinking companions In 1930 Tracy first called him Bogie 60 Tracy made his feature film debut in his only movie with Bogart John Ford s early sound film Up the River 1930 in which their leading roles were as inmates Tracy received top billing but Bogart s picture appeared on the film s posters 61 He was billed fourth behind Tracy Claire Luce and Warren Hymer but his role was almost as large as Tracy s and much larger than Luce s or Hymer s A quarter of a century later the two men planned to make The Desperate Hours together Both insisted upon top billing however Tracy dropped out and was replaced by Fredric March 62 Bogart then had a supporting role in Bad Sister 1931 with Bette Davis 63 Bogart shuttled back and forth between Hollywood and the New York stage from 1930 to 1935 out of work for long periods His parents had separated his father died in 1934 in debt which Bogart eventually paid off He inherited his father s gold ring which he wore in many of his films At his father s deathbed Bogart finally told him how much he loved him 64 Bogart s second marriage was rocky dissatisfied with his acting career depressed and irritable he drank heavily 19 In Hollywood permanently The Petrified Forest edit nbsp Bogart Leslie Howard and Bette Davis in The Petrified Forest 1936In 1934 Bogart starred in the Broadway play Invitation to a Murder at the Theatre Masque renamed the John Golden Theatre in 1937 Its producer Arthur Hopkins heard the play from offstage he sent for Bogart and offered him the role of escaped murderer Duke Mantee in Robert E Sherwood s forthcoming play The Petrified Forest 19 Hopkins later recalled When I saw the actor I was somewhat taken aback for I realized he was the one I never much admired He was an antiquated juvenile who spent most of his stage life in white pants swinging a tennis racquet He seemed as far from a cold blooded killer as one could get but the voice dry and tired persisted and the voice was Mantee s 65 The play had 197 performances at the Broadhurst Theatre in New York in 1935 66 Although Leslie Howard was the star The New York Times critic Brooks Atkinson said that the play was a peach a roaring Western melodrama Humphrey Bogart does the best work of his career as an actor 67 Bogart said that the play marked my deliverance from the ranks of the sleek sybaritic stiff shirted swallow tailed smoothies to which I seemed condemned to life However he still felt insecure 66 Warner Bros bought the screen rights to The Petrified Forest in 1935 68 The play seemed ideal for the studio which was known for its socially realistic pictures for a public entranced by real life criminals such as John Dillinger 69 and Dutch Schultz 70 Bette Davis and Leslie Howard were cast Howard who held the production rights made it clear that he wanted Bogart to star with him nbsp The Petrified Forest trailer 1936 The studio tested several Hollywood veterans for the Duke Mantee role and chose Edward G Robinson who had star appeal and was due to make a film to fulfill his contract Bogart cabled news of this development to Howard in Scotland who replied Att Jack Warner Insist Bogart Play Mantee No Bogart No Deal L H When Warner Bros saw that Howard would not budge they gave in and cast Bogart 71 Jack Warner wanted Bogart to use a stage name but Bogart declined having built a reputation with his name in Broadway theater 72 73 The film version of The Petrified Forest was released in 1936 According to Variety Bogart s menace leaves nothing wanting 74 Frank S Nugent wrote for The New York Times that the actor can be a psychopathic gangster more like Dillinger than the outlaw himself 75 The film was successful at the box office earning 500 000 in rentals and made Bogart a star 76 He never forgot Howard s favor and named his only daughter Leslie Howard Bogart after him in 1952 Supporting gangster and villain roles edit Despite his success in The Petrified Forest an A movie Bogart signed a tepid 26 week contract at 550 per week and was typecast as a gangster in a series of B movie crime dramas 77 Although he was proud of his success the fact that it derived from gangster roles weighed on him I can t get in a mild discussion without turning it into an argument There must be something in my tone of voice or this arrogant face something that antagonizes everybody Nobody likes me on sight I suppose that s why I m cast as the heavy 78 In spite of his success Warner Bros had no interest in raising Bogart s profile His roles were repetitive and physically demanding studios were not yet air conditioned and his tightly scheduled job at Warners was anything but the indolent and peachy actor s life he hoped for 79 Although Bogart disliked the roles chosen for him he worked steadily In the first 34 pictures for Warner s he told journalist George Frazier I was shot in 12 electrocuted or hanged in 8 and was a jailbird in 9 80 He averaged a film every two months between 1936 and 1940 sometimes working on two films at the same time Bogart used these years to begin developing his film persona a wounded stoical cynical charming vulnerable self mocking loner with a code of honor Amenities at Warners were few compared to the prestigious Metro Goldwyn Mayer Bogart thought that the Warners wardrobe department was cheap and often wore his own suits in his films He chose his own dog named Zero to play Pard his character s dog in High Sierra His disputes with Warner Bros over roles and money were similar to those waged by the studio with more established and less malleable stars such as Bette Davis and James Cagney 81 nbsp Taking a back seat to James Cagney in The Roaring Twenties 1939 the last film they made togetherLeading men at Warner Bros included George Raft James Cagney and Edward G Robinson Most of the studio s better scripts went to them or others leaving Bogart with what was left films like San Quentin 1937 Racket Busters 1938 and You Can t Get Away with Murder 1939 His only leading role during this period was in Dead End 1937 on loan to Samuel Goldwyn as a gangster modeled after Baby Face Nelson 82 Bogart played violent roles so often that in Nevil Shute s 1939 novel What Happened to the Corbetts the protagonist replies I ve seen Humphrey Bogart with one often enough when asked if he knows how to operate an automatic weapon 83 Although he played a variety of supporting roles in films such as Angels with Dirty Faces 1938 Bogart s roles were either rivals of characters played by Cagney and Robinson or a secondary member of their gang 80 In Black Legion 1937 a movie Graham Greene described as intelligent and exciting if rather earnest 84 he played a good man who was caught up with and destroyed by a racist organization The studio cast Bogart as a wrestling promoter in Swing Your Lady 1938 a hillbilly musical which he reportedly considered his worst film performance 85 He played a rejuvenated formerly dead scientist in The Return of Doctor X 1939 his only horror film If it d been Jack Warner s blood I wouldn t have minded so much The trouble was they were drinking mine and I was making this stinking movie 86 His wife Mary had a stage hit in A Touch of Brimstone and refused to abandon her Broadway career for Hollywood After the play closed Mary relented she insisted on continuing her career however and they divorced in 1937 87 nbsp Mayo Methot and Bogart with their dogs 1944 On August 21 1938 Bogart entered a turbulent third marriage to actress Mayo Methot a lively friendly woman when sober but paranoid and aggressive when drunk She became convinced that Bogart was unfaithful to her which he eventually was with Lauren Bacall while filming To Have and Have Not in 1944 88 They drifted apart Methot s drinking increased and she threw plants crockery and other objects at Bogart She set their house afire stabbed him with a knife and slashed her wrists several times Bogart needled her apparently enjoying confrontation he was sometimes violent as well The press called them the Battling Bogarts 89 According to their friend Julius Epstein The Bogart Methot marriage was the sequel to the Civil War 90 Bogart bought a motor launch which he named Sluggy his nickname for Methot I like a jealous wife We get on so well together because we don t have illusions about each other I wouldn t give you two cents for a dame without a temper Louise Brooks said that except for Leslie Howard no one contributed as much to Humphrey s success as his third wife Mayo Methot 91 Methot s influence was increasingly destructive however 91 and Bogart also continued to drink 88 He had a lifelong disdain for pretension and phoniness 92 and was again irritated by his inferior films Bogart rarely watched his own films and avoided premieres issuing fake press releases about his private life to satisfy journalistic and public curiosity 93 When he thought an actor director or studio had done something shoddy he spoke up publicly about it Bogart advised Robert Mitchum that the only way to stay alive in Hollywood was to be an againster He was not the most popular of actors and some in the Hollywood community shunned him privately to avoid trouble with the studios 94 Bogart once said 95 All over Hollywood they are continually advising me Oh you mustn t say that That will get you in a lot of trouble when I remark that some picture or writer or director or producer is no good I don t get it If he isn t any good why can t you say so If more people would mention it pretty soon it might start having some effect The local idea that anyone making a thousand dollars a week is sacred and is beyond the realm of criticism never strikes me as particularly sound The Hollywood press unaccustomed to such candor was delighted 96 Early stardom editHigh Sierra edit High Sierra 1941 directed by Raoul Walsh featured a screenplay written by John Huston Bogart s friend and drinking partner adapted from a novel by W R Burnett author of the novel on which Little Caesar was based 97 Paul Muni George Raft Cagney and Robinson turned down the lead role 80 giving Bogart the opportunity to play a character with some depth Walsh initially opposed Bogart s casting preferring Raft for the part It was Bogart s last major film as a gangster a supporting role followed in The Big Shot released in 1942 He worked well with Ida Lupino sparking jealousy from Mayo Methot 98 The film cemented a strong personal and professional connection between Bogart and Huston Bogart admired and somewhat envied Huston for his skill as a writer a poor student Bogart was a lifelong reader He could quote Plato Alexander Pope Ralph Waldo Emerson and over a thousand lines of Shakespeare and subscribed to the Harvard Law Review 99 Bogart admired writers some of his best friends were screenwriters including Louis Bromfield Nathaniel Benchley and Nunnally Johnson He enjoyed intense provocative conversation accompanied by stiff drinks as did Huston Both were rebellious and enjoyed playing childish pranks Huston was reportedly easily bored during production and admired Bogart also bored easily off camera for his acting talent and his intense concentration on set 100 nbsp Bogart in a publicity picture with the prop Maltese FalconThe Maltese Falcon edit Now regarded as a classic film noir The Maltese Falcon 1941 was John Huston s directorial debut Based on the Dashiell Hammett novel it was first serialized in the pulp magazine Black Mask in 1929 and was the basis of two earlier film versions the second was Satan Met a Lady 1936 starring Bette Davis 101 Producer Hal B Wallis initially offered to cast George Raft as the leading man but Raft then better known than Bogart had a contract stipulating he was not required to appear in remakes Fearing that it would be nothing more than a sanitized version of the pre Production Code The Maltese Falcon 1931 Raft turned down the role to make Manpower with director Raoul Walsh with whom he had worked on The Bowery in 1933 Huston then eagerly accepted Bogart as his Sam Spade Complementing Bogart were co stars Sydney Greenstreet Peter Lorre Elisha Cook Jr and Mary Astor as the treacherous female foil 102 Bogart s sharp timing and facial expressions were praised by the cast and director as vital to the film s quick action and rapid fire dialogue 99 It was a commercial hit and a major triumph for Huston Bogart was unusually happy with the film It is practically a masterpiece I don t have many things I m proud of but that s one 103 Casablanca edit nbsp With Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca 1942 which earned Bogart the first of three Oscar nominationsBogart played his first romantic lead in Casablanca 1942 Rick Blaine an expatriate nightclub owner hiding from a suspicious past and negotiating a fine line among Nazis the French underground the Vichy prefect and unresolved feelings for his ex girlfriend Bosley Crowther wrote in his November 1942 New York Times review that Bogart s character was used to inject a cold point of tough resistance to evil forces afoot in Europe today 104 The film directed by Michael Curtiz and produced by Hal Wallis featured Ingrid Bergman Claude Rains Sydney Greenstreet Paul Henreid Conrad Veidt Peter Lorre and Dooley Wilson Bogart and Bergman s on screen relationship was based on professionalism rather than actual rapport although Mayo Methot assumed otherwise Off the set the co stars hardly spoke Bergman who had a reputation for affairs with her leading men 105 later said about Bogart I kissed him but I never knew him 106 Because she was taller Bogart had 3 inch 76 mm blocks attached to his shoes in some scenes 105 Bogart is reported to have been responsible for the notion that Rick Blaine should be portrayed as a chess player a metaphor for the relationships he maintained with friends enemies and allies He played tournament level chess one division below master in real life 107 often enjoying games with crew members and cast but finding his better in Paul Henreid 108 Casablanca won the Academy Award for Best Picture at the 16th Academy Awards for 1943 Bogart was nominated for Best Actor in a Leading Role but lost to Paul Lukas for his performance in Watch on the Rhine The film vaulted Bogart from fourth place to first in the studio s roster however finally overtaking James Cagney He more than doubled his annual salary to over 460 000 by 1946 making him the world s highest paid actor 109 Bogart went on United Service Organizations and War Bond tours with Methot in 1943 and 1944 making arduous trips to Italy and North Africa including Casablanca 109 He was still required to perform in films with weak scripts leading to conflicts with the front office He starred in Conflict 1945 110 again with Greenstreet but turned down God Is My Co Pilot that year 111 Bogart and Bacall editTo Have and Have Not edit nbsp With Lauren Bacall and Marcel Dalio in To Have and Have Not 1944 nbsp Bogart and Bacall in The Big Sleep 1946 Howard Hawks introduced Bogart and Lauren Bacall while Bogart was filming Passage to Marseille 1944 112 The three subsequently collaborated on To Have and Have Not 1944 a loose adaptation of the Ernest Hemingway novel and Bacall s film debut It has several similarities to Casablanca the same kind of hero and enemies and a piano player portrayed this time by Hoagy Carmichael as a supporting character 113 When they met Bacall was 19 and Bogart 44 he nicknamed her Baby A model since age 16 she had appeared in two failed plays Bogart was attracted by Bacall s high cheekbones green eyes tawny blond hair lean body maturity poise and earthy outspoken honesty 114 he reportedly said I just saw your test We ll have a lot of fun together 115 Their emotional bond was strong from the start their difference in age and acting experience encouraged a mentor student dynamic In contrast to the Hollywood norm their affair was Bogart s first with a leading lady 116 His early meetings with Bacall were discreet and brief their separations bridged by love letters 117 The relationship made it easier for Bacall to make her first film and Bogart did his best to put her at ease with jokes and quiet coaching 88 He encouraged her to steal scenes Howard Hawks also did his best to highlight her role and found Bogart easy to direct 118 However Hawks began to disapprove of the relationship 88 He considered himself Bacall s protector and mentor and Bogart was usurping that role Not usually drawn to his starlets the married director also fell for Bacall he told her that she meant nothing to Bogart and threatened to send her to the poverty row studio Monogram Pictures Bogart calmed her down and then went after Hawks Jack Warner settled the dispute and filming resumed 119 Hawks said about Bacall Bogie fell in love with the character she played so she had to keep playing it the rest of her life 120 The Big Sleep edit Months after wrapping To Have and Have Not Bogart and Bacall were reunited for an encore the film noir The Big Sleep 1946 based on the novel by Raymond Chandler with script help from William Faulkner Chandler admired the actor s performance Bogart can be tough without a gun Also he has a sense of humor that contains that grating undertone of contempt 121 Although the film was completed and scheduled for release in 1945 it was withdrawn and re edited to add scenes exploiting Bogart and Bacall s box office chemistry in To Have and Have Not and the publicity surrounding their offscreen relationship At the insistence of director Howard Hawks production partner Charles K Feldman agreed to a rewrite of Bacall s scenes to heighten the insolent quality which had intrigued critics such as James Agee and audiences of the earlier film and a memo was sent to studio head Jack Warner 122 The dialogue especially in the added scenes supplied by Hawks was full of sexual innuendo The film was successful although some critics found its plot confusing and overly complicated 123 According to Chandler Hawks and Bogart argued about who killed the chauffeur when Chandler received an inquiry by telegram he could not provide an answer 124 125 nbsp Bogart and Bacall s wedding in 1945Marriage to Bacall edit Bogart filed for divorce from Methot in February 1945 He and Bacall married in a small ceremony at the country home of Bogart s close friend Pulitzer Prize winning author Louis Bromfield 88 at Malabar Farm near Lucas Ohio on May 21 1945 76 They moved into a 160 000 2 600 000 in 2022 white brick mansion in an exclusive neighborhood of Los Angeles Holmby Hills 126 At the time of the 1950 United States census the couple was living at 2707 Benedict Canyon Drive in Beverly Hills with their son and nursemaid Bacall is listed as Betty Bogart 127 The marriage was a mostly happy one but not without its troubles Bogart s drinking was sometimes problematic and he initially wasn t happy about having his first child He was a homebody and Bacall liked the nightlife he loved the sea which made her seasick 88 Bogart and Bacall both had affairs but they never stopped loving each other a fact Bacall mentions throughout her memoir By Myself 128 In a 1997 Parade magazine cover story she told reporter Dotson Rader that Bogart said If you want a career more than anything I will do everything I can to help you and I will send you on your way but I will not marry you I ve been through it and I know it doesn t work He was right He loved me and wanted me with him I made the deal and I stuck to it and I m damn glad that I did 129 130 131 Bogart bought the Santana a 55 foot 17 m sailing yacht from actor Dick Powell in 1945 He found the sea a sanctuary 132 and spent about thirty weekends a year on the water with a particular fondness for sailing around Catalina Island An actor needs something to stabilize his personality something to nail down what he really is not what he is currently pretending to be 133 Bogart joined the Coast Guard Temporary Reserve a forerunner of the modern Coast Guard Auxiliary offering the Coast Guard use of the Santana 134 He reportedly attempted to enlist but was turned down due to his age 135 Dark Passage and Key Largo edit nbsp In Dark Passage 1947 The suspenseful Dark Passage 1947 was Bogart and Bacall s next collaboration 88 Vincent Parry Bogart is intent on finding the real murderer for a crime of which he was convicted and sentenced to prison 136 According to Bogart s biographer Stefan Kanfer it was a production line film noir with no particular distinction 137 Bogart and Bacall s last pairing in a film was in Key Largo 1948 Directed by John Huston Edward G Robinson was billed second behind Bogart as gangster Johnny Rocco a seething older synthesis of many of his early bad guy roles The billing question was hard fought and at the end of at least one of the trailers Robinson is listed above Bogart in a list of the actors names in the last frame and in the film itself Robinson s name appearing between Bogart s and Bacall s is pictured slightly higher onscreen than the other two Robinson had top billing over Bogart in their four previous films together Bullets or Ballots 1936 Kid Galahad 1937 The Amazing Dr Clitterhouse 1938 and Brother Orchid 1940 In some posters for Key Largo Robinson s picture is substantially larger than Bogart s and in the foreground manhandling Bacall while Bogart is in the background The characters are trapped during a hurricane in a hotel owned by Bacall s father in law portrayed by Lionel Barrymore Claire Trevor won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance as Rocco s physically abused alcoholic girlfriend Later career editThe Treasure of the Sierra Madre edit nbsp The Treasure of the Sierra Madre 1948 Riding high in 1947 with a new contract which provided limited script refusal and the right to form his own production company Bogart rejoined with John Huston for The Treasure of the Sierra Madre a stark tale of greed among three gold prospectors in Mexico Lacking a love interest or a happy ending it was considered a risky project 138 Bogart later said about co star and John Huston s father Walter Huston He s probably the only performer in Hollywood to whom I d gladly lose a scene 139 The film was shot in the heat of summer for greater realism and atmosphere and was grueling to make 140 James Agee wrote Bogart does a wonderful job with this character miles ahead of the very good work he has done before Although John Huston won the Academy Award for Best Director and screenplay and his father won the Best Supporting Actor award the film had mediocre box office results Bogart complained An intelligent script beautifully directed something different and the public turned a cold shoulder on it 141 House Un American Activities Committee edit Bogart a liberal Democrat 142 organized the Committee for the First Amendment a delegation to Washington D C opposing what he saw as the House Un American Activities Committee s harassment of Hollywood screenwriters and actors He later wrote an article I m No Communist for the March 1948 issue of Photoplay magazine distancing himself from the Hollywood Ten to counter negative publicity resulting from his appearance Bogart wrote The ten men cited for contempt by the House Un American Activities Committee were not defended by us 143 Santana Productions edit Bogart created his film company Santana Productions named after his yacht and the cabin cruiser in Key Largo in 1948 144 The right to create his own company had left Jack Warner furious fearful that other stars would do the same and further erode the major studios power In addition to pressure from freelancing actors such as Bogart James Stewart and Henry Fonda they were beginning to buckle from the impact of television and the enforcement of antitrust laws which broke up theater chains 145 Bogart appeared in his final films for Warners Chain Lightning 1950 and The Enforcer 1951 nbsp With Gloria Grahame in In A Lonely Place 1950 Except for Beat the Devil 1953 originally distributed in the United States by United Artists 146 the company released its films through Columbia Pictures Columbia re released Beat the Devil a decade later 146 In quick succession Bogart starred in Knock on Any Door 1949 Tokyo Joe 1949 In a Lonely Place 1950 and Sirocco 1951 Santana also made two films without him And Baby Makes Three 1949 and The Family Secret 1951 Although most lost money at the box office ultimately forcing Santana s sale at least two retain a reputation In a Lonely Place is considered a film noir high point Bogart plays Dixon Steele an embittered writer with a violent reputation who is the primary suspect in the murder of a young woman and falls in love with failed actress Laurel Gray Gloria Grahame 147 Several Bogart biographers and actress writer Louise Brooks have felt that this role is closest to the real Bogart According to Brooks the film gave him a role that he could play with complexity because the film character s pride in his art his selfishness drunkenness lack of energy stabbed with lightning strokes of violence were shared by the real Bogart The character mimics some of Bogart s personal habits twice ordering the actor s favorite meal ham and eggs 148 A parody of sorts of The Maltese Falcon Beat the Devil was the final film for Bogart and John Huston Co written by Truman Capote the eccentrically filmed story follows an amoral group of rogues one of whom was portrayed by Peter Lorre chasing an unattainable treasure 149 Bogart sold his interest in Santana to Columbia for over 1 million in 1955 150 The African Queen edit nbsp Hepburn and Bogart in The African Queen 1951 Outside Santana Productions Bogart starred with Katharine Hepburn in the John Huston directed The African Queen in 1951 The C S Forester novel on which it was based was overlooked and left undeveloped for 15 years until producer Sam Spiegel and Huston bought the rights Spiegel sent Katharine Hepburn the book she suggested Bogart for the male lead believing that he was the only man who could have played that part 151 Huston s love of adventure his deep longstanding friendship and success with Bogart and the chance to work with Hepburn convinced the actor to leave Hollywood for a difficult shoot on location in the Belgian Congo Bogart was to get 30 percent of the profits and Hepburn 10 percent plus a relatively small salary for both The stars met in London and announced that they would work together Bacall came for the over four month duration leaving their young son in Los Angeles The Bogarts began the trip with a junket through Europe including a visit with Pope Pius XII 152 Bacall later made herself useful as a cook nurse and clothes washer her husband said I don t know what we d have done without her She Luxed my undies in darkest Africa 153 Nearly everyone in the cast developed dysentery except Bogart and Huston who subsisted on canned food and alcohol Bogart said All I ate was baked beans canned asparagus and Scotch whisky Whenever a fly bit Huston or me it dropped dead 154 Hepburn a teetotaler fared worse in the difficult conditions losing weight and at one point becoming very ill Bogart resisted Huston s insistence on using real leeches in a key scene where Charlie has to drag his steam launch through an infested marsh and reasonable fakes were employed 155 The crew overcame illness army ant infestations leaky boats poor food attacking hippos poor water filters extreme heat isolation and a boat fire to complete the film 156 Despite the discomfort of jumping from the boat into swamps rivers and marshes The African Queen apparently rekindled Bogart s early love of boats when he returned to California he bought a classic mahogany Hacker Craft runabout which he kept until his death His performance as cantankerous skipper Charlie Allnut earned Bogart an Academy Award for Best Actor in 1951 his only award of three nominations and he considered it the best of his film career 157 Promising friends that if he won his speech would break the convention of thanking everyone in sight Bogart advised Claire Trevor when she was nominated for Key Largo to just say you did it all yourself and don t thank anyone When Bogart won however he said It s a long way from the Belgian Congo to the stage of this theatre It s nicer to be here Thank you very much No one does it alone As in tennis you need a good opponent or partner to bring out the best in you John and Katie helped me to be where I am now Despite the award and its accompanying recognition Bogart later said The way to survive an Oscar is never to try to win another one too many stars win it and then figure they have to top themselves they become afraid to take chances The result A lot of dull performances in dull pictures 158 The African Queen was Bogart s first starring Technicolor role The Caine Mutiny edit nbsp In The Caine Mutiny trailer with Fred MacMurray Robert Francis and Van JohnsonBogart dropped his asking price to obtain the role of Captain Queeg in Edward Dmytryk s drama The Caine Mutiny 1954 Though he retained some of his old bitterness about having to do so 159 he delivered a strong performance in the lead he received his final Oscar nomination and was the subject of a June 7 1954 Time magazine cover story Despite his success Bogart was still melancholy he grumbled to and feuded with the studio while his health began to deteriorate Like his portrayal of Fred C Dobbs in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre Bogart s Queeg is a paranoid self pitying character whose small mindedness eventually destroys him Henry Fonda played a different role in the Broadway version of The Caine Mutiny generating publicity for the film 160 Final roles edit nbsp With Audrey Hepburn in Sabrina trailerFor Sabrina 1954 Billy Wilder wanted Cary Grant for the older male lead and chose Bogart to play the conservative brother who competes with his younger playboy sibling William Holden for the affection of the Cinderella like Sabrina Audrey Hepburn Although Bogart was lukewarm about the part he agreed to it on a handshake with Wilder without a finished script but with the director s assurance that he would take good care of Bogart during filming 161 The actor however got along poorly with his director and co stars he complained about the script s last minute drafting and delivery and accused Wilder of favoring Hepburn and Holden on and off the set Wilder was the opposite of Bogart s ideal director John Huston in style and personality Bogart complained to the press that Wilder was overbearing and is a kind of Prussian German with a riding crop He is the type of director I don t like to work with the picture is a crock of crap I got sick and tired of who gets Sabrina 162 Wilder later said We parted as enemies but finally made up Despite the acrimony the film was successful according to a review in The New York Times Bogart was incredibly adroit the skill with which this old rock ribbed actor blends the gags and such duplicities with a manly manner of melting is one of the incalculable joys of the show 163 Joseph L Mankiewicz s The Barefoot Contessa 1954 was filmed in Rome In this Hollywood backstory Bogart is a broken down man a cynical director narrator who saves his career by making a star of a flamenco dancer modeled on Rita Hayworth He was uneasy with Ava Gardner in the female lead she had just broken up with his Rat Pack buddy Frank Sinatra and Bogart was annoyed by her inexperienced performance The actor was generally praised as the film s strongest part 164 During filming and while Bacall was home Bogart resumed his discreet affair with Verita Bouvaire Thompson his long time studio assistant whom he drank with and took sailing When Bacall found them together she extracted an expensive shopping spree from her husband the three traveled together after the shooting 165 nbsp With Mike Lane in The Harder They Fall 1956 Bogart could be generous with actors particularly those who were blacklisted down on their luck or having personal problems During the filming of the Edward Dmytryk directed The Left Hand of God 1955 he noticed his co star Gene Tierney having a hard time remembering her lines and behaving oddly he coached her feeding Tierney her lines Familiar with mental illness because of his sister s bouts of depression Bogart encouraged Tierney to seek treatment 166 167 He also stood behind Joan Bennett and insisted on her as his co star in Michael Curtiz s We re No Angels 1955 when a scandal made her persona non grata with studio head Jack Warner 168 Bogart had already been diagnosed with terminal cancer when shooting The Harder They Fall a boxing drama with Rod Steiger in a supporting role Steiger later mentioned Bogart s courage and geniality during his final performance Bogey and I got on very well Unlike some other stars when they had closeups you might have been relegated to a two shot or cut out altogether Bogey didn t play those games He was a professional and had tremendous authority He d come in exactly at 9am and leave at precisely 6pm I remember once walking to lunch in between takes and seeing Bogey on the lot I shouldn t have because his work was finished for the day I asked him why he was still on the lot and he said They want to shoot some retakes of my closeups because my eyes are too watery A little while later after the film somebody came up to me with word of Bogey s death Then it struck me His eyes were watery because he was in pain with the cancer I thought How dumb can you be Rodney 169 Television and radio edit nbsp With Bacall and Henry Fonda in the televised version of The Petrified Forest 1955Bogart rarely performed on television but he and Bacall appeared on Edward R Murrow s Person to Person and disagreed on the answer to every question He also appeared on The Jack Benny Program where a surviving kinescope of the live telecast captures him in his only TV sketch comedy performance October 25 1953 Bogart and Bacall worked on an early color telecast in 1955 an NBC adaptation of The Petrified Forest for Producers Showcase Bogart received top billing Henry Fonda played Leslie Howard s role and Bacall played Bette Davis s part Jack Klugman Richard Jaeckel and Jack Warden played supporting roles In the late 1990s Bacall donated the only known kinescope of the 1955 performance in black and white to the Museum of Television amp Radio now the Paley Center for Media where it remains archived for viewing in New York City and Los Angeles It is now in the public domain Bogart also performed radio adaptations of some of his best known films such as Casablanca and The Maltese Falcon and recorded a radio series entitled Bold Venture with Bacall Personal life editChildren edit Bogart became a father at age 49 when Bacall gave birth to their son Stephen Humphrey Bogart on January 6 1949 during the filming of Tokyo Joe 88 The name was taken from Steve Bogart s character s nickname in To Have and Have Not 170 Stephen became an author and biographer and hosted a television special about his father on Turner Classic Movies The couple s second child and daughter Leslie Howard Bogart was born on August 23 1952 Her first and middle names honor Leslie Howard Bogart s friend and co star in The Petrified Forest 76 88 Rat Pack edit Bogart was a founding member and the original leader of the Hollywood Rat Pack In the spring of 1955 after a long party in Las Vegas attended by Frank Sinatra Judy Garland and her husband Sidney Luft Michael Romanoff and his wife Gloria David Niven Angie Dickinson and others Bacall surveyed the wreckage and said You look like a goddamn rat pack 171 The name stuck and was made official at Romanoff s in Beverly Hills Sinatra was dubbed pack president Bacall den mother Bogart director of public relations and Sid Luft acting cage manager 172 Asked by columnist Earl Wilson what the group s purpose was Bacall replied To drink a lot of bourbon and stay up late 171 Illness and death edit nbsp Bogart s niche in the Columbarium of Eternal Light Garden of Memory of Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale CaliforniaAfter signing a long term deal with Warner Bros Bogart predicted with glee that his teeth and hair would fall out before the contract ended In 1955 however his health was failing In the wake of Santana Bogart had formed a new company and had plans for a film Melville Goodwin U S A in which he would play a general and Bacall a press magnate His persistent cough and difficulty eating became too serious to ignore though and he dropped the project 173 A heavy smoker and drinker Bogart had developed esophageal cancer He did not talk about his health and visited a doctor in late January 1956 after considerable persuasion from Bacall The disease worsened and several weeks later on March 1 Bogart had surgery to remove his esophagus two lymph nodes and a rib The surgery was unsuccessful and chemotherapy followed 174 He had additional surgery in November 1956 when the cancer had metastasized 76 Although he became too weak to walk up and down stairs he joked despite the pain Put me in the dumbwaiter and I ll ride down to the first floor in style It was then altered to accommodate his wheelchair 175 Frank Sinatra Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy visited him on January 13 1957 In an interview Hepburn said Spence patted him on the shoulder and said Goodnight Bogie Bogie turned his eyes to Spence very quietly and with a sweet smile covered Spence s hand with his own and said Goodbye Spence Spence s heart stood still He understood 176 Bogart lapsed into a coma and died the following day at the time of his death he weighed only 80 pounds 36 kg A simple funeral was held at All Saints Episcopal Church with music by Bogart s favorite composers Johann Sebastian Bach and Claude Debussy In attendance were many of Hollywood s biggest stars and most powerful people Don Ameche Jean Arthur Mary Astor Jack Benny Ingrid Bergman Joan Blondell Walter Brennan James Cagney Cyd Charisse Lee J Cobb Harry Cohn Ronald Colman Gary Cooper Joan Crawford Bing Crosby Michael Curtiz Bette Davis Olivia de Havilland Marlene Dietrich Jose Ferrer Errol Flynn Henry Fonda Joan Fontaine Judy Garland Greer Garson Audrey Hepburn Katharine Hepburn Bob Hope Miriam Hopkins Lena Horne John Huston Jennifer Jones Danny Kaye Gene Kelly Veronica Lake Charles Laughton Myrna Loy Ida Lupino Fredric March James Mason Raymond Massey Joel McCrea Adolphe Menjou Marilyn Monroe David Niven Laurence Olivier Louella Parsons Gregory Peck Mary Pickford George Raft Claude Rains Ronald Reagan Edward G Robinson Rosalind Russell Randolph Scott David O Selznick Norma Shearer Barbara Stanwyck Jimmy Stewart Robert Taylor Gene Tierney Spencer Tracy Lana Turner Jack L Warner John Wayne Billy Wilder William Wyler Jane Wyman and others Bacall asked Tracy to give the eulogy he was too upset however and John Huston spoke instead Himself he never took his work too seriously He regarded the somewhat gaudy figure of Bogart the star with an amused cynicism Bogart the actor he held in deep respect In each of the fountains at Versailles there is a pike which keeps all the carp active otherwise they would grow over fat and die Bogie took rare delight in performing a similar duty in the fountains of Hollywood Yet his victims seldom bore him any malice and when they did not for long His shafts were fashioned only to stick into the outer layer of complacency and not to penetrate through to the regions of the spirit where real injuries are done He is quite irreplaceable There will never be another like him 177 Bogart was cremated and his ashes were interred in Forest Lawn Memorial Park s Columbarium of Eternal Light in its Garden of Memory in Glendale California He was buried with a small gold whistle that had been part of a charm bracelet he had given to Bacall before they married On it was inscribed If you want anything just whistle This alluded to a scene in To Have and Have Not when Bacall s character says to Bogart shortly after their first meeting You know how to whistle don t you Steve You just put your lips together and blow 178 Bogart s estate had a gross value of 910 146 and a net value of 737 668 9 5 million and 7 7 million respectively in 2022 179 Awards and honors edit nbsp Bogart s star on the Walk of Fame at 6322 Hollywood BoulevardOn August 21 1946 he recorded his hand and footprints in cement in a ceremony at Grauman s Chinese Theatre On February 8 1960 Bogart was posthumously inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame with a motion picture star at 6322 Hollywood Boulevard 180 Academy Awards Year Award Film Result1943 Best Actor Casablanca Nominated1951 The African Queen Won1954 The Caine Mutiny NominatedLegacy and tributes edit nbsp 2015 street art of Bogart and Bacall in SpainAfter his death a Bogie cult formed at the Brattle Theatre in Cambridge Massachusetts 181 in Greenwich Village and in France this contributed to his increased popularity during the late 1950s and 1960s In 1997 Entertainment Weekly magazine ranked Bogart the number one movie legend of all time two years later the American Film Institute rated him the greatest male screen legend Jean Luc Godard s Breathless 1960 was the first film to pay tribute to Bogart Over a decade later in Woody Allen s comic paean Play It Again Sam 1972 Bogart s ghost aids Allen s character a film critic having difficulties with women who says that his sex life has turned into the Petrified Forest 182 The United States Postal Service honored Bogart with a stamp in its Legends of Hollywood series in 1997 the third figure recognized 183 At a ceremony attended by Lauren Bacall and the Bogart children Stephen and Leslie USPS governing board chair Tirso del Junco delivered a tribute Today we mark another chapter in the Bogart legacy With an image that is small and yet as powerful as the ones he left in celluloid we will begin today to bring his artistry his power his unique star quality to the messages that travel the world 184 On June 24 2006 103rd Street between Broadway and West End Avenue in New York City was renamed Humphrey Bogart Place Lauren Bacall and her son Stephen Bogart attended the ceremony Bogie would never have believed it she said to the assembled city officials and onlookers 185 In popular culture edit Bogart has inspired multiple artists Two Bugs Bunny cartoons featured the actor Slick Hare 1947 and 8 Ball Bunny 1950 based on The Treasure of the Sierra Madre 186 187 188 The Man with Bogart s Face 1981 starring Bogart lookalike Robert Sacchi was an homage to the actor 189 The lyrics of Bertie Higgins 1981 song Key Largo refer to two of Bogart s films Key Largo and Casablanca 190 Al Stewart s 1976 song Year of the Cat was influenced by Casablanca and begins with the line In a morning from a Bogart movie in a country where they turn back time 191 Filmography editMain article Humphrey Bogart on stage screen radio and televisionNotable radio appearances edit nbsp Magazine ad in 1954 nbsp Trailer for Dark Victory 1939 nbsp Jennifer Jones Gina Lollobrigida and Bogart in Beat the Devil 1953 Date Program EpisodeApril 17 1939 Lux Radio Theatre Bullets or Ballots 192 1940 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater The Petrified Forest1941 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater If Only She Could Cook1941 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater The Amazing Dr Clitterhouse1941 The Gulf Screen Guild Theater If You Could Only CookJanuary 4 1942 The Screen Guild Theater High Sierra 193 194 1943 The Screen Guild Theater Casablanca 195 September 20 1943 The Screen Guild Theater The Maltese Falcon 196 197 1944 Screen Guild Players High Sierra 198 April 30 1945 Lux Radio Theatre MoontideJuly 3 1946 Academy Award Theater The Maltese Falcon 197 1946 Lux Radio Theatre To Have and Have Not 199 April 18 1949 Lux Radio Theatre Treasure of the Sierra Madre1951 52 Bold Venture 78 episode series1952 Stars in the Air The House on 92nd Street 200 1952 Lux Radio Theatre The African Queen 201 See also editBogart Bacall syndrome List of actors with Academy Award nominations List of amateur chess players List of members of the American LegionReferences editNotes Bogart Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Retrieved March 13 2014 Sragow Michael Spring Films Revivals How One Role Made Bogart Into an Icon The New York Times January 16 2000 Retrieved February 22 2009 AFI S 100 Years 100 Stars AFI s 50 Greatest American Screen Legends American Film Institute Archived from the original on October 10 2018 Retrieved March 15 2019 Humphrey Bogart www rottentomatoes com Retrieved August 16 2017 Sklar Robert 1993 Film An International History of the Medium London England Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 13 034049 8 Chandler Raymond 1981 Selected Letters College Trustees Ltd Bogdanovich Peter September 1 1964 Bogie in Excelsis Esquire Steven Jay Scheider Ed pp 244 and 263 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die Quintessence Editions Limited 2003 pp 244 and 263 ISBN 0 7641 5907 0 Ontario County Times birth announcement January 10 1900 Birthday of Reckoning Phillips Academy Notable Alumni Short List www andover edu Archived from the original on October 27 2016 Retrieved November 1 2016 Meyers 1997 p 5 The religious affiliation of Humphrey Bogart Adherents com Retrieved January 25 2011 McCarty C The Complete Films of Humphrey Bogart Citadel Press 1965 p 34 ISBN 0 8065 0955 4 Humphrey DeForest Bogart at Humphrey DeForest Bogart encyclopedia com Retrieved October 30 2014 Barron James And a merry birthday to you too Lifetimes of coping with ghost of Christmas present The New York Times archive December 25 2000 Retrieved October 30 2014 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 44 Bacall 1978 p 134 a b c Sperber and Lax 1997 p 45 Bogart 1995 pp 43 44 How to Research the Vital Records Collection NYC Department of Records amp Information Services May 21 2021 Official certificate and record of birth of Humphrey DeForest Bogart Meyers 1997 pp 6 7 a b Meyers 1997 p 8 Meyers 1997 p 6 Meyers 1997 pp 10 11 Sperber amp Lax pp 5 7 Meyers 1997 pp 9 10 Meyers 1997 p 9 a b Meyers 1997 p 22 Hyams 1975 p 12 Meyers 1997 p 13 Alumni Andover An independent and inclusive coed boarding high school Retrieved March 6 2023 Wallechinsky and Wallace 2005 p 9 a b Meyers 1997 pp 18 19 a b Celebrities and Other Famous People A list of people that once served in or was associated with the U S Coast Guard uscg mil Retrieved April 16 2021 Meyers 1997 p 19 a b Sperber and Lax 1997 p 27 Famous Veteran Humphrey Bogart Military com Retrieved April 16 2021 Bogart Humphrey Deforest PO3 navy togetherweserved com Retrieved July 4 2021 Citro et al 2005 pp 240 241 Eyles Allen 1975 Bogart Macmillan p 9 ISBN 978 0 333 18020 4 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 28 Meyers 1997 pp 22 31 a b Meyers 1997 p 23 Chronicling America New York Tribune October 17 1922 via Historic American Newspapers Library of Congress Bell Steve December 1 2016 Which Famous Actor Hustled Chess Games in New York City The New York Times Meyers 1997 pp 24 31 Sperber and Lax 1997 pp 29 31 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 35 Humphrey Bogart at the Internet Broadway Database Meyers 1997 p 28 Time Magazine June 7 1954 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 33 Williams Joe October 15 2012 Hollywood Myths The Shocking Truths Behind Film s Most Incredible Secrets and Scandals Voyageur Press pp 32 34 ISBN 978 0 7603 4241 1 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 36 Staff December 12 1927 Actress Seeks Divorce The Evening Star Washington DC Retrieved February 4 2018 via Historic American Newspapers Library of Congress The dancing town Daniel Frohman presents Paramount Famous Lasky Corp produced by Eugene Spitz directed by Edmund Lawrence scenario by Adeline Leitzbach UCLA Film and Television Archive Sperber and Lax 1997 pp 39 39 letter from Bogart to John Huston displayed in the documentary John Huston The Man the Movies the Maverick 1989 Meyers 1997 p 41 Macksoud Meredith C Smith Craig R Lohrke Jackie November 25 2002 Arthur Kennedy Man of Characters A Stage and Cinema Biography McFarland pp 90 ISBN 978 0 7864 1384 3 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 41 Meyers 1997 p 48 Meyers 1997 p 49 a b Meyers 1997 p 51 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 46 Lebo Harlan 1992 Casablanca Behind the Scenes The Illustrated History of One of the Favorite Films of All Time New York City Simon amp Schuster p 49 ISBN 978 0 671 76981 9 The Petrified Forest TCM April 14 2019 Retrieved April 17 2019 Meyers 1997 p 52 Sperber and Lax 1997 pp 52 54 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 57 Nollen Scott Allen 2016 Warners Wiseguys All 112 Films That Robinson Cagney and Bogart Made for the Studio McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 1004 7 The Petrified Forest Variety December 31 1935 Retrieved April 17 2019 Nugent Frank S February 7 1936 Heralding the Warner Brothers Film Version of The Petrified Forest at the Music Hall The New York Times Retrieved April 17 2019 a b c d Shickel Richard 2006 Bogie A Celebration of The Life and Films of Humphrey Bogart New York NY Thomas Dunne ISBN 0 312 36629 9 Sperber and Lax 1997 pp 60 61 Bogart Stephen Humphrey Provost Gary 2012 Bogart In Search of My Father Untreed Reads ISBN 978 1 61187 495 2 Meyers 1997 p 56 a b c Shipman David 1989 The Great Movie Stars The Golden Years 3rd ed London Macdonald p 68 Shipman indicates the quote is from a 1965 book about Bogart by Richard Gehman citing Frazier This outline also appears in Frazier s June 2 1944 profile of Bogart in Life magazine p 59 Meyers 1997 p 54 Meyers 1997 p 69 Shute Nevil 1939 Chapter 3 What Happened to the Corbetts William Morrow Meyers 1997 p 67 Lax Eric Audio commentary for Disc One of the 2006 three disc DVD special edition of The Maltese Falcon Senn Bryan September 3 2015 Golden Horrors An Illustrated Critical Filmography of Terror Cinema 1931 1939 McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 1089 4 Sperber and Lax 1997 pp 62 63 a b c d e f g h i Bacall Lauren By Myself and Then Some HarperCollins New York 2005 ISBN 0 06 075535 0 Meyers 1997 pp 78 91 92 Bogart Stephen Humphrey Provost Gary 2012 Bogart In Search of My Father Untreed Reads ISBN 978 1 61187 495 2 a b Meyers 1997 p 81 Interview of son Stephen with Turner Classic Movies host Robert Osborne in 1999 Meyers 1997 p 76 Meyers 1997 pp 86 87 Bogart Stephen Humphrey Provost Gary 2012 Bogart In Search of My Father Untreed Reads ISBN 978 1 61187 495 2 Retrieved April 11 2016 Meyers 1997 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 119 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 128 a b Sperber and Lax 1997 p 127 Meyers 1997 p 115 Meyers 1997 p 123 Meyers 1997 p 125 Meyers 1997 p 131 Crowther Bosley November 27 1942 Casablanca With Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman at Hollywood White Cargo and Ravaged Earth Open The New York Times Retrieved April 14 2019 a b Sperber and Lax 1997 p 201 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 196 Bell Steve Gorce Tammy La December 2 2016 Which Famous Actor Hustled Chess Games in New York City The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 17 2022 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 198 a b Meyers 1997 p 151 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 214 Meyers 1997 p 164 Barnes Mike Byrge Duane August 12 2014 Lauren Bacall Hollywood s Icon of Cool Dies at 89 The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved May 1 2021 Crowther Bosley October 12 1944 To Have and Have Not With Humphrey Bogart at the Hollywood Arrival of Other New Films at Theatres Here The New York Times Retrieved April 14 2019 Meyers 1997 p 166 Meyers 1997 p 165 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 258 Meyers 1997 pp 166 167 Meyers 1997 pp 173 174 Sperber and Lax 1997 pp 263 264 Meyers 1997 p 168 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 289 Schatz Thomas November 23 1999 Boom and Bust American Cinema in the 1940s University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 22130 7 Meyers 1997 p 180 Hiney T MacShane F eds 2000 The Raymond Chandler Papers Atlantic Monthly Press p 103 ISBN 978 0 8021 9433 6 McCrum Robert November 24 2014 The 100 best novels No 62 The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler 1939 The Guardian Retrieved December 4 2019 Meyers 1997 p 185 Search 1950 Census 1950census archives gov By Myself Lauren Bacall 1978 Parade Flashback Lauren Bacall on Marriage Luck and the Choices She Made The Love Story of Bogart and Bacall February 14 2019 Meyers 1997 pp 188 191 Interview with John Huston Bogart Stephen Humphrey December 5 2012 Bogart In Search of My Father Untreed Reads p 19 ISBN 978 1 61187 495 2 Retrieved January 1 2016 Humphrey DeForest Bogart Coast Guard History November 17 2014 Retrieved July 31 2015 More than Military Humphrey Bogart Actor Archived April 14 2015 at the Wayback Machine MilitaryHub com Retrieved July 31 2015 Crowther Bosley September 6 1947 Dark Passage Warner Thriller in Which Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall Are Chief Attractions Opens at Strand The New York Times Retrieved April 14 2019 Kanfer p 119 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 337 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 343 Meyers 1997 p 227 Meyers 1997 pp 229 230 Porter 2003 p 9 Bogart Humphrey I m no Communist Photoplay March 1948 Meyers 1997 p 236 Meyers 1997 p 235 a b Beat the Devil 1954 AFI Film Catalog Retrieved January 2 2019 Crowther Bosley May 18 1950 Three Films Make Their Bows Humphrey Bogart Movie In a Lonely Place at Paramount Import at Trans Lux Annie Get Your Gun Starring Betty Hutton Is Presented at Loew s State Theatre The New York Times Retrieved April 14 2019 Meyers 1997 pp 240 241 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 471 Meyers 1997 p 243 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 439 Meyers 1997 p 248 Meyers 1997 p 249 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 444 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 447 Sperber and Lax 1997 pp 444 445 Meyers 1997 p 258 Meyers 1997 pp 259 260 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 480 Meyers 1997 pp 279 280 Meyers 1997 p 281 Meyers 1997 p 283 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 495 Meyers 1997 pp 288 290 Meyers 1997 pp 291 292 Gene Tierney A Shattered Portrait The Biography Channel Airdate March 26 1999 Tierney and Herskowitz 1978 pp 164 165 Meyers 1997 p 294 Fantle amp Johnson 2009 p 140 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 422 a b Sperber and Lax 1997 p 504 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 430 The film was subsequently renamed Top Secret Affair and made with Kirk Douglas and Susan Hayward Sperber and Lax 1997 pp 509 510 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 510 Bacall 1978 p 273 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 516 Sperber and Lax 1997 p 518 Meyers 1997 p 315 Mendel Stephen A Famous Estates Legacy Champ or Chump Humphrey Bogart 1899 1957 Actor Archived April 28 2014 at the Wayback Machine Mendel Estate Planning August 3 2012 Retrieved July 4 2013 Hollywood Walk of Fame Humphrey Bogart walkoffame com Hollywood Chamber of Commerce Retrieved November 21 2017 Mazur Rebecca J Past Tense The Brattle Theatre The Harvard Crimson February 14 2013 Retrieved March 12 2015 Nichols Mary P August 23 2000 Reconstructing Woody Art Love and Life in the Films of Woody Allen Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 1 4422 0746 2 Selligman Craig New Humphrey Bogart bio a superficial effort USPS Humphrey Bogart Legends of Hollywood Stamp reuters com February 22 2011 Retrieved March 19 2011 Kanfer 2011 p 248 Kanfer 2011 p 249 Slick Hare Big Cartoon Database Retrieved January 25 2011 8 Ball Bunny Archived January 19 2011 at the Wayback Machine revver com Retrieved January 25 2011 bogart panhandler Archived from the original on October 28 2021 via www youtube com Null Christopher The Man With Bogart s Face Archived October 15 2011 at the Wayback Machine filmcritic com May 17 2000 Retrieved January 25 2011 Stutz Colin August 12 2014 Lauren Bacall Dies Her Top 5 Pop Song References Billboard Retrieved October 31 2015 Honigmann David May 10 2021 Year of the Cat the long slow evolution of Al Stewart s best known song Financial Times Radio Classics Bullets or Ballots rebroadcast Radio Classics November 18 2015 Sirius XM Channel 148 Retrieved November 18 2015 The Gulf Screen Guild Theatre RadioGOLDINdex Archived from the original on December 5 2018 Retrieved November 2 2015 Screen Guild Theater Internet Archive Retrieved November 2 2015 Bogart Humphrey Ingrid Bergman Paul Henreid 1942 Casablanca The Ultimate Collector s Edition multi disc DVD set Warner Home Video Terrace Vincent 1999 Radio Programs 1924 1984 A Catalog of Over 1800 Shows Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 0 7864 0351 9 a b Bogart Humphrey Mary Astor Gladys George 1941 The Maltese Falcon 3 Disc Special Edition multi disc DVD set Warner Home Video Those Were The Days Nostalgia Digest 41 3 32 39 Summer 2015 Bacall amp Bogart Lux Theatre Stars Harrisburg Telegraph October 12 1946 p 17 Retrieved October 1 2015 via Newspapers com nbsp Those Were the Days Nostalgia Digest 35 2 32 39 Spring 2009 Kirby Walter December 14 1952 Better Radio Programs for the Week The Decatur Daily Review p 54 Bibliography Bacall Lauren By Myself New York Alfred Knopf 1979 ISBN 0 394 41308 3 Bogart Stephen Humphrey Bogart In Search of My Father New York Dutton 1995 ISBN 0 525 93987 3 Citro Joseph A Mark Sceurman and Mark Moran Weird New England New York Sterling 2005 ISBN 1 4027 3330 5 Fantle David Johnson Tom 2009 25 Years of Celebrity Interviews from Vaudeville to Movies to TV Reel to Real Badger Books Inc ISBN 978 1 932542 04 2 Halliwell Leslie Halliwell s Film Video and DVD Guide New York HarperCollins Entertainment 2004 ISBN 0 00 719081 6 Hepburn Katharine The Making of the African Queen New York Alfred Knopf 1987 ISBN 0 394 56272 0 Hill Jonathan and Jonah Ruddy Bogart The Man and the Legend London Mayflower Dell 1966 History of the U S S Leviathan Cruiser and Transport Forces United States Atlantic Fleet pp 207 208 full citation needed Humphrey Bogart Time June 7 1954 Hyams Joe Bogart and Bacall A Love Story New York David McKay Co Inc 1975 ISBN 0 446 91228 X Hyams Joe Bogie The Biography of Humphrey Bogart New York New American Library 1966 later editions renamed as Bogie The Definitive Biography of Humphrey Bogart ISBN 0 451 09189 2 Kanfer Stefan Tough Without A Gun The Life and Extraordinary Afterlife of Humphrey Bogart New York Knopf 2011 ISBN 978 0 307 27100 6 Meyers Jeffrey 1997 Bogart A Life in Hollywood London Andre Deutsch ISBN 978 0 395 77399 4 Michael Paul Humphrey Bogart The Man and his Films New York Bonanza Books 1965 No ISBN Porter Darwin The Secret Life of Humphrey Bogart The Early Years 1899 1931 New York Georgia Literary Association 2003 ISBN 0 9668030 5 1 Pym John ed Time Out Film Guide London Time Out Group Ltd 2004 ISBN 1 904978 21 5 Santas Constantine The Essential Humphrey Bogart Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield 2016 ISBN 978 1 4422 6093 1 Shickel Richard Bogie A Celebration of the Life and Films of Humphrey Bogart New York Thomas Dunne Books St Martin s Press 2006 ISBN 978 0 312 36629 2 Sperber A M and Eric Lax Bogart New York William Morrow amp Co 1997 ISBN 0 688 07539 8 Tierney Gene with Mickey Herskowitz Self Portrait New York Peter Wyden 1979 ISBN 0 88326 152 9 Wallechinsky David and Amy Wallace The New Book of Lists Edinburgh Scotland Canongate 2005 ISBN 1 84195 719 4 Wise James Stars in Blue Movie Actors in America s Sea Services Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1997 ISBN 1 55750 937 9 OCLC 36824724 Youngkin Stephen D The Lost One A Life of Peter Lorre Lexington Kentucky University Press of Kentucky 2005 ISBN 0 8131 2360 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Humphrey Bogart nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Humphrey Bogart Official website nbsp Humphrey Bogart at IMDb Humphrey Bogart at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Humphrey Bogart at Turner Classic Movies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Humphrey Bogart amp oldid 1187265202, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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