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John Ireland

John Benjamin Ireland (January 30, 1914 – March 21, 1992) was a Canadian actor.[1] He was nominated for an Academy Award for his performance in All the King's Men (1949), making him the first Vancouver-born actor to receive an Oscar nomination.[2]

John Ireland
Ireland in 1960
Born
John Benjamin Ireland

(1914-01-30)January 30, 1914
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
DiedMarch 21, 1992(1992-03-21) (aged 78)
Resting placeSanta Barbara Cemetery, Santa Barbara, California, U.S.
Occupations
  • Actor
  • film director
Years active1932–1992
Spouse(s)
Elaine Sheldon Rosen
(m. 1940; div. 1948)

(m. 1949; div. 1957)

Daphne Myrick Cameron
(m. 1962; died 1992)
Children4
RelativesTommy Noonan (half-brother)

Ireland was a supporting actor in several Western films such as My Darling Clementine (1946), Red River (1948), Vengeance Valley (1951), and Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957). His other film roles include A Walk in the Sun (1945), Joan Of Arc (1948), Spartacus (1960), 55 Days at Peking (1963), The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964), The Adventurers (1970), and Farewell, My Lovely (1975).

Ireland also appeared in many television series, notably The Cheaters (1960–62). He was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contribution to the television industry.

Early life

Ireland was born in Vancouver, British Columbia on January 30, 1914.[3] He lived in New York City from a very early age. Ireland's formal education ended at the 7th grade, and he worked to help his family make ends meet.

He never knew his natural father; his mother, a Scottish piano teacher Gracie Ferguson, remarried to Michael Noone, an Irish vaudevillian, and had three other children, a daughter Kathryn, a son named Tommy (the future actor-comedian Tommy Noonan), and another son, Michael. Their last name was Noone; Ireland never knew for sure where his last name came from. One of his jobs was in a water carnival where he wrestled a dead octopus.

He was a swimmer, once competing with Johnny Weissmuller. He performed underwater stunts at a carnival and worked as a barker.

Career

Theatre

One day he was passing the Davenport Free Theater in Manhattan. He entered, thinking it offered a free show and instead received free training. He slept in a dressing room and was paid a dollar a day to work backstage while rehearsing lines.[citation needed]

In 1941 he made his Broadway debut in a production of Macbeth with Maurice Evans and Judith Anderson. Other Broadway plays followed.[4]

20th Century Fox

Ireland signed with 20th Century Fox and made his screen-debut as Private Windy, the thoughtful letter-writing GI, in the 1945 war film A Walk in the Sun, directed by Lewis Milestone.

This was followed by Wake Up and Dream (1946); Behind Green Lights (1946) with Carole Landis; and It Shouldn't Happen to a Dog (1946), again with Landis. He played Billy Clanton in John Ford's My Darling Clementine (1946).

Freelance actor and Red River

Ireland had his first lead role in Railroaded! (1947), directed by Anthony Mann for Eagle-Lion. He went back to support parts for The Gangster (1947) for the King Brothers and I Love Trouble (1948) for Columbia.

Ireland played the lead in Open Secret (1948) for Eagle-Lion, then had a support role in Anthony Mann's classic noir, Raw Deal (1948).

Ireland had a vital support part in Howard Hawks' 1948 film Red River as the gunslinger Cherry Valance. However, Ireland's part was reduced when Hawks became annoyed with the actor. Ireland was an army captain in the Ingrid Bergman spectacular, Joan of Arc (1948).

All the King's Men

In April 1948 Ireland signed a contract with Columbia Pictures at $500 a week going up to $1500 a week. Ireland was nominated for an Oscar as Best Supporting Actor for his powerful performance as Jack Burden, the hard-boiled newspaper reporter who evolves from devotee to cynical denouncer of demagogue Willie Stark (Broderick Crawford) in All the King's Men (1949), making him the first Vancouver-born actor to receive an Academy Award nomination.

Ireland was featured as Bob Ford in the low budget I Shot Jesse James (1949) the first movie directed by Sam Fuller. He was a villain in the Western Roughshod (1949) and a love rival for Paulette Goddard in Anna Lucasta (1949).

In December 1949 Columbia suspended him after walking out after filming one scene on One Way Out (released as Convicted).[5] He sued the studio.[6]

Lippert Pictures gave him the lead in The Return of Jesse James (1950) and he appeared opposite his then-wife Joanne Dru in support parts in Vengeance Valley (1951)

During McCarthyism in the early 50s, he successfully sued two television producers for breach of contract and slander, claiming that they reneged on roles promised to him due to his perceived political undesirability, including the lead in a TV series The Adventures of Ellery McQueen. He received an undisclosed but "substantial" cash settlement.[4][7][8]

Ireland had the leads in some low-budget films: The Basketball Fix (1951); The Scarf (1951); Little Big Horn (1951); The Bushwackers (1952); and Hannah Lee (1953) with his wife. He directed the latter. That film resulted in a lawsuit against the producers.[9][10]

He went to England to make The Good Die Young (1954) and supported his wife in Southwest Passage (1954) and Joan Crawford in Queen Bee (1955).

Director

John Ireland turned director with The Fast and the Furious (1954), an early production from Roger Corman; Ireland also starred. He had the lead in the British thriller The Glass Cage (1955) and the war film Hell's Horizon (1955). He made another for Corman, this time only as an actor – Gunslinger (1956).

In July 1955 he signed a contract with Revue to act and direct films for television.[11]

In January 1956 he signed to play the lead in the TV series Port of Call.[12]

Ireland landed a supporting role as Johnny Ringo in Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), and played a mobster in MGM's Party Girl (1958). He had the lead in No Place to Land (1958), and Stormy Crossing (1958).

In 1959, Ireland appeared as Chris Slade, with Karl Swenson as Ansel Torgin, in the episode "The Fight Back" of the NBC western series, Riverboat. In the storyline, Tom Fowler (Tom Laughlin), the boss of the corrupt river town of Hampton near Vicksburg, Mississippi, blocks farmers from shipping their crops to market. In a dispute over a wedding held on the Enterprise, a lynch-mob led by Fowler comes after series lead-character Grey Holden (Darren McGavin). Karl Swenson also was cast in this episode.[13]

1960s

In 1959, John guest-appeared on Judy Garland's album, The Letter for Capitol Records.

Ireland had a key role as the gladiator Crixus in the Stanley Kubrick 1960 spectacle Spartacus, co-starring with Kirk Douglas. That year he starred as Winch in the western series Rawhide episode "Incident of the Garden of Eden" and made Faces in the Dark (1960) in England. He also appeared in the Thriller TV series (1960) episode "Papa Benjamin."

From 1960 to 1962, he starred in the British television series The Cheaters, playing John Hunter, a claims investigator for an insurance company who tracked down cases of fraud. He supported Elvis Presley in Wild in the Country (1961) and had the lead in the British Return of a Stranger (1961).

In 1962, he portrayed the character Frank Trask in the episode "Incident of the Portrait" on Rawhide. Rawhide, S7, EP28 Air date: May 7, 1965, THE SPANISH CAMP" A group of men led by Dr. John Merritt (John Ireland) searching for old Spanish treasure stubbornly refuses to let the cattle drive come through the area of their diggings, even though the herd desperately needs the water in the area.

He had a supporting part in 55 Days at Peking (1963) with Charlton Heston and was Ballomar in The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964), both films shot in Spain by producer Samuel Bronston.

By the mid-1960s, he was seen as the star of B-movies, such as I Saw What You Did with Crawford. In 1965, he played role of Jed Colby, a trail scout in the final season of Rawhide. In 1966 he starred in the episode "Stage Stop" (S12E10) as abusive husband and stage coach robbery collaborator "Jeb Coombs" on Gunsmoke.

In 1967, he appeared as Marshal Will Rimbau on Bonanza with Michael Landon in the episode "Judgment at Red Creek". A few years later, he again appeared with Landon on two episodes of Little House on the Prairie as a drunk who saves Carrie Ingalls, who had fallen down an abandoned mine shaft in season 3 episode "Little Girl Lost" and season 5 episode "The Winoka Warriors".[citation needed]

He had some leads in the A. C. Lyles Western Fort Utah (1967), then traveled to Europe to appear in Hate for Hate (1967), and Pistol for a Hundred Coffins (1967) and supported in Villa Rides (1968), Trusting Is Good... Shooting Is Better (1969), One on Top of the Other (1969), and Carnal Circuit (1969).

1970s

In 1970, Ireland appeared as Kinroy in the TV western The Men From Shiloh (rebranded name for The Virginian) in the episode titled "Jenny". Ireland was seen in productions like The House of Seven Corpses (1974), Salon Kitty (1976) and Satan's Cheerleaders (1977). He did, however, also appear in big-budget fare such as The Adventurers (1970), also as a police lieutenant in the Robert Mitchum private-eye story Farewell, My Lovely (1975).

Later career

In 1987, he put an ad in the newspapers stating "I'm an actor... let me act."[14] It led to a role as Jonathan Aaron Cartwright, the younger brother of Ben Cartwright, in the television movie Bonanza: The Next Generation.[15]

He was seen in the War of the Worlds episode "Eye for an Eye" in 1988.

Ireland regularly returned to the stage throughout his career and co-directed two features in the 1950s: the acclaimed Western drama Hannah Lee (1953) and the carjacking B-movie The Fast and the Furious (1955).

Personal life

 
1960 gossip magazine with a story about Ireland and Tuesday Weld

Occasionally Ireland's name was mentioned in tabloids of the times, in connection with much younger starlets, including Natalie Wood, Barbara Payton, and Sue Lyon. He attracted controversy by dating 16-year-old actress Tuesday Weld when he was 45. Ireland also had an affair with co-star Joan Crawford while on the set of Queen Bee (1955). A decade later, Ireland and Crawford co-starred again in William Castle's movie I Saw What You Did.

He was married three times. His first wife, from 1940 to 1949, was Elaine Sheldon, by whom he had two sons, John and Peter.

From 1949 to 1957, he was married to actress Joanne Dru (whose younger brother, entertainer Peter Marshall, was originally best known for his comedy act with Ireland's half-brother Tommy Noonan). In July 1956, Dru was admitted to hospital with a black eye which she said was accidental but which commonly was believed to have been caused by Ireland.[16] Ireland later was admitted to hospital for taking an overdose of barbiturates.[17]

When the couple divorced in 1957 they had over $50,000 in debts.[18]

From 1962 until his death, Ireland was married to Daphne Myrick Cameron, with whom he had a daughter named Daphne and a son named Cameron. He has four grandchildren: Pete, Melissa, Jack and Helios.[4]

In his later years, he owned the restaurant Ireland's in Santa Barbara, California. An accomplished chef, he regularly worked in the kitchen and concocted Ireland Stew, combining whatever ingredients were available on a given night. He was also a regular at the restaurant's bar, greeting patrons and buying drinks for friends.[citation needed]

The restaurant failed. In May 1977, Ireland declared bankruptcy.[19]

On March 21, 1992, Ireland died in Santa Barbara, California of leukemia at the age of 78.[4] He is buried at the Santa Barbara Cemetery.

For his contribution to the television industry, he was commemorated with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1610 Vine Street.[20]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1945 A Walk in the Sun Pfc. Windy Craven
1946 Behind Green Lights Det. Engelhofer
1946 Somewhere in the Night Minor Role Voice, Uncredited
1946 It Shouldn't Happen to a Dog Benny Smith
1946 My Darling Clementine Billy Clanton
1946 Wake Up and Dream Howard Williams
1947 Repeat Performance Narrator Voice, Uncredited
1947 Railroaded! Duke Martin
1947 The Gangster Frank Karty
1948 I Love Trouble Reno
1948 Open Secret Paul Lester
1948 Raw Deal Fantail
1948 A Southern Yankee Capt. Jed Calbern
1948 Red River Cherry Valance
1948 Joan of Arc Jean de la Boussac, St. Severe
1949 I Shot Jesse James Bob Ford
1949 The Walking Hills Frazee
1949 The Undercover Man Narrator Voice, Uncredited
1949 Roughshod Lednov
1949 The Doolins of Oklahoma Bitter Creek
1949 Anna Lucasta Danny Johnson
1949 Mr. Soft Touch Henry "Early" Byrd
1949 All the King's Men Jack Burden Academy Award nomination for Ireland, the film won the Oscar for Best Picture
1950 Cargo to Capetown Steve Conway
1950 The Return of Jesse James Johnny Callum
1951 Vengeance Valley Hub Fasken
1951 The Scarf John Howard Barrington
1951 Little Big Horn Lt. John Haywood
1951 The Basketball Fix Pete Ferreday
1951 Red Mountain Gen. William Quantrill
1951 The Bushwackers Jefferson Waring
1952 Hurricane Smith Hurricane Smith
1953 The 49th Man Investigator John Williams
1953 Hannah Lee Marshal Sam Rochelle Also co-director. Released in color and 3-D, re-released "flat" in B&W; a.k.a. Outlaw Territory
1953 Combat Squad Sgt. Ken 'Fletch' Fletcher
1954 The Good Die Young Eddie Blaine
1954 Southwest Passage Clint McDonald
1954 Security Risk Ralph Payne
1954 The Steel Cage Al, a Ringleader (segment "The Hostages")
1955 The Glass Cage Pel Pelham
1955 The Fast and the Furious Frank Webster Also co-director.
1955 Queen Bee Judd Prentiss
1955 Hell's Horizon Capt. John Merrill
1956 Gunslinger Cane Miro
1957 Gunfight at the O.K. Corral Johnny Ringo
1958 Stormy Crossing Griff Parker
1958 No Place to Land Jonas Bailey
1958 Party Girl Louis Canetto
1959 Med mord i bagaget Johnny Greco
1960 Spartacus Crixus
1960 Faces in the Dark Max Hammond
1961 Wild in the Country Phil Macy
1961 Return of a Stranger Ray Reed
1962 Brushfire Jeff Saygure
1963 55 Days at Peking Sgt. Harry
1963 The Ceremony Prison Warden
1964 The Fall of the Roman Empire Ballomar
1965 I Saw What You Did Steve Marek
1965 Day of the Nightmare Detective Sgt. Dave Harmon
1967 Hate for Hate James Arthur Cooper
1967 Fort Utah Tom Horn
1967 Dirty Heroes Capt. O'Connor
1967 Caxambu Vince Neff
1968 Go for Broke The Owl
1968 Arizona Bushwhackers Deputy Dan Shelby
1968 Villa Rides Client in barber shop Uncredited
1968 Trusting Is Good... Shooting Is Better The Colonel
1968 Pistol for a Hundred Coffins Douglas
1968 Run, Man, Run Santillana
1968 A Taste of Death Dan El
1968 Revenge for Revenge Maj. Bower
1968 Gatling Gun Tarpas
1969 El 'Che' Guevara Stuart
1969 Carnal Circuit Richard Salinger
1969 One on Top of the Other Inspector Wald
1969 Zenabel Don Alonso Imolne
1969 I diavoli della guerra American General Uncredited
1970 Men From Shiloh (rebranded name of The Virginian) Kinroy
1970 La sfida dei MacKenna Jones
1970 The Adventurers Mr. James Hadley
1972 Escape to the Sun Jacob Kagan
1972 Northeast of Seoul Flanagan
1973 Huyendo del halcón Shot in 1966
1974 The House of Seven Corpses Eric Hartman
1974 The Phantom of Hollywood Lieutenant Gifford TV movie
1974 Welcome to Arrow Beach Sheriff Duke Bingham
1974 Dieci bianchi uccisi da un piccolo indiano Abel Webster
1975 Farewell, My Lovely Det. Lt. Nulty
1975 We Are No Angels Mr. Shark
1976 Salon Kitty Cliff
1976 Sex Diary Milton
1976 The Swiss Conspiracy Dwight McGowan
1977 Assault in Paradise Chief Haliburton a.k.a. The Ransom and Maniac!
1977 Mission to Glory: A True Story Benny
1977 Satan's Cheerleaders The Sheriff
1977 Love and the Midnight Auto Supply Tony Santore
1977 Quel pomeriggio maledetto Benny
1977 The Moon and a Mumur
1978 Tomorrow Never Comes Captain
1979 H. G. Wells' The Shape of Things to Come Senator Smedley
1979 Crossbar Miles Kornylo TV movie
1979 Guyana: Cult of the Damned Dave Cole
1979 Delta Fox Lucas Johnson
1979 On the Air Live with Captain Midnight Agent Pierson
1981 Bordello Judge
1982 The Incubus Hank Walden
1985 Martin's Day Brewer
1985 Treasure of the Amazon Priest
1985 Miami Golem Anderson
1986 Thunder Run George Adams
1987 Terror Night Lance Hayward
1988 Bonanza: The Next Generation Capt. Aaron Cartwright TV movie
1988 Messenger of Death Zenas Beecham
1989 Sundown: The Vampire in Retreat Ethan Jefferson
1990 The Graveyard Story Dr. McGregor
1992 Waxwork II: Lost in Time King Arthur
1992 Hammer Down Lt. Bates (final film role)

References

  1. ^ Wyndham Wise (April 3, 2011). "John Ireland". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 26, 2018.
  2. ^ "Actor John Ireland dies at 78". Las Vegas Review–Journal. Associated Press. March 22, 1992. p. 2.f.
  3. ^ "John Ireland". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  4. ^ a b c d "John Ireland, 78, Longtime Actor With Role in 'All the King's Men'" Bruce Lambert, THE NEW YORK TIMES, March 22, 1992
  5. ^ "Actor John Ireland Suspended by Studio". Los Angeles Times. December 22, 1949. p. A8.
  6. ^ "Actor Petitions Court to Break Film Contract". Los Angeles Times. December 15, 1949. p. 26.
  7. ^ "Actor John Ireland Files $1,756,000 Slander Suit: Charges He Was Dismissed From Television Series by False Claim of Communist Leanings". Los Angeles Times. March 3, 1954. p. 10.
  8. ^ "JOHN IRELAND AGREES TO SETTLING OF SUIT". The New York Times. May 22, 1954. p. 8.
  9. ^ "Joanne Dru and Ireland Countersued on Movie: Producer Asks for $200,000 Damages Against Their Action for Accounting". Los Angeles Times. November 27, 1953. p. 22.
  10. ^ Scheuer, Philip K. (June 21, 1953). "In Debut, John Ireland Directs 2D, 3D, Color and Wide Screen Western: Wide, Colorful Debut". Los Angeles Times. p. D1.
  11. ^ Ames, Walter (July 13, 1955). "VIDEO-RADIO BRIEFS: John Ireland Joins Directing Actors". Los Angeles Times. p. 26.
  12. ^ "JOHN IRELAND SET FOR 39 TV SHOWS: Actor Will Portray Captain in 'Port of Call,' Warner Brothers' Film Series". The New York Times. January 12, 1956. p. 55.
  13. ^ ""The Fight Back", Riverboat, October 18, 1959". Internet Movie Data Base. Retrieved February 23, 2013.
  14. ^ "Actor John Ireland dies". The Ottawa Citizen (Final\ ed.). March 23, 1992. p. C10.
  15. ^ "John Ireland; Played Tough Guys in Movies, TV Shows". Los Angeles Times (Home ed.). March 22, 1992. p. 38.
  16. ^ "JOANNE DRU HOSPITALIZED BY BLACKED EYES, PUFFED NOSE". Los Angeles Times. July 7, 1956. p. 3.
  17. ^ Aline Mosby (July 7, 1956). "Ireland, Joanne Land in Hospital After Row". The Washington Post and Times-Herald. p. 3.
  18. ^ "VERY LITTLE ELSE TO DIVIDE: Joanne Dru Gets Divorce, Must Help Pay Off $53,388.66 in Bills". Los Angeles Times. May 17, 1957. p. B1.
  19. ^ "LATE NEWS: John Ireland Bankrupt". Los Angeles Times. May 5, 1977. p. a1.
  20. ^ "John Ireland – Hollywood Star Walk –". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 9, 2017.

External links

john, ireland, this, article, about, actor, other, people, named, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, f. This article is about the actor For other people named John Ireland see John Ireland disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources John Ireland news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message John Benjamin Ireland January 30 1914 March 21 1992 was a Canadian actor 1 He was nominated for an Academy Award for his performance in All the King s Men 1949 making him the first Vancouver born actor to receive an Oscar nomination 2 John IrelandIreland in 1960BornJohn Benjamin Ireland 1914 01 30 January 30 1914Vancouver British Columbia CanadaDiedMarch 21 1992 1992 03 21 aged 78 Santa Barbara California U S Resting placeSanta Barbara Cemetery Santa Barbara California U S OccupationsActorfilm directorYears active1932 1992Spouse s Elaine Sheldon Rosen m 1940 div 1948 wbr Joanne Dru m 1949 div 1957 wbr Daphne Myrick Cameron m 1962 died 1992 wbr Children4RelativesTommy Noonan half brother Ireland was a supporting actor in several Western films such as My Darling Clementine 1946 Red River 1948 Vengeance Valley 1951 and Gunfight at the O K Corral 1957 His other film roles include A Walk in the Sun 1945 Joan Of Arc 1948 Spartacus 1960 55 Days at Peking 1963 The Fall of the Roman Empire 1964 The Adventurers 1970 and Farewell My Lovely 1975 Ireland also appeared in many television series notably The Cheaters 1960 62 He was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contribution to the television industry Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Theatre 2 2 20th Century Fox 2 3 Freelance actor and Red River 2 4 All the King s Men 2 5 Director 2 6 1960s 2 7 1970s 2 8 Later career 3 Personal life 4 Filmography 5 References 6 External linksEarly life EditIreland was born in Vancouver British Columbia on January 30 1914 3 He lived in New York City from a very early age Ireland s formal education ended at the 7th grade and he worked to help his family make ends meet He never knew his natural father his mother a Scottish piano teacher Gracie Ferguson remarried to Michael Noone an Irish vaudevillian and had three other children a daughter Kathryn a son named Tommy the future actor comedian Tommy Noonan and another son Michael Their last name was Noone Ireland never knew for sure where his last name came from One of his jobs was in a water carnival where he wrestled a dead octopus He was a swimmer once competing with Johnny Weissmuller He performed underwater stunts at a carnival and worked as a barker Career EditTheatre Edit One day he was passing the Davenport Free Theater in Manhattan He entered thinking it offered a free show and instead received free training He slept in a dressing room and was paid a dollar a day to work backstage while rehearsing lines citation needed In 1941 he made his Broadway debut in a production of Macbeth with Maurice Evans and Judith Anderson Other Broadway plays followed 4 20th Century Fox Edit Ireland signed with 20th Century Fox and made his screen debut as Private Windy the thoughtful letter writing GI in the 1945 war film A Walk in the Sun directed by Lewis Milestone This was followed by Wake Up and Dream 1946 Behind Green Lights 1946 with Carole Landis and It Shouldn t Happen to a Dog 1946 again with Landis He played Billy Clanton in John Ford s My Darling Clementine 1946 Freelance actor and Red River Edit Ireland had his first lead role in Railroaded 1947 directed by Anthony Mann for Eagle Lion He went back to support parts for The Gangster 1947 for the King Brothers and I Love Trouble 1948 for Columbia Ireland played the lead in Open Secret 1948 for Eagle Lion then had a support role in Anthony Mann s classic noir Raw Deal 1948 Ireland had a vital support part in Howard Hawks 1948 film Red River as the gunslinger Cherry Valance However Ireland s part was reduced when Hawks became annoyed with the actor Ireland was an army captain in the Ingrid Bergman spectacular Joan of Arc 1948 All the King s Men Edit In April 1948 Ireland signed a contract with Columbia Pictures at 500 a week going up to 1500 a week Ireland was nominated for an Oscar as Best Supporting Actor for his powerful performance as Jack Burden the hard boiled newspaper reporter who evolves from devotee to cynical denouncer of demagogue Willie Stark Broderick Crawford in All the King s Men 1949 making him the first Vancouver born actor to receive an Academy Award nomination Ireland was featured as Bob Ford in the low budget I Shot Jesse James 1949 the first movie directed by Sam Fuller He was a villain in the Western Roughshod 1949 and a love rival for Paulette Goddard in Anna Lucasta 1949 In December 1949 Columbia suspended him after walking out after filming one scene on One Way Out released as Convicted 5 He sued the studio 6 Lippert Pictures gave him the lead in The Return of Jesse James 1950 and he appeared opposite his then wife Joanne Dru in support parts in Vengeance Valley 1951 During McCarthyism in the early 50s he successfully sued two television producers for breach of contract and slander claiming that they reneged on roles promised to him due to his perceived political undesirability including the lead in a TV series The Adventures of Ellery McQueen He received an undisclosed but substantial cash settlement 4 7 8 Ireland had the leads in some low budget films The Basketball Fix 1951 The Scarf 1951 Little Big Horn 1951 The Bushwackers 1952 and Hannah Lee 1953 with his wife He directed the latter That film resulted in a lawsuit against the producers 9 10 He went to England to make The Good Die Young 1954 and supported his wife in Southwest Passage 1954 and Joan Crawford in Queen Bee 1955 Director Edit John Ireland turned director with The Fast and the Furious 1954 an early production from Roger Corman Ireland also starred He had the lead in the British thriller The Glass Cage 1955 and the war film Hell s Horizon 1955 He made another for Corman this time only as an actor Gunslinger 1956 In July 1955 he signed a contract with Revue to act and direct films for television 11 In January 1956 he signed to play the lead in the TV series Port of Call 12 Ireland landed a supporting role as Johnny Ringo in Gunfight at the O K Corral 1957 and played a mobster in MGM s Party Girl 1958 He had the lead in No Place to Land 1958 and Stormy Crossing 1958 In 1959 Ireland appeared as Chris Slade with Karl Swenson as Ansel Torgin in the episode The Fight Back of the NBC western series Riverboat In the storyline Tom Fowler Tom Laughlin the boss of the corrupt river town of Hampton near Vicksburg Mississippi blocks farmers from shipping their crops to market In a dispute over a wedding held on the Enterprise a lynch mob led by Fowler comes after series lead character Grey Holden Darren McGavin Karl Swenson also was cast in this episode 13 1960s Edit In 1959 John guest appeared on Judy Garland s album The Letter for Capitol Records Ireland had a key role as the gladiator Crixus in the Stanley Kubrick 1960 spectacle Spartacus co starring with Kirk Douglas That year he starred as Winch in the western series Rawhide episode Incident of the Garden of Eden and made Faces in the Dark 1960 in England He also appeared in the Thriller TV series 1960 episode Papa Benjamin From 1960 to 1962 he starred in the British television series The Cheaters playing John Hunter a claims investigator for an insurance company who tracked down cases of fraud He supported Elvis Presley in Wild in the Country 1961 and had the lead in the British Return of a Stranger 1961 In 1962 he portrayed the character Frank Trask in the episode Incident of the Portrait on Rawhide Rawhide S7 EP28 Air date May 7 1965 THE SPANISH CAMP A group of men led by Dr John Merritt John Ireland searching for old Spanish treasure stubbornly refuses to let the cattle drive come through the area of their diggings even though the herd desperately needs the water in the area He had a supporting part in 55 Days at Peking 1963 with Charlton Heston and was Ballomar in The Fall of the Roman Empire 1964 both films shot in Spain by producer Samuel Bronston By the mid 1960s he was seen as the star of B movies such as I Saw What You Did with Crawford In 1965 he played role of Jed Colby a trail scout in the final season of Rawhide In 1966 he starred in the episode Stage Stop S12E10 as abusive husband and stage coach robbery collaborator Jeb Coombs on Gunsmoke In 1967 he appeared as Marshal Will Rimbau on Bonanza with Michael Landon in the episode Judgment at Red Creek A few years later he again appeared with Landon on two episodes of Little House on the Prairie as a drunk who saves Carrie Ingalls who had fallen down an abandoned mine shaft in season 3 episode Little Girl Lost and season 5 episode The Winoka Warriors citation needed He had some leads in the A C Lyles Western Fort Utah 1967 then traveled to Europe to appear in Hate for Hate 1967 and Pistol for a Hundred Coffins 1967 and supported in Villa Rides 1968 Trusting Is Good Shooting Is Better 1969 One on Top of the Other 1969 and Carnal Circuit 1969 1970s Edit In 1970 Ireland appeared as Kinroy in the TV western The Men From Shiloh rebranded name for The Virginian in the episode titled Jenny Ireland was seen in productions like The House of Seven Corpses 1974 Salon Kitty 1976 and Satan s Cheerleaders 1977 He did however also appear in big budget fare such as The Adventurers 1970 also as a police lieutenant in the Robert Mitchum private eye story Farewell My Lovely 1975 Later career Edit In 1987 he put an ad in the newspapers stating I m an actor let me act 14 It led to a role as Jonathan Aaron Cartwright the younger brother of Ben Cartwright in the television movie Bonanza The Next Generation 15 He was seen in the War of the Worlds episode Eye for an Eye in 1988 Ireland regularly returned to the stage throughout his career and co directed two features in the 1950s the acclaimed Western drama Hannah Lee 1953 and the carjacking B movie The Fast and the Furious 1955 Personal life Edit 1960 gossip magazine with a story about Ireland and Tuesday Weld Occasionally Ireland s name was mentioned in tabloids of the times in connection with much younger starlets including Natalie Wood Barbara Payton and Sue Lyon He attracted controversy by dating 16 year old actress Tuesday Weld when he was 45 Ireland also had an affair with co star Joan Crawford while on the set of Queen Bee 1955 A decade later Ireland and Crawford co starred again in William Castle s movie I Saw What You Did He was married three times His first wife from 1940 to 1949 was Elaine Sheldon by whom he had two sons John and Peter From 1949 to 1957 he was married to actress Joanne Dru whose younger brother entertainer Peter Marshall was originally best known for his comedy act with Ireland s half brother Tommy Noonan In July 1956 Dru was admitted to hospital with a black eye which she said was accidental but which commonly was believed to have been caused by Ireland 16 Ireland later was admitted to hospital for taking an overdose of barbiturates 17 When the couple divorced in 1957 they had over 50 000 in debts 18 From 1962 until his death Ireland was married to Daphne Myrick Cameron with whom he had a daughter named Daphne and a son named Cameron He has four grandchildren Pete Melissa Jack and Helios 4 In his later years he owned the restaurant Ireland s in Santa Barbara California An accomplished chef he regularly worked in the kitchen and concocted Ireland Stew combining whatever ingredients were available on a given night He was also a regular at the restaurant s bar greeting patrons and buying drinks for friends citation needed The restaurant failed In May 1977 Ireland declared bankruptcy 19 On March 21 1992 Ireland died in Santa Barbara California of leukemia at the age of 78 4 He is buried at the Santa Barbara Cemetery For his contribution to the television industry he was commemorated with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1610 Vine Street 20 Filmography EditYear Title Role Notes1945 A Walk in the Sun Pfc Windy Craven1946 Behind Green Lights Det Engelhofer1946 Somewhere in the Night Minor Role Voice Uncredited1946 It Shouldn t Happen to a Dog Benny Smith1946 My Darling Clementine Billy Clanton1946 Wake Up and Dream Howard Williams1947 Repeat Performance Narrator Voice Uncredited1947 Railroaded Duke Martin1947 The Gangster Frank Karty1948 I Love Trouble Reno1948 Open Secret Paul Lester1948 Raw Deal Fantail1948 A Southern Yankee Capt Jed Calbern1948 Red River Cherry Valance1948 Joan of Arc Jean de la Boussac St Severe1949 I Shot Jesse James Bob Ford1949 The Walking Hills Frazee1949 The Undercover Man Narrator Voice Uncredited1949 Roughshod Lednov1949 The Doolins of Oklahoma Bitter Creek1949 Anna Lucasta Danny Johnson1949 Mr Soft Touch Henry Early Byrd1949 All the King s Men Jack Burden Academy Award nomination for Ireland the film won the Oscar for Best Picture1950 Cargo to Capetown Steve Conway1950 The Return of Jesse James Johnny Callum1951 Vengeance Valley Hub Fasken1951 The Scarf John Howard Barrington1951 Little Big Horn Lt John Haywood1951 The Basketball Fix Pete Ferreday1951 Red Mountain Gen William Quantrill1951 The Bushwackers Jefferson Waring1952 Hurricane Smith Hurricane Smith1953 The 49th Man Investigator John Williams1953 Hannah Lee Marshal Sam Rochelle Also co director Released in color and 3 D re released flat in B amp W a k a Outlaw Territory1953 Combat Squad Sgt Ken Fletch Fletcher1954 The Good Die Young Eddie Blaine1954 Southwest Passage Clint McDonald1954 Security Risk Ralph Payne1954 The Steel Cage Al a Ringleader segment The Hostages 1955 The Glass Cage Pel Pelham1955 The Fast and the Furious Frank Webster Also co director 1955 Queen Bee Judd Prentiss1955 Hell s Horizon Capt John Merrill1956 Gunslinger Cane Miro1957 Gunfight at the O K Corral Johnny Ringo1958 Stormy Crossing Griff Parker1958 No Place to Land Jonas Bailey1958 Party Girl Louis Canetto1959 Med mord i bagaget Johnny Greco1960 Spartacus Crixus1960 Faces in the Dark Max Hammond1961 Wild in the Country Phil Macy1961 Return of a Stranger Ray Reed1962 Brushfire Jeff Saygure1963 55 Days at Peking Sgt Harry1963 The Ceremony Prison Warden1964 The Fall of the Roman Empire Ballomar1965 I Saw What You Did Steve Marek1965 Day of the Nightmare Detective Sgt Dave Harmon1967 Hate for Hate James Arthur Cooper1967 Fort Utah Tom Horn1967 Dirty Heroes Capt O Connor1967 Caxambu Vince Neff1968 Go for Broke The Owl1968 Arizona Bushwhackers Deputy Dan Shelby1968 Villa Rides Client in barber shop Uncredited1968 Trusting Is Good Shooting Is Better The Colonel1968 Pistol for a Hundred Coffins Douglas1968 Run Man Run Santillana1968 A Taste of Death Dan El1968 Revenge for Revenge Maj Bower1968 Gatling Gun Tarpas1969 El Che Guevara Stuart1969 Carnal Circuit Richard Salinger1969 One on Top of the Other Inspector Wald1969 Zenabel Don Alonso Imolne1969 I diavoli della guerra American General Uncredited1970 Men From Shiloh rebranded name of The Virginian Kinroy1970 La sfida dei MacKenna Jones1970 The Adventurers Mr James Hadley1972 Escape to the Sun Jacob Kagan1972 Northeast of Seoul Flanagan1973 Huyendo del halcon Shot in 19661974 The House of Seven Corpses Eric Hartman1974 The Phantom of Hollywood Lieutenant Gifford TV movie1974 Welcome to Arrow Beach Sheriff Duke Bingham1974 Dieci bianchi uccisi da un piccolo indiano Abel Webster1975 Farewell My Lovely Det Lt Nulty1975 We Are No Angels Mr Shark1976 Salon Kitty Cliff1976 Sex Diary Milton1976 The Swiss Conspiracy Dwight McGowan1977 Assault in Paradise Chief Haliburton a k a The Ransom and Maniac 1977 Mission to Glory A True Story Benny1977 Satan s Cheerleaders The Sheriff1977 Love and the Midnight Auto Supply Tony Santore1977 Quel pomeriggio maledetto Benny1977 The Moon and a Mumur1978 Tomorrow Never Comes Captain1979 H G Wells The Shape of Things to Come Senator Smedley1979 Crossbar Miles Kornylo TV movie1979 Guyana Cult of the Damned Dave Cole1979 Delta Fox Lucas Johnson1979 On the Air Live with Captain Midnight Agent Pierson1981 Bordello Judge1982 The Incubus Hank Walden1985 Martin s Day Brewer1985 Treasure of the Amazon Priest1985 Miami Golem Anderson1986 Thunder Run George Adams1987 Terror Night Lance Hayward1988 Bonanza The Next Generation Capt Aaron Cartwright TV movie1988 Messenger of Death Zenas Beecham1989 Sundown The Vampire in Retreat Ethan Jefferson1990 The Graveyard Story Dr McGregor1992 Waxwork II Lost in Time King Arthur1992 Hammer Down Lt Bates final film role References Edit Wyndham Wise April 3 2011 John Ireland The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved October 26 2018 Actor John Ireland dies at 78 Las Vegas Review Journal Associated Press March 22 1992 p 2 f John Ireland Los Angeles Times Retrieved July 17 2013 a b c d John Ireland 78 Longtime Actor With Role in All the King s Men Bruce Lambert THE NEW YORK TIMES March 22 1992 Actor John Ireland Suspended by Studio Los Angeles Times December 22 1949 p A8 Actor Petitions Court to Break Film Contract Los Angeles Times December 15 1949 p 26 Actor John Ireland Files 1 756 000 Slander Suit Charges He Was Dismissed From Television Series by False Claim of Communist Leanings Los Angeles Times March 3 1954 p 10 JOHN IRELAND AGREES TO SETTLING OF SUIT The New York Times May 22 1954 p 8 Joanne Dru and Ireland Countersued on Movie Producer Asks for 200 000 Damages Against Their Action for Accounting Los Angeles Times November 27 1953 p 22 Scheuer Philip K June 21 1953 In Debut John Ireland Directs 2D 3D Color and Wide Screen Western Wide Colorful Debut Los Angeles Times p D1 Ames Walter July 13 1955 VIDEO RADIO BRIEFS John Ireland Joins Directing Actors Los Angeles Times p 26 JOHN IRELAND SET FOR 39 TV SHOWS Actor Will Portray Captain in Port of Call Warner Brothers Film Series The New York Times January 12 1956 p 55 The Fight Back Riverboat October 18 1959 Internet Movie Data Base Retrieved February 23 2013 Actor John Ireland dies The Ottawa Citizen Final ed March 23 1992 p C10 John Ireland Played Tough Guys in Movies TV Shows Los Angeles Times Home ed March 22 1992 p 38 JOANNE DRU HOSPITALIZED BY BLACKED EYES PUFFED NOSE Los Angeles Times July 7 1956 p 3 Aline Mosby July 7 1956 Ireland Joanne Land in Hospital After Row The Washington Post and Times Herald p 3 VERY LITTLE ELSE TO DIVIDE Joanne Dru Gets Divorce Must Help Pay Off 53 388 66 in Bills Los Angeles Times May 17 1957 p B1 LATE NEWS John Ireland Bankrupt Los Angeles Times May 5 1977 p a1 John Ireland Hollywood Star Walk Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 9 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Ireland John Ireland at IMDb John Ireland at the Internet Broadway Database John Ireland at Find a GravePortals Biography Canada New York state New York City California Theatre Film Television Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Ireland amp oldid 1142149312, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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