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Mickey Rooney

Mickey Rooney (born Joseph Yule Jr.; other pseudonym Mickey Maguire;[1] September 23, 1920 – April 6, 2014) was an American actor, producer, radio entertainer, and vaudevillian. In a career spanning nearly nine decades, he appeared in more than 300 films and was among the last surviving stars of the silent-film era.[2] He was the top box-office attraction from 1939 to 1941,[3] and one of the best-paid actors of that era.[4] At the height of a career marked by declines and comebacks, Rooney performed the role of Andy Hardy in a series of 16 films in the 1930s and 1940s that epitomized the mainstream United States self-image.

Mickey Rooney
Rooney in 1945
Born
Joseph Yule Jr.

(1920-09-23)September 23, 1920
DiedApril 6, 2014(2014-04-06) (aged 93)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Resting placeHollywood Forever Cemetery, Los Angeles
Other namesMickey Maguire
Occupations
  • Actor
  • producer
  • radio entertainer
  • vaudevillian
Years active1926–2014
Notable workFull list
Spouses
  • (m. 1942; div. 1943)
  • (m. 1944; div. 1949)
  • (m. 1949; div. 1951)
  • (m. 1952; div. 1958)
  • Barbara Ann Thomason
    (m. 1958; died 1966)
  • Marge Lane
    (m. 1966; div. 1967)
  • Carolyn Hockett
    (m. 1969; div. 1975)
  • Jan Chamberlin
    (m. 1978; sep. 2012)
Children9, including Tim, Michael, Teddy, and Mickey Jr.
Parent
Websitemickeyrooney.com

At the peak of his career between ages 15 and 25, he made 43 films, and was one of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's most consistently successful actors. A versatile performer, he became a celebrated character actor later in his career. Laurence Olivier once said he considered Rooney "the best there has ever been".[4] Clarence Brown, who directed him in two of his earliest dramatic roles in National Velvet and The Human Comedy, said Rooney was "the closest thing to a genius" with whom he had ever worked.[5] He won a Golden Globe Award in 1982 and an Emmy Award in the same year for the title role in a television movie Bill and was awarded the Academy Honorary Award in 1982.

Rooney first performed in vaudeville as a child actor, and made his film debut at the age of six. He played the title character in the "Mickey McGuire" series of 78 short films, from age seven to 13. At 14 and 15, he played Puck in the play and subsequent film adaptation of A Midsummer Night's Dream. At the age of 16, he began playing Andy Hardy, and gained his first recognition at 17 as Whitey Marsh in Boys Town. At only 19, Rooney became the second-youngest Best Actor in a Leading Role nominee and the first teenager to be nominated for an Academy Award for his performance as Mickey Moran in 1939 film adaptation of coming-of-age Broadway musical Babes in Arms; he was awarded a special Academy Juvenile Award in 1939.[6] Rooney received his second Academy Award nomination in the same category for his role as Homer Macauley in The Human Comedy.

Drafted into the military during World War II, Rooney served nearly two years, entertaining over two million troops on stage and radio. He was awarded a Bronze Star for performing in combat zones. Returning in 1945, he was too old for juvenile roles, but too short at 5 ft 2 in (157 cm) for most adult roles, and was unable to gain as many starring roles. However, numerous low-budget, but critically well-received films noir had Rooney playing the lead during this period and the 1950s. Rooney's career was renewed with well-received supporting roles in films such as The Bold and the Brave (1956), Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962), It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), Pete's Dragon (1977), and The Black Stallion (1979). Rooney received Academy Award nominations for Best Actor in a Supporting Role in 1957 for The Bold and the Brave, and 1980 for The Black Stallion. In the early 1980s, he returned to Broadway in Sugar Babies, a role that earned him nominations for Tony Award and Drama Desk Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical. He made hundreds of appearances on TV, including dramas, variety programs, and talk shows.

Early life and acting background edit

Rooney was born Joseph Yule, Jr.,[7] in the Brooklyn borough of New York City on September 23, 1920, the only child of Nellie W. Carter and Joe Yule.[8] His mother was an American former chorus girl and burlesque performer from Kansas City, Missouri, while his father was a Scottish-born vaudevillian, who had emigrated to New York from Glasgow with his family at the age of three months.[4] They lived in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn.[9] When Rooney was born, his parents were appearing together in a Brooklyn production of A Gaiety Girl. He later recounted in his memoirs that he began performing at the age of 17 months as part of his parents' routine, wearing a specially tailored tuxedo.[10][11][12]

Career edit

1924–1926: Career beginnings as a child actor edit

Rooney's parents separated when he was four years old in 1924, and he and his mother moved to Hollywood the following year. He made his first film appearance at age six in 1926, in the short Not to be Trusted.[4][13] Rooney got bit parts in films such as The Beast of the City (1932) and The Life of Jimmy Dolan (1933), which allowed him to work alongside stars such as Joel McCrea, Colleen Moore, Clark Gable, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., John Wayne, and Jean Harlow. He enrolled in the Hollywood Professional School and later attended Fairfax High School.[14]

1927–1936: Mickey McGuire edit

His mother saw an advertisement for a child to play the role of "Mickey McGuire" in a series of short films.[15] Rooney got the role and became "Mickey" for 78 of the films, running from 1927 to 1936, starting with Mickey's Circus (1927), his first starring role.[a][b] During this period, he also briefly voiced Oswald the Lucky Rabbit for Walter Lantz Productions.[19] He made other films in his adolescence, including several more of the McGuire films. At age 14, he played the role of Puck in the Warner Bros. all-star adaptation of A Midsummer Night's Dream in 1935. Critic David Thomson hailed his performance as "one of the cinema's most arresting pieces of magic". Rooney then moved to MGM, where he befriended Judy Garland, with whom he began making a series of musicals that propelled both of them to stardom.[20][21][22]

1937–1944: Andy Hardy films and Hollywood stardom edit

 
Rooney with Judy Garland in Love Finds Andy Hardy (1938)

In 1937, Rooney was selected to portray Andy Hardy in A Family Affair, which MGM had planned as a B-movie.[15] Rooney provided comic relief as the son of Judge James K. Hardy, portrayed by Lionel Barrymore (although former silent-film leading man Lewis Stone played the role of Judge Hardy in subsequent pictures). The film was an unexpected success, and led to 13 more Andy Hardy films between 1937 and 1946, and a final film in 1958.

According to author Barry Monush, MGM wanted the Andy Hardy films to appeal to all family members. Rooney's character portrayed a typical "anxious, hyperactive, girl-crazy teenager", and he soon became the unintended main star of the films. Although some critics describe the series of films as "sweet, overly idealized, and pretty much interchangeable," their ultimate success was because they gave viewers a "comforting portrait of small-town America that seemed suited for the times", with Rooney instilling "a lasting image of what every parent wished their teen could be like".[23]

Behind the scenes, however, Rooney was like the "hyperactive girl-crazy teenager" he portrayed on the screen. Wallace Beery, his co-star in Stablemates, described him as a "brat", but a "fine actor".[24] MGM head Louis B. Mayer found it necessary to manage Rooney's public image, explains historian Jane Ellen Wayne:

Mayer naturally tried to keep all his child actors in line, like any father figure. After one such episode, Mickey Rooney replied, "I won't do it. You're asking the impossible." Mayer then grabbed young Rooney by his lapels and said, "Listen to me! I don't care what you do in private. Just don't do it in public. In public, behave. Your fans expect it. You're Andy Hardy! You're the United States! You're the Stars and Stripes. Behave yourself! You're a symbol!" Mickey nodded. "I'll be good, Mr. Mayer. I promise you that." Mayer let go of his lapels, "All right," he said.[25]

Fifty years later, Rooney realized in hindsight that these early confrontations with Mayer were necessary for him to develop into a leading film star: "Everybody butted heads with him, but he listened and you listened. And then you'd come to an agreement you could both live with. ... He visited the sets, he gave people talks ... What he wanted was something that was American, presented in a cosmopolitan manner."[26]

 
Spencer Tracy and Rooney in a scene from Boys Town (1938)
 
Lionel Barrymore's 61st birthday in 1939, standing: Mickey Rooney, Robert Montgomery, Clark Gable, Louis B. Mayer, William Powell, Robert Taylor, seated: Norma Shearer, Lionel Barrymore, and Rosalind Russell

In 1937, Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with Thoroughbreds Don't Cry.[27] Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co-starred in future films and became a successful song-and-dance team. Audiences delighted in seeing the "playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry".[28] Along with three of the Andy Hardy films, where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy, they appeared together in a string of successful musicals, including coming-of-age musical Babes in Arms (1939). For his performance as Mickey Moran, 19-year-old Mickey Rooney was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, becoming the second-youngest Best Actor nominee. During an interview in the 1992 documentary film MGM: When the Lion Roars, Rooney describes their friendship:[29]

Judy and I were so close we could've come from the same womb. We weren't like brothers or sisters but there was no love affair there; there was more than a love affair. It's very, very difficult to explain the depths of our love for each other. It was so special. It was a forever love. Judy, as we speak, has not died. She's always with me in every heartbeat of my body.

In 1937, Rooney received top billing as Shockey Carter in Hoosier Schoolboy, but his breakthrough role as a dramatic actor came in 1938's Boys Town opposite Spencer Tracy as Father Flanagan, who runs a home for wayward and homeless boys. 18-year-old Rooney and 17-year-old Deanna Durbin were awarded a special Juvenile Academy Award in 1939, for "significant contribution in bringing to the screen the spirit and personification of youth".[30][31] Jane Ellen Wayne describes one of the "most famous scenes" in the film, where tough young Rooney is playing poker with a cigarette in his mouth, his hat is cocked, and his feet are up on the table. "Tracy grabs him by the lapels, throws the cigarette away, and pushes him into a chair. 'That's better,' he tells Mickey."[25] Louis B. Mayer said Boys Town was his favorite film during his years at MGM.[30]

Rooney was the biggest box-office draw in 1939, 1940, and 1941.[32] For their roles in Boys Town, Rooney and Tracy won first and second place in the Motion Picture Herald 1940 National Poll of Exhibitors, based on the box-office appeal of 200 players. A contributor to Boys' Life magazine wrote, "Congratulations to Messrs. Rooney and Tracy! Also to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer we extend a hearty thanks for their very considerable part in this outstanding achievement."[33] Actor Laurence Olivier once called Rooney "the greatest actor of them all".[34] He appeared on the cover of Time magazine in 1940, timed to coincide with the release of Young Tom Edison;[35] the cover story began:[36]

Hollywood's No. 1 box office bait in 1939 was not Clark Gable, Errol Flynn, or Tyrone Power, but a rope-haired, kazoo-voiced kid with a comic-strip face, who until this week had never appeared in a picture without mugging or overacting it. His name (assumed) was Mickey Rooney, and to a large part of the more articulate U.S. cinema audience, his name was becoming a frequently used synonym for brat.

During his long career, Rooney also worked with many of the screen's female stars, including Elizabeth Taylor in National Velvet (1944), Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), [37] Marilyn Monroe in The Fireball (1950) and Grace Kelly in The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954). Rooney's "bumptiousness and boyish charm" as an actor developed more "smoothness and polish" over the years, writes biographer Scott Eyman. The fact that Rooney fully enjoyed his life as an actor played a large role in those changes:

You weren't going to work, you were going to have fun. It was home, everybody was cohesive; it was family. One year I made nine pictures; I had to go from one set to another. It was like I was on a conveyor belt. You did not read a script and say, "I guess I'll do it." You did it. They had people that knew the kind of stories that were suited to you. It was a conveyor belt that made motion pictures.[38]

Clarence Brown, who directed Rooney in his Oscar-nominated performance in The Human Comedy (1943) and again in National Velvet (1944), enjoyed working with Rooney in films:

Mickey Rooney is the closest thing to a genius that I ever worked with. There was Chaplin, then there was Rooney. The little bastard could do no wrong in my book ... All you had to do with him was rehearse it once.[39]

Military service and later film career edit

 
Rooney entertains American troops in Germany, April 1945
 
Rooney with Tom Poston (right) circa 1940s
 
Rooney feeds the troops for the USO in 1952.

In June 1944, Rooney was inducted into the United States Army, where[40] he served more than 21 months (until shortly after the end of World War II) entertaining the troops in America and Europe in Special Services. He spent part of the time as a radio personality on the American Forces Network, and was awarded the Bronze Star Medal for entertaining troops in combat zones. In addition to the Bronze Star, Rooney also received the Army Good Conduct Medal, American Campaign Medal, European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal, and World War II Victory Medal, for his military service.[41][self-published source][42][43]

Rooney's career declined after his return to civilian life. He was now an adult with a height of only 5 feet 2 inches (1.57 m)[44] (5 feet 1 inch (1.55 m) according to his 1942 draft registration)[45] and he could no longer play the role of a teenager, but he also lacked the stature of most leading men. He appeared in the film Words and Music in 1948, which paired him for the last time with Garland on film (he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on The Judy Garland Show). He briefly starred in a CBS radio series, Shorty Bell, in the summer of 1948, and reprised his role as Andy Hardy, with most of the original cast, in a syndicated radio version of The Hardy Family in 1949 and 1950 (repeated on Mutual during 1952).[46]

In 1949, Variety reported a renegotiation of Rooney's deal with MGM. He agreed to make one film a year for them for five years at $25,000 a movie (his fee until then had been $100,000, but Rooney wanted to enter independent production.) Rooney claimed he was unhappy with the billing MGM gave him for Words and Music,[47] but his career was at a low point. His New York Times obituary reported, "at one point in 1950, the only job he could get was touring Southern states with the Hadacol Caravan", promoting a patent medicine that was later forced off the market.[7]

His first television series, The Mickey Rooney Show, also known as Hey, Mulligan, was created by Blake Edwards with Rooney as his own producer, and appeared on NBC television for 32 episodes from August 1954 to June 1955.[48] In 1951, he made his directorial debut with My True Story, starring Helen Walker.[49] Rooney also starred as a ragingly egomaniacal television comedian, loosely based on Red Buttons, in the live 90-minute television drama The Comedian, in the Playhouse 90 series on the evening of Valentine's Day in 1957, and as himself in a 1960 revue called The Musical Revue of 1959, based on the 1929 film The Hollywood Revue of 1929. In May 1956, Sequoia University awarded Rooney an honorary degree of PhD in Fine Arts for his work.[50]

In 1958, Rooney joined Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra in hosting an episode of NBC's short-lived Club Oasis comedy and variety show. In 1960, Rooney directed and starred in The Private Lives of Adam and Eve, an ambitious comedy known for its multiple flashbacks and many cameos. In the 1960s, Rooney returned to theatrical entertainment. He accepted film roles in undistinguished films, but still appeared in better works, such as Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962) and It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963).

He portrayed a Japanese character, Mr. Yunioshi, in the 1961 film version of Truman Capote's novella Breakfast at Tiffany's. His performance was criticized by some in subsequent years as a racist caricature.[51][52] Rooney later said that he would not have taken the role if he had known it would offend people.[53]

In 1961, Rooney appeared on television's What's My Line?, and mentioned that he had already started enrolling students in the Mickey Rooney School of Entertainment. His school venture never came to fruition. This was a period of professional distress for Rooney; as a childhood friend, director Richard Quine put it: "Let's face it. It wasn't all that easy to find roles for a 5-foot-3 man who'd passed the age of Andy Hardy."[54] In 1962, although he had earned $12 million by that point, his debts had forced him into filing for bankruptcy.[55][56]

In 1966, Rooney was working on the film Ambush Bay in the Philippines when his wife Barbara Ann Thomason—a former model and aspiring actress who had won 17 straight beauty contests in Southern California—was found dead in her bed. Her lover, Milos Milos—who was one of Rooney's actor-friends—was found dead beside her. Detectives ruled it a murder-suicide, which was committed with Rooney's own gun.[57]

Francis Ford Coppola had bought the rights to make The Black Stallion (1979), and when casting it, he called Rooney and asked him if he thought he could play a jockey. Rooney replied saying, "Gee, I don't know. I never played a jockey before." He was kidding, he said, since he had played a jockey in at least three past films, including Down the Stretch, Thoroughbreds Don't Cry, and National Velvet.[58] The film garnered excellent reviews and earned $40 million in its first run, which gave Coppola's struggling studio, American Zoetrope, a significant boost. It also gave Rooney newfound recognition, along with an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor.[59]

In 1983, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences gave Rooney their Academy Honorary Award for his lifetime of achievement.[60][61][62]

Character roles and Broadway comeback edit

Television roles edit

 
Rooney and James Dunn in the television special Mr. Broadway (1957)
 
Rooney with Sebastian Cabot on Checkmate in 1961
 
Rooney and Red Skelton on The Red Skelton Show in 1962
 
Guest stars for the 1961 premiere episode of The Dick Powell Show, "Who Killed Julie Greer?". Standing, from left: Ronald Reagan, Nick Adams, Lloyd Bridges, Mickey Rooney, Edgar Bergen, Jack Carson, Ralph Bellamy, Kay Thompson, Dean Jones. Seated, from left, Carolyn Jones and Dick Powell.

In addition to his movie roles, Rooney made numerous guest-starring roles as a television character actor for nearly six decades, beginning with an episode of Celanese Theatre. The part led to other roles on such television series as Schlitz Playhouse,[63] Playhouse 90,[63] Producers' Showcase, Alcoa Theatre,[63] The Soldiers, Wagon Train, General Electric Theater,[64] Hennesey,[65] The Dick Powell Theatre,[66] Arrest and Trial (1964),[66] Burke's Law (1963),[63] Combat! (1964),[66] The Fugitive, Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre, The Jean Arthur Show (1966),[66] The Name of the Game (1970),[63] Dan August (1970),[67] Night Gallery (1970),[67] The Love Boat,[68] Kung Fu: The Legend Continues (1995),[67] Murder, She Wrote (1992),[67] and The Golden Girls (1988)[67] among many others.

In 1961, he guest-starred in the 13-week James Franciscus adventure–drama CBS television series The Investigators.[66] In 1962, he was cast as himself in the episode "The Top Banana" of the CBS sitcom, Pete and Gladys,[63] starring Harry Morgan and Cara Williams.

In 1963, he entered CBS's The Twilight Zone,[69] giving a one-man performance in the episode "The Last Night of a Jockey" (1963).[66] Also in 1963, in 'The Hunt' for Suspense Theater,[66] he played the sadistic sheriff hunting the young surfer played by James Caan. In 1964, he launched another half-hour sitcom, Mickey. The story line had "Mickey" operating a resort hotel in Southern California. His own son Tim Rooney appeared as his character's teenaged son on this program, and Emmaline Henry starred as Rooney's wife. The program lasted for 17 episodes.[54]

When Norman Lear was developing All in the Family in 1970, he wanted Rooney for the lead role of Archie Bunker.[70] Rooney turned Lear down, and the role eventually went to Carroll O'Connor.

Rooney garnered a Golden Globe and an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or a Special for his role in 1981's Bill. Playing opposite Dennis Quaid, Rooney's character was a mentally handicapped man attempting to live on his own after leaving an institution. His acting quality in the film has been favorably compared to other actors who took on similar roles, including Sean Penn, Dustin Hoffman, and Tom Hanks.[71] He reprised his role in 1983's Bill: On His Own, earning an Emmy nomination for the turn. He appeared on "The Love Boat" S6 E11 "A Christmas Presence" as Angelorum Dominicus (a guardian angel character). His wife Jan Rooney played Sister Bernadette, a nun with a beautiful singing voice. The episode aired on 12/18/1982.

Rooney did voice acting from time to time. He provided the voice of Santa Claus in four stop-motion animated Christmas TV specials: Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town (1970), The Year Without a Santa Claus (1974),[72] Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July (1979)[72] and A Miser Brothers' Christmas (2008). In 1995, he appeared as himself on The Simpsons episode "Radioactive Man".[67]

After starring in one unsuccessful TV series and turning down an offer for a huge TV series, Rooney, now 70, starred in the Family Channel's The Adventures of the Black Stallion, where he reprised his role as Henry Dailey in the film of the same name, 11 years earlier.[68] The series ran for three years and was an international hit.[73]

Rooney appeared in television commercials for Garden State Life Insurance Company in 2002.[74]

Broadway shows edit

A major turning point came in 1979, when Rooney made his Broadway debut in the acclaimed stage play Sugar Babies, a musical revue tribute to the burlesque era co-starring former MGM dancing star Ann Miller. Aljean Harmetz noted, "Mr. Rooney fought over every skit and argued over every song and almost always got things done his way. The show opened on Broadway on October 8, 1979, to rave reviews, and this time he did not throw success away.[7] Rooney and Miller performed the show 1,208 times in New York and then toured with it for five years, including eight months in London.[75] Co-star Miller recalls that Rooney "never missed a performance or a chance to ad-lib or read the lines the same way twice, if he even stuck to the script".[55] Biographer Alvin Marill states, "at 59, Mickey Rooney was reincarnated as a baggy-pants comedian—back as a top banana in show biz in his belated Broadway debut."[55] For his performance, Rooney received nominations for Tony Award and Drama Desk Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical.

Following this, he toured as Pseudelous in Stephen Sondheim's A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.[76] In the 1990s, he returned to Broadway for the final months of Will Rogers Follies, playing the ghost of Will's father.[77] On television, he starred in the short-lived sitcom, One of the Boys,[78] along with two unfamiliar young stars, Dana Carvey and Nathan Lane, in 1982.

He toured Canada in a dinner theatre production of The Mind with the Naughty Man in the mid-1990s.[79] He played The Wizard in a stage production of The Wizard of Oz with Eartha Kitt at Madison Square Garden.[80] Kitt was later replaced by Jo Anne Worley.

 
Mickey Rooney speaks at the Pentagon in 2000 during a ceremony honoring the USO.

Final years edit

Rooney wrote a memoir titled Life is too Short, published by Villard Books in 1991. A Library Journal review said, "From title to the last line, 'I'll have a short bier', Rooney's self-deprecating humor powers this book." He wrote a novel about a child star, published in 1994, The Search for Sunny Skies.[81] On November 10, 2000, he starred in the Disney Channel original movie Phantom of the Megaplex.

Despite the millions of dollars that he earned over the years, such as his $65,000-a-week earnings from Sugar Babies, Rooney was plagued by financial problems late in life. His longtime gambling habit caused him to "gamble away his fortune again and again". He declared bankruptcy for the second time in 1996 and described himself as "broke" in 2005. He kept performing on stage and in the movies, but his personal property was valued at only $18,000 when he died in 2014.[82]

Rooney and his wife Jan toured the country in 2005 through 2011 in a musical revue called Let's Put on a Show. Vanity Fair called it "a homespun affair full of dog-eared jokes" that featured Rooney singing George Gershwin songs.[3]

In 2006, Rooney played Gus in Night at the Museum.[83][84] He returned to play the role again in the sequel Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian in 2009, in a scene that was deleted from the final film.[83]

 
Rooney on the set of Illusion Infinity (2003) with director Roger Steinmann

On May 26, 2007, Rooney was grand marshal at the Garden Grove Strawberry Festival. He made his British pantomime debut, playing Baron Hardup in Cinderella, at the Sunderland Empire Theatre over the 2007 Christmas period,[85][86] a role he reprised at Bristol Hippodrome in 2008 and at the Milton Keynes theatre in 2009.[87]

In 2011, Rooney made a cameo appearance in The Muppets, and in 2014, at age 93, six weeks before his death, he reprised his role as Gus in Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb, which was dedicated to Robin Williams, who also died that year, and to him.[88] Although confined to a wheelchair, he was described by director Shawn Levy as "energetic and so pleased to be there. He was just happy to be invited to the party."[83]

An October 2015 article in The Hollywood Reporter maintained that Rooney was frequently abused and financially depleted by his closest relatives in the last years of his life. The article said that it was clear that "one of the biggest stars of all time, who remained aloft longer than anyone in Hollywood history, was in the end brought down by those closest to him. He died humiliated and betrayed, nearly broke, and often broken."[4] Rooney suffered from bipolar disorder and had attempted suicide two or three times over the years, with resulting hospitalizations reported as "nervous breakdowns".[4]

Personal life edit

 
Rooney and his wife Jan at a Beverly Hills military concert in 2000

At the time of his death (April 6, 2014), Rooney was married to Jan Chamberlin Rooney, although they had separated in June 2012.[89] He had nine children and two stepchildren, as well as 19 grandchildren and several great-grandchildren.[90][91] Rooney had been addicted to sleeping pills and overcame the addiction in 2000 when he was in his late 70s.[3] In 1997, he was arrested on suspicion of beating his wife, Jan, but the charges were dropped due to lack of evidence.[92]

In the late 1970s, Rooney became a born-again Christian and was a fan of Pat Robertson.[93]

 
Rooney in 2006

On February 16, 2011, Rooney was granted a temporary restraining order against his stepson Christopher Aber and Aber's wife Christina, and they were ordered to stay 100 yards from Rooney, his stepson Mark Rooney, and Mark's wife Charlene.[94][95] Rooney claimed that he was a victim of elder abuse.[96] On March 2, 2011, Rooney appeared before a special U.S. Senate committee that was considering legislation to curb elder abuse, testifying about the abuse he claimed to have suffered at the hands of family members.[94] In 2011, all of Rooney's finances were permanently handed over to a conservator,[97] who called Rooney "completely competent".[96]

In April 2011, the temporary restraining order that Rooney was previously granted was replaced by a confidential settlement between Rooney and Aber.[98] Aber and Jan Rooney denied all the allegations.[99][100]

In May 2013, Rooney sold his home of many years, reportedly for $1.3 million, and split the proceeds with his wife, Jan.[13][101]

Marriages edit

Rooney was married eight times, with six of the marriages ending in divorce; his eighth and final marriage lasted longer than the previous seven put together. During the 1960s and 1970s he was often the subject of comedians' jokes over his apparent inability to stay married. In 1942, he married his first wife, actress Ava Gardner, who at that time was still an obscure teenaged starlet. They divorced the following year, partly because of alleged infidelity.[4] While stationed in the military in Alabama in 1944, Rooney met and married Betty Jane Phillips, who later became a singer under the name B. J. Baker. They had two sons together. This marriage ended in divorce after he returned from Europe at the end of World War II. His marriage to actress Martha Vickers in 1949 produced one son, but ended in divorce in 1951. He married actress Elaine Mahnken in 1952, and they divorced in 1958.[90][91]

In 1958, Rooney married model and actress Barbara Ann Thomason (stage name Carolyn Mitchell). She was murdered in 1966 by stuntman and actor Milos Milos, who then shot himself. Thomason and Milos had an affair while Rooney was traveling, and police theorized that Milos had shot her after she wanted to end it.[102] Rooney then married Barbara's best friend, Marge Lane, though the marriage lasted only 100 days. He was married to Carolyn Hockett from 1969 to 1975.[90] In 1978, he married his eighth and final wife, Jan Chamberlin. Their marriage lasted until his death, a total of 34 years (longer than his seven previous unions combined). However, they separated in 2012.[89]

Wife Years Children
Ava Gardner 1942–1943
Betty Jane Rase (née Phillips) 1944–1949 2, Mickey Rooney, Jr. and Tim Rooney
Martha Vickers 1949–1951 1, Teddy[103]
Elaine Devry
(a.k.a.: Elaine Davis)
1952–1958
Barbara Ann Thomason
(a.k.a.: Tara Thomas, Carolyn Mitchell)
1958–1966 4, Kelly Ann, Kerry, Michael Joseph Rooney and Kimmy Sue
Marge Lane 1966–1967
Carolyn Hockett 1969–1975 2, Jimmy and Jonelle
Jan Chamberlin 1978–2014
(separated, June 2012)[89]

Death edit

 
Grave and Crypt of Mickey Rooney at Hollywood Forever Cemetery

Rooney died of natural causes (including complications from diabetes) in Studio City, Los Angeles, California, on April 6, 2014,[104] at the age of 93.[105] A group of family members and friends, including Mickey Rourke, held a memorial service on April 18. A private funeral, organized by another set of family members, was held at Hollywood Forever Cemetery, where he was buried, on April 19. His eight surviving children said in a statement that they were barred from seeing Rooney during his final years.[106][107][108]

At his death, Vanity Fair called Rooney "the original Hollywood train wreck".[3] Despite earning millions during his career, he had to file for bankruptcy in 1962 due to mismanagement of his finances. In his later years, Rooney had entrusted his finances to his stepson, who funneled Rooney's earnings to pay for his own lavish lifestyle. His millions in earnings had dwindled to an estate that was valued at only $18,000. He died owing medical bills and back taxes, and contributions were solicited from the public.[109][110]

Legacy edit

 
Rooney in 1986

Rooney was one of the last surviving actors of the silent-film era. His film career spanned 88 years, from 1926 to 2014, continuing until shortly before his death. During his peak years from the late 1930s to the early 1940s, Rooney was among the top box-office stars in the United States,[111] and in 1939 was the biggest box-office draw, followed immediately by Tyrone Power.[112]

He made 43 films between the ages of 15 and 25. Among those, his role as Andy Hardy became one of "Hollywood's best-loved characters," with Marlon Brando calling him "the best actor in films".[23]

"There was nothing he couldn't do," said actress Margaret O'Brien.[111] MGM boss Louis B. Mayer treated him like a son and saw in Rooney "the embodiment of the amiable American boy who stands for family, humbug, and sentiment," wrote critic and author David Thomson.[113]

By the time Rooney was 20, his consistent portrayals of characters with youth and energy suggested that his future success was unlimited. Thomson also explains that Rooney's characters were able to cover a wide range of emotional types, and gives three examples where "Rooney is not just an actor of genius, but an artist able to maintain a stylized commentary on the demon impulse of the small, belligerent man:"[113]

Rooney's Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935) is truly inhuman, one of cinema's most arresting pieces of magic. ... His toughie in Boys Town (1938) struts and bullies like something out of a nightmare and then comes clean in a grotesque but utterly frank outburst of sentimentality in which he aspires to the boy community ... His role as Baby Face Nelson (1957), the manic, destructive response of the runt against a pig society.[113]

By the end of the 1940s, Rooney was no longer in demand, and his career declined. "In 1938," he said, "I starred in eight pictures. In 1948 and 1949 together, I starred in only three."[62] Film historian Jeanine Basinger observed while his career "reached the heights and plunged to the depths, Rooney kept on working and growing, the mark of a professional." Some of the films that reinvigorated his profile were Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962), It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), and The Black Stallion (1979). In the early 1980s, he returned to Broadway in Sugar Babies, and "found himself once more back on top".[62]

Basinger tries to encapsulate Rooney's career:

Rooney's abundant talent, like his film image, might seem like a metaphor for America: a seemingly endless supply of natural resources that could never dry up, but which, it turned out, could be ruined by excessive use and abuse, by arrogance or power, and which had to be carefully tended to be returned to full capacity. From child star to character actor, from movie shorts to television specials, and from films to Broadway, Rooney ultimately did prove he could do it all, do it well, and keep on doing it. His is a unique career, both for its versatility and its longevity.[62]

Acting credits and awards edit

One of the most enduring performers in show business history, Rooney appeared in over 300 films in 88 years.[2]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The film was long believed lost, but in 2014 was reported found in the Netherlands.[16]
  2. ^ The Mickey McGuire films were adapted from the Toonerville Trolley comic strip, which contained a character named Mickey McGuire. Joe Yule briefly became Mickey McGuire legally to "trump an attempted copyright lawsuit so the film producer Larry Darmour would not have to pay the comic-strip writers royalties". His mother also changed her surname to McGuire in an attempt to bolster the argument, but the film producers lost. The litigation settlement awarded damages to the owners of the cartoon character, compelling the 12-year-old actor to refrain from calling himself Mickey McGuire on- and off-screen.[17][18]
    During an interruption in the series in 1932, Mrs. Yule made plans to take her son on a 10-week vaudeville tour as McGuire, and Fox sued successfully to stop him from using the name. Mrs. Yule suggested the stage name of Mickey Looney for her comedian son. He altered this to Rooney, which did not infringe upon the copyright of Warner Bros.' animation series called Looney Tunes.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ "Mickey Rooney's Own Story". The Mail (Adelaide). Vol. 29, no. 1, 470. South Australia. July 27, 1940. p. 5 (Magazine Section). Retrieved October 13, 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
  2. ^ a b "Mickey Rooney, an enduring star". The Boston Globe. April 7, 2014. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d Sales, Nancy Jo (April 7, 2014). "Mickey Rooney Blew Through Wives and Fortunes, but God, What a Talent!". Vanity Fair. Retrieved January 27, 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Gary Baum and Scott Feinberg (October 21, 2015). "Tears and Terror: The Disturbing Final Years of Mickey Rooney". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved October 22, 2015.
  5. ^ "Iconic Actor Mickey Rooney Dies At 93". Dallas News. April 7, 2014. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  6. ^ . Los Angeles Times. April 7, 2014. Archived from the original on April 8, 2014. Retrieved November 16, 2015.
  7. ^ a b c Harmetz, Aljean (April 7, 2014). "Mickey Rooney, Master of Putting On a Show, Dies at 93". The New York Times. p. 1. Retrieved April 9, 2014.
  8. ^ "Joe Yule, 55, Father Of Mickey Rooney". The New York Times. March 31, 1950. p. 30. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
  9. ^ Ogle, Vanessa (March 24, 2015). "Authors share obscure history of Greenpoint". Brooklyn Paper. Retrieved February 22, 2019.
  10. ^ Rooney, Mickey (1991). Life is too short. Villard Books. ISBN 0-679-40195-4. OCLC 778940948.[page needed]
  11. ^ Bernstein, Adam (April 7, 2014). "Mickey Rooney dies at 93". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 10, 2014.
  12. ^ Lertzman & Birnes 2015, pp. 24–27.
  13. ^ a b Duke, Alan; Leopold, Todd (April 7, 2014). "Legendary actor Mickey Rooney dies at 93". CNN. Retrieved November 16, 2015.
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  15. ^ a b c Current Biography 1942. H.W. Wilson Co. (January 1942). pp. 704–06. ISBN 99903-960-3-5.
  16. ^ Barnes, Mike (March 30, 2014). "Lost Mickey Rooney Film Is Found and Set for Preservation". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved April 4, 2014.
  17. ^ Server, Lee (2007). Ava Gardner: "Love Is Nothing". St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-1-4299-0874-0.
  18. ^ Coons, Robbin (August 29, 1930). "Mother of Mickey McGuire Seeks to Change Her Name". The Evening Review. East Liverpool, Ohio. Retrieved January 10, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
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  20. ^ Krantz, Les. Their First Time in the Movies, The Overlook Press N.Y. (2001) p. 45
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  25. ^ a b Wayne, Jane Ellen (2005). The Leading Men of MGM. Carroll & Graf Publishers. p. 246. ISBN 978-0-7867-1475-9.
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  35. ^ "Young Tom Edison (1940)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved September 16, 2013. Time put Rooney on the cover, noting that his movies had grossed a whopping $30 million for MGM the previous year and praising him for 'his most sober and restrained performance to date' as young Edison, 'who (like himself) began at the bottom of the American heap, (like himself) had to struggle, (like himself) won, but a boy whose main activity (unlike Mickey's) was investigating, inventing, thinking.'
  36. ^ "Cinema: Success Story". Time. March 18, 1940. Retrieved September 16, 2013. Hollywood's No. 1 box office bait in 1939 was not Clark Gable, Errol Flynn, or Tyrone Power, but a rope-haired, kazoo-voiced kid with a comic-strip face, who until this week had never appeared in a picture without mugging or overacting it. His name (assumed) was Mickey Rooney, and to a large part of the more articulate U. S. cinema audience, his name was becoming a frequently used synonym for brat.
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  44. ^ Bergan, Ronald (April 7, 2014). "Mickey Rooney obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved April 7, 2014.
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  46. ^ Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 310. ISBN 978-0-19-507678-3.
  47. ^ "Rooney's $25,000 Per Metro Picture; He's Out to Cash in on Own Prods". Variety. April 13, 1949. p. 4. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  48. ^ Lertzman & Birnes 2015, p. 317.
  49. ^ Lertzman & Birnes 2015, p. 413.
  50. ^ Hopper, Hedda (May 31, 1956). "Altoona's Own Hedda Hopper Writes From Hollywood". The Altoona Mirror. p. 17.
  51. ^ Durant, Yvonne (June 18, 2006). "Where Holly Hung Her Ever-So-Stylish Hat". The New York Times. Retrieved October 3, 2010.
  52. ^ Dargis, Manohla (July 20, 2007). "Dude (Nyuck-Nyuck), I Love You (as If!)". The New York Times. Retrieved March 6, 2022.
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  56. ^ Green, Abel (January 8, 1964). "A Year of Tragedy & Trifles". Variety. p. 3.
  57. ^ Lertzman & Birnes 2015, p. 362.
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  62. ^ a b c d Unterburger, Amy L.; Lofting, Claire (1997). Actors and actresses. International dictionary of films and filmmakers. Vol. 3. St. James Press. pp. 1053–1056. ISBN 978-1-55862-300-2. OCLC 264881830.
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  69. ^ Lertzman & Birnes 2015, p. 595.
  70. ^ Mell, Eila (2008). Mickey Rooney as Archie Bunker. BearManor Media. ISBN 978-1593931452.
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  74. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "1/1/2002 Commercials Part 25". June 9, 2013. Retrieved June 18, 2017 – via YouTube.
  75. ^ Video: "Ann Miller and Mickey Rooney at the Palladium, 1988" on YouTube 8 min.
  76. ^ Lertzman & Birnes 2015, p. 351.
  77. ^ Lertzman & Birnes 2015, p. 547.
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  82. ^ Duke, Alan (May 9, 2014). "Mickey Rooney's widow contests late actor's will". CNN.
  83. ^ a b c Alexander, Bryan (December 17, 2014). "Mickey Rooney gives one final Museum moment". USA Today. Retrieved January 10, 2015.
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Bibliography

  • Best, Marc (1971). Those endearing young charms : Child performers of the screen. A.S. Barnes and Company. pp. 220–224. OCLC 937145025.
  • Dye, David (April 1988). Child and youth actors: filmographies of their entire careers, 1914–1985. McFarland. pp. 201–205. ISBN 978-0-89950-247-2.
  • Edelson, Edward (1979). Great Kids of the Movies. Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-14127-7.
  • Holmstrom, John (1996). The moving picture boy: an international encyclopaedia from 1895 to 1995. Michael Russell. pp. 100–102. ISBN 9780859551786.
  • Lertzman, Richard A.; Birnes, William J. (2015). The Life and Times of Mickey Rooney. Gallery Books. ISBN 978-1-5011-0096-3.
  • Marx, Arthur (1986). The Nine Lives of Mickey Rooney. Stein & Day. ISBN 978-0-8128-3056-9.
  • Parish, James Robert (1976). Great child stars. Ace Books. OCLC 475567835.
  • Rooney, Mickey (1991). Life is too short. Villard Books. ISBN 0-679-40195-4. OCLC 778940948.
  • Willson, Dixie (1935). Little Hollywood stars. Saalfield Pub. Co. OCLC 17445181.
  • Zierold, Norman J. (1965). The child stars. Coward-McCann. OCLC 475525671.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Mickey Rooney at IMDb
  • at the TCM Movie Database
  • Mickey Rooney at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • Mickey Rooney at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
  • Mickey Rooney discography at Discogs
  • Mickey Rooney at The Interviews: An Oral History of Television
  • . The Phil Silvers Show. Archived from the original on May 14, 2006. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  • "Mickey Rooney on America, Christ and Judy Garland: The Hollywood Legend Speaks Out." Montreal Mirror interview 1998. Republished on a blog as Montreal Mirror has dissolved.
  • "Mickey Rooney". Virtual History. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  • (PDF). Film Noir Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 29, 2013.
  • "Mickey Rooney Gets Emotional, Reflects on His Career in One of His Final Interviews (Video)". The Hollywood Reporter. July 2010. Retrieved September 3, 2019.

mickey, rooney, born, joseph, yule, other, pseudonym, mickey, maguire, september, 1920, april, 2014, american, actor, producer, radio, entertainer, vaudevillian, career, spanning, nearly, nine, decades, appeared, more, than, films, among, last, surviving, star. Mickey Rooney born Joseph Yule Jr other pseudonym Mickey Maguire 1 September 23 1920 April 6 2014 was an American actor producer radio entertainer and vaudevillian In a career spanning nearly nine decades he appeared in more than 300 films and was among the last surviving stars of the silent film era 2 He was the top box office attraction from 1939 to 1941 3 and one of the best paid actors of that era 4 At the height of a career marked by declines and comebacks Rooney performed the role of Andy Hardy in a series of 16 films in the 1930s and 1940s that epitomized the mainstream United States self image Mickey RooneyRooney in 1945BornJoseph Yule Jr 1920 09 23 September 23 1920New York City U S DiedApril 6 2014 2014 04 06 aged 93 Los Angeles California U S Resting placeHollywood Forever Cemetery Los AngelesOther namesMickey MaguireOccupationsActorproducerradio entertainervaudevillianYears active1926 2014Notable workFull listSpousesAva Gardner m 1942 div 1943 wbr Betty Jane Phillips m 1944 div 1949 wbr Martha Vickers m 1949 div 1951 wbr Elaine Devry m 1952 div 1958 wbr Barbara Ann Thomason m 1958 died 1966 wbr Marge Lane m 1966 div 1967 wbr Carolyn Hockett m 1969 div 1975 wbr Jan Chamberlin m 1978 sep 2012 wbr Children9 including Tim Michael Teddy and Mickey Jr ParentJoe Yule father Websitemickeyrooney wbr comAt the peak of his career between ages 15 and 25 he made 43 films and was one of Metro Goldwyn Mayer s most consistently successful actors A versatile performer he became a celebrated character actor later in his career Laurence Olivier once said he considered Rooney the best there has ever been 4 Clarence Brown who directed him in two of his earliest dramatic roles in National Velvet and The Human Comedy said Rooney was the closest thing to a genius with whom he had ever worked 5 He won a Golden Globe Award in 1982 and an Emmy Award in the same year for the title role in a television movie Bill and was awarded the Academy Honorary Award in 1982 Rooney first performed in vaudeville as a child actor and made his film debut at the age of six He played the title character in the Mickey McGuire series of 78 short films from age seven to 13 At 14 and 15 he played Puck in the play and subsequent film adaptation of A Midsummer Night s Dream At the age of 16 he began playing Andy Hardy and gained his first recognition at 17 as Whitey Marsh in Boys Town At only 19 Rooney became the second youngest Best Actor in a Leading Role nominee and the first teenager to be nominated for an Academy Award for his performance as Mickey Moran in 1939 film adaptation of coming of age Broadway musical Babes in Arms he was awarded a special Academy Juvenile Award in 1939 6 Rooney received his second Academy Award nomination in the same category for his role as Homer Macauley in The Human Comedy Drafted into the military during World War II Rooney served nearly two years entertaining over two million troops on stage and radio He was awarded a Bronze Star for performing in combat zones Returning in 1945 he was too old for juvenile roles but too short at 5 ft 2 in 157 cm for most adult roles and was unable to gain as many starring roles However numerous low budget but critically well received films noir had Rooney playing the lead during this period and the 1950s Rooney s career was renewed with well received supporting roles in films such as The Bold and the Brave 1956 Requiem for a Heavyweight 1962 It s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World 1963 Pete s Dragon 1977 and The Black Stallion 1979 Rooney received Academy Award nominations for Best Actor in a Supporting Role in 1957 for The Bold and the Brave and 1980 for The Black Stallion In the early 1980s he returned to Broadway in Sugar Babies a role that earned him nominations for Tony Award and Drama Desk Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical He made hundreds of appearances on TV including dramas variety programs and talk shows Contents 1 Early life and acting background 2 Career 2 1 1924 1926 Career beginnings as a child actor 2 2 1927 1936 Mickey McGuire 2 3 1937 1944 Andy Hardy films and Hollywood stardom 2 4 Military service and later film career 2 5 Character roles and Broadway comeback 2 5 1 Television roles 2 5 2 Broadway shows 2 6 Final years 3 Personal life 3 1 Marriages 3 2 Death 4 Legacy 5 Acting credits and awards 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and acting background editRooney was born Joseph Yule Jr 7 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City on September 23 1920 the only child of Nellie W Carter and Joe Yule 8 His mother was an American former chorus girl and burlesque performer from Kansas City Missouri while his father was a Scottish born vaudevillian who had emigrated to New York from Glasgow with his family at the age of three months 4 They lived in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn 9 When Rooney was born his parents were appearing together in a Brooklyn production of A Gaiety Girl He later recounted in his memoirs that he began performing at the age of 17 months as part of his parents routine wearing a specially tailored tuxedo 10 11 12 Career edit1924 1926 Career beginnings as a child actor edit Rooney s parents separated when he was four years old in 1924 and he and his mother moved to Hollywood the following year He made his first film appearance at age six in 1926 in the short Not to be Trusted 4 13 Rooney got bit parts in films such as The Beast of the City 1932 and The Life of Jimmy Dolan 1933 which allowed him to work alongside stars such as Joel McCrea Colleen Moore Clark Gable Douglas Fairbanks Jr John Wayne and Jean Harlow He enrolled in the Hollywood Professional School and later attended Fairfax High School 14 1927 1936 Mickey McGuire edit His mother saw an advertisement for a child to play the role of Mickey McGuire in a series of short films 15 Rooney got the role and became Mickey for 78 of the films running from 1927 to 1936 starting with Mickey s Circus 1927 his first starring role a b During this period he also briefly voiced Oswald the Lucky Rabbit for Walter Lantz Productions 19 He made other films in his adolescence including several more of the McGuire films At age 14 he played the role of Puck in the Warner Bros all star adaptation of A Midsummer Night s Dream in 1935 Critic David Thomson hailed his performance as one of the cinema s most arresting pieces of magic Rooney then moved to MGM where he befriended Judy Garland with whom he began making a series of musicals that propelled both of them to stardom 20 21 22 1937 1944 Andy Hardy films and Hollywood stardom edit nbsp Rooney with Judy Garland in Love Finds Andy Hardy 1938 In 1937 Rooney was selected to portray Andy Hardy in A Family Affair which MGM had planned as a B movie 15 Rooney provided comic relief as the son of Judge James K Hardy portrayed by Lionel Barrymore although former silent film leading man Lewis Stone played the role of Judge Hardy in subsequent pictures The film was an unexpected success and led to 13 more Andy Hardy films between 1937 and 1946 and a final film in 1958 According to author Barry Monush MGM wanted the Andy Hardy films to appeal to all family members Rooney s character portrayed a typical anxious hyperactive girl crazy teenager and he soon became the unintended main star of the films Although some critics describe the series of films as sweet overly idealized and pretty much interchangeable their ultimate success was because they gave viewers a comforting portrait of small town America that seemed suited for the times with Rooney instilling a lasting image of what every parent wished their teen could be like 23 Behind the scenes however Rooney was like the hyperactive girl crazy teenager he portrayed on the screen Wallace Beery his co star in Stablemates described him as a brat but a fine actor 24 MGM head Louis B Mayer found it necessary to manage Rooney s public image explains historian Jane Ellen Wayne Mayer naturally tried to keep all his child actors in line like any father figure After one such episode Mickey Rooney replied I won t do it You re asking the impossible Mayer then grabbed young Rooney by his lapels and said Listen to me I don t care what you do in private Just don t do it in public In public behave Your fans expect it You re Andy Hardy You re the United States You re the Stars and Stripes Behave yourself You re a symbol Mickey nodded I ll be good Mr Mayer I promise you that Mayer let go of his lapels All right he said 25 Fifty years later Rooney realized in hindsight that these early confrontations with Mayer were necessary for him to develop into a leading film star Everybody butted heads with him but he listened and you listened And then you d come to an agreement you could both live with He visited the sets he gave people talks What he wanted was something that was American presented in a cosmopolitan manner 26 nbsp Spencer Tracy and Rooney in a scene from Boys Town 1938 nbsp Lionel Barrymore s 61st birthday in 1939 standing Mickey Rooney Robert Montgomery Clark Gable Louis B Mayer William Powell Robert Taylor seated Norma Shearer Lionel Barrymore and Rosalind RussellIn 1937 Rooney made his first film alongside Judy Garland with Thoroughbreds Don t Cry 27 Garland and Rooney became close friends as they co starred in future films and became a successful song and dance team Audiences delighted in seeing the playful interactions between the two stars showcase a wonderful chemistry 28 Along with three of the Andy Hardy films where she portrayed a girl attracted to Andy they appeared together in a string of successful musicals including coming of age musical Babes in Arms 1939 For his performance as Mickey Moran 19 year old Mickey Rooney was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role becoming the second youngest Best Actor nominee During an interview in the 1992 documentary film MGM When the Lion Roars Rooney describes their friendship 29 Judy and I were so close we could ve come from the same womb We weren t like brothers or sisters but there was no love affair there there was more than a love affair It s very very difficult to explain the depths of our love for each other It was so special It was a forever love Judy as we speak has not died She s always with me in every heartbeat of my body In 1937 Rooney received top billing as Shockey Carter in Hoosier Schoolboy but his breakthrough role as a dramatic actor came in 1938 s Boys Town opposite Spencer Tracy as Father Flanagan who runs a home for wayward and homeless boys 18 year old Rooney and 17 year old Deanna Durbin were awarded a special Juvenile Academy Award in 1939 for significant contribution in bringing to the screen the spirit and personification of youth 30 31 Jane Ellen Wayne describes one of the most famous scenes in the film where tough young Rooney is playing poker with a cigarette in his mouth his hat is cocked and his feet are up on the table Tracy grabs him by the lapels throws the cigarette away and pushes him into a chair That s better he tells Mickey 25 Louis B Mayer said Boys Town was his favorite film during his years at MGM 30 Rooney was the biggest box office draw in 1939 1940 and 1941 32 For their roles in Boys Town Rooney and Tracy won first and second place in the Motion Picture Herald 1940 National Poll of Exhibitors based on the box office appeal of 200 players A contributor to Boys Life magazine wrote Congratulations to Messrs Rooney and Tracy Also to Metro Goldwyn Mayer we extend a hearty thanks for their very considerable part in this outstanding achievement 33 Actor Laurence Olivier once called Rooney the greatest actor of them all 34 He appeared on the cover of Time magazine in 1940 timed to coincide with the release of Young Tom Edison 35 the cover story began 36 Hollywood s No 1 box office bait in 1939 was not Clark Gable Errol Flynn or Tyrone Power but a rope haired kazoo voiced kid with a comic strip face who until this week had never appeared in a picture without mugging or overacting it His name assumed was Mickey Rooney and to a large part of the more articulate U S cinema audience his name was becoming a frequently used synonym for brat During his long career Rooney also worked with many of the screen s female stars including Elizabeth Taylor in National Velvet 1944 Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany s 1961 37 Marilyn Monroe in The Fireball 1950 and Grace Kelly in The Bridges at Toko Ri 1954 Rooney s bumptiousness and boyish charm as an actor developed more smoothness and polish over the years writes biographer Scott Eyman The fact that Rooney fully enjoyed his life as an actor played a large role in those changes You weren t going to work you were going to have fun It was home everybody was cohesive it was family One year I made nine pictures I had to go from one set to another It was like I was on a conveyor belt You did not read a script and say I guess I ll do it You did it They had people that knew the kind of stories that were suited to you It was a conveyor belt that made motion pictures 38 Clarence Brown who directed Rooney in his Oscar nominated performance in The Human Comedy 1943 and again in National Velvet 1944 enjoyed working with Rooney in films Mickey Rooney is the closest thing to a genius that I ever worked with There was Chaplin then there was Rooney The little bastard could do no wrong in my book All you had to do with him was rehearse it once 39 Military service and later film career edit nbsp Rooney entertains American troops in Germany April 1945 nbsp Rooney with Tom Poston right circa 1940s nbsp Rooney feeds the troops for the USO in 1952 In June 1944 Rooney was inducted into the United States Army where 40 he served more than 21 months until shortly after the end of World War II entertaining the troops in America and Europe in Special Services He spent part of the time as a radio personality on the American Forces Network and was awarded the Bronze Star Medal for entertaining troops in combat zones In addition to the Bronze Star Rooney also received the Army Good Conduct Medal American Campaign Medal European African Middle Eastern Campaign Medal and World War II Victory Medal for his military service 41 self published source 42 43 Rooney s career declined after his return to civilian life He was now an adult with a height of only 5 feet 2 inches 1 57 m 44 5 feet 1 inch 1 55 m according to his 1942 draft registration 45 and he could no longer play the role of a teenager but he also lacked the stature of most leading men He appeared in the film Words and Music in 1948 which paired him for the last time with Garland on film he appeared with her on one episode as a guest on The Judy Garland Show He briefly starred in a CBS radio series Shorty Bell in the summer of 1948 and reprised his role as Andy Hardy with most of the original cast in a syndicated radio version of The Hardy Family in 1949 and 1950 repeated on Mutual during 1952 46 In 1949 Variety reported a renegotiation of Rooney s deal with MGM He agreed to make one film a year for them for five years at 25 000 a movie his fee until then had been 100 000 but Rooney wanted to enter independent production Rooney claimed he was unhappy with the billing MGM gave him for Words and Music 47 but his career was at a low point His New York Times obituary reported at one point in 1950 the only job he could get was touring Southern states with the Hadacol Caravan promoting a patent medicine that was later forced off the market 7 His first television series The Mickey Rooney Show also known as Hey Mulligan was created by Blake Edwards with Rooney as his own producer and appeared on NBC television for 32 episodes from August 1954 to June 1955 48 In 1951 he made his directorial debut with My True Story starring Helen Walker 49 Rooney also starred as a ragingly egomaniacal television comedian loosely based on Red Buttons in the live 90 minute television drama The Comedian in the Playhouse 90 series on the evening of Valentine s Day in 1957 and as himself in a 1960 revue called The Musical Revue of 1959 based on the 1929 film The Hollywood Revue of 1929 In May 1956 Sequoia University awarded Rooney an honorary degree of PhD in Fine Arts for his work 50 In 1958 Rooney joined Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra in hosting an episode of NBC s short lived Club Oasis comedy and variety show In 1960 Rooney directed and starred in The Private Lives of Adam and Eve an ambitious comedy known for its multiple flashbacks and many cameos In the 1960s Rooney returned to theatrical entertainment He accepted film roles in undistinguished films but still appeared in better works such as Requiem for a Heavyweight 1962 and It s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World 1963 He portrayed a Japanese character Mr Yunioshi in the 1961 film version of Truman Capote s novella Breakfast at Tiffany s His performance was criticized by some in subsequent years as a racist caricature 51 52 Rooney later said that he would not have taken the role if he had known it would offend people 53 In 1961 Rooney appeared on television s What s My Line and mentioned that he had already started enrolling students in the Mickey Rooney School of Entertainment His school venture never came to fruition This was a period of professional distress for Rooney as a childhood friend director Richard Quine put it Let s face it It wasn t all that easy to find roles for a 5 foot 3 man who d passed the age of Andy Hardy 54 In 1962 although he had earned 12 million by that point his debts had forced him into filing for bankruptcy 55 56 In 1966 Rooney was working on the film Ambush Bay in the Philippines when his wife Barbara Ann Thomason a former model and aspiring actress who had won 17 straight beauty contests in Southern California was found dead in her bed Her lover Milos Milos who was one of Rooney s actor friends was found dead beside her Detectives ruled it a murder suicide which was committed with Rooney s own gun 57 Francis Ford Coppola had bought the rights to make The Black Stallion 1979 and when casting it he called Rooney and asked him if he thought he could play a jockey Rooney replied saying Gee I don t know I never played a jockey before He was kidding he said since he had played a jockey in at least three past films including Down the Stretch Thoroughbreds Don t Cry and National Velvet 58 The film garnered excellent reviews and earned 40 million in its first run which gave Coppola s struggling studio American Zoetrope a significant boost It also gave Rooney newfound recognition along with an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor 59 In 1983 the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences gave Rooney their Academy Honorary Award for his lifetime of achievement 60 61 62 Character roles and Broadway comeback edit Television roles edit nbsp Rooney and James Dunn in the television special Mr Broadway 1957 nbsp Rooney with Sebastian Cabot on Checkmate in 1961 nbsp Rooney and Red Skelton on The Red Skelton Show in 1962 nbsp Guest stars for the 1961 premiere episode of The Dick Powell Show Who Killed Julie Greer Standing from left Ronald Reagan Nick Adams Lloyd Bridges Mickey Rooney Edgar Bergen Jack Carson Ralph Bellamy Kay Thompson Dean Jones Seated from left Carolyn Jones and Dick Powell In addition to his movie roles Rooney made numerous guest starring roles as a television character actor for nearly six decades beginning with an episode of Celanese Theatre The part led to other roles on such television series as Schlitz Playhouse 63 Playhouse 90 63 Producers Showcase Alcoa Theatre 63 The Soldiers Wagon Train General Electric Theater 64 Hennesey 65 The Dick Powell Theatre 66 Arrest and Trial 1964 66 Burke s Law 1963 63 Combat 1964 66 The Fugitive Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre The Jean Arthur Show 1966 66 The Name of the Game 1970 63 Dan August 1970 67 Night Gallery 1970 67 The Love Boat 68 Kung Fu The Legend Continues 1995 67 Murder She Wrote 1992 67 and The Golden Girls 1988 67 among many others In 1961 he guest starred in the 13 week James Franciscus adventure drama CBS television series The Investigators 66 In 1962 he was cast as himself in the episode The Top Banana of the CBS sitcom Pete and Gladys 63 starring Harry Morgan and Cara Williams In 1963 he entered CBS s The Twilight Zone 69 giving a one man performance in the episode The Last Night of a Jockey 1963 66 Also in 1963 in The Hunt for Suspense Theater 66 he played the sadistic sheriff hunting the young surfer played by James Caan In 1964 he launched another half hour sitcom Mickey The story line had Mickey operating a resort hotel in Southern California His own son Tim Rooney appeared as his character s teenaged son on this program and Emmaline Henry starred as Rooney s wife The program lasted for 17 episodes 54 When Norman Lear was developing All in the Family in 1970 he wanted Rooney for the lead role of Archie Bunker 70 Rooney turned Lear down and the role eventually went to Carroll O Connor Rooney garnered a Golden Globe and an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or a Special for his role in 1981 s Bill Playing opposite Dennis Quaid Rooney s character was a mentally handicapped man attempting to live on his own after leaving an institution His acting quality in the film has been favorably compared to other actors who took on similar roles including Sean Penn Dustin Hoffman and Tom Hanks 71 He reprised his role in 1983 s Bill On His Own earning an Emmy nomination for the turn He appeared on The Love Boat S6 E11 A Christmas Presence as Angelorum Dominicus a guardian angel character His wife Jan Rooney played Sister Bernadette a nun with a beautiful singing voice The episode aired on 12 18 1982 Rooney did voice acting from time to time He provided the voice of Santa Claus in four stop motion animated Christmas TV specials Santa Claus Is Comin to Town 1970 The Year Without a Santa Claus 1974 72 Rudolph and Frosty s Christmas in July 1979 72 and A Miser Brothers Christmas 2008 In 1995 he appeared as himself on The Simpsons episode Radioactive Man 67 After starring in one unsuccessful TV series and turning down an offer for a huge TV series Rooney now 70 starred in the Family Channel s The Adventures of the Black Stallion where he reprised his role as Henry Dailey in the film of the same name 11 years earlier 68 The series ran for three years and was an international hit 73 Rooney appeared in television commercials for Garden State Life Insurance Company in 2002 74 Broadway shows edit A major turning point came in 1979 when Rooney made his Broadway debut in the acclaimed stage play Sugar Babies a musical revue tribute to the burlesque era co starring former MGM dancing star Ann Miller Aljean Harmetz noted Mr Rooney fought over every skit and argued over every song and almost always got things done his way The show opened on Broadway on October 8 1979 to rave reviews and this time he did not throw success away 7 Rooney and Miller performed the show 1 208 times in New York and then toured with it for five years including eight months in London 75 Co star Miller recalls that Rooney never missed a performance or a chance to ad lib or read the lines the same way twice if he even stuck to the script 55 Biographer Alvin Marill states at 59 Mickey Rooney was reincarnated as a baggy pants comedian back as a top banana in show biz in his belated Broadway debut 55 For his performance Rooney received nominations for Tony Award and Drama Desk Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Following this he toured as Pseudelous in Stephen Sondheim s A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum 76 In the 1990s he returned to Broadway for the final months of Will Rogers Follies playing the ghost of Will s father 77 On television he starred in the short lived sitcom One of the Boys 78 along with two unfamiliar young stars Dana Carvey and Nathan Lane in 1982 He toured Canada in a dinner theatre production of The Mind with the Naughty Man in the mid 1990s 79 He played The Wizard in a stage production of The Wizard of Oz with Eartha Kitt at Madison Square Garden 80 Kitt was later replaced by Jo Anne Worley nbsp Mickey Rooney speaks at the Pentagon in 2000 during a ceremony honoring the USO Final years edit Rooney wrote a memoir titled Life is too Short published by Villard Books in 1991 A Library Journal review said From title to the last line I ll have a short bier Rooney s self deprecating humor powers this book He wrote a novel about a child star published in 1994 The Search for Sunny Skies 81 On November 10 2000 he starred in the Disney Channel original movie Phantom of the Megaplex Despite the millions of dollars that he earned over the years such as his 65 000 a week earnings from Sugar Babies Rooney was plagued by financial problems late in life His longtime gambling habit caused him to gamble away his fortune again and again He declared bankruptcy for the second time in 1996 and described himself as broke in 2005 He kept performing on stage and in the movies but his personal property was valued at only 18 000 when he died in 2014 82 Rooney and his wife Jan toured the country in 2005 through 2011 in a musical revue called Let s Put on a Show Vanity Fair called it a homespun affair full of dog eared jokes that featured Rooney singing George Gershwin songs 3 In 2006 Rooney played Gus in Night at the Museum 83 84 He returned to play the role again in the sequel Night at the Museum Battle of the Smithsonian in 2009 in a scene that was deleted from the final film 83 nbsp Rooney on the set of Illusion Infinity 2003 with director Roger SteinmannOn May 26 2007 Rooney was grand marshal at the Garden Grove Strawberry Festival He made his British pantomime debut playing Baron Hardup in Cinderella at the Sunderland Empire Theatre over the 2007 Christmas period 85 86 a role he reprised at Bristol Hippodrome in 2008 and at the Milton Keynes theatre in 2009 87 In 2011 Rooney made a cameo appearance in The Muppets and in 2014 at age 93 six weeks before his death he reprised his role as Gus in Night at the Museum Secret of the Tomb which was dedicated to Robin Williams who also died that year and to him 88 Although confined to a wheelchair he was described by director Shawn Levy as energetic and so pleased to be there He was just happy to be invited to the party 83 An October 2015 article in The Hollywood Reporter maintained that Rooney was frequently abused and financially depleted by his closest relatives in the last years of his life The article said that it was clear that one of the biggest stars of all time who remained aloft longer than anyone in Hollywood history was in the end brought down by those closest to him He died humiliated and betrayed nearly broke and often broken 4 Rooney suffered from bipolar disorder and had attempted suicide two or three times over the years with resulting hospitalizations reported as nervous breakdowns 4 Personal life edit nbsp Rooney and his wife Jan at a Beverly Hills military concert in 2000At the time of his death April 6 2014 Rooney was married to Jan Chamberlin Rooney although they had separated in June 2012 89 He had nine children and two stepchildren as well as 19 grandchildren and several great grandchildren 90 91 Rooney had been addicted to sleeping pills and overcame the addiction in 2000 when he was in his late 70s 3 In 1997 he was arrested on suspicion of beating his wife Jan but the charges were dropped due to lack of evidence 92 In the late 1970s Rooney became a born again Christian and was a fan of Pat Robertson 93 nbsp Rooney in 2006On February 16 2011 Rooney was granted a temporary restraining order against his stepson Christopher Aber and Aber s wife Christina and they were ordered to stay 100 yards from Rooney his stepson Mark Rooney and Mark s wife Charlene 94 95 Rooney claimed that he was a victim of elder abuse 96 On March 2 2011 Rooney appeared before a special U S Senate committee that was considering legislation to curb elder abuse testifying about the abuse he claimed to have suffered at the hands of family members 94 In 2011 all of Rooney s finances were permanently handed over to a conservator 97 who called Rooney completely competent 96 In April 2011 the temporary restraining order that Rooney was previously granted was replaced by a confidential settlement between Rooney and Aber 98 Aber and Jan Rooney denied all the allegations 99 100 In May 2013 Rooney sold his home of many years reportedly for 1 3 million and split the proceeds with his wife Jan 13 101 Marriages edit Rooney was married eight times with six of the marriages ending in divorce his eighth and final marriage lasted longer than the previous seven put together During the 1960s and 1970s he was often the subject of comedians jokes over his apparent inability to stay married In 1942 he married his first wife actress Ava Gardner who at that time was still an obscure teenaged starlet They divorced the following year partly because of alleged infidelity 4 While stationed in the military in Alabama in 1944 Rooney met and married Betty Jane Phillips who later became a singer under the name B J Baker They had two sons together This marriage ended in divorce after he returned from Europe at the end of World War II His marriage to actress Martha Vickers in 1949 produced one son but ended in divorce in 1951 He married actress Elaine Mahnken in 1952 and they divorced in 1958 90 91 In 1958 Rooney married model and actress Barbara Ann Thomason stage name Carolyn Mitchell She was murdered in 1966 by stuntman and actor Milos Milos who then shot himself Thomason and Milos had an affair while Rooney was traveling and police theorized that Milos had shot her after she wanted to end it 102 Rooney then married Barbara s best friend Marge Lane though the marriage lasted only 100 days He was married to Carolyn Hockett from 1969 to 1975 90 In 1978 he married his eighth and final wife Jan Chamberlin Their marriage lasted until his death a total of 34 years longer than his seven previous unions combined However they separated in 2012 89 Wife Years ChildrenAva Gardner 1942 1943Betty Jane Rase nee Phillips 1944 1949 2 Mickey Rooney Jr and Tim RooneyMartha Vickers 1949 1951 1 Teddy 103 Elaine Devry a k a Elaine Davis 1952 1958Barbara Ann Thomason a k a Tara Thomas Carolyn Mitchell 1958 1966 4 Kelly Ann Kerry Michael Joseph Rooney and Kimmy SueMarge Lane 1966 1967Carolyn Hockett 1969 1975 2 Jimmy and JonelleJan Chamberlin 1978 2014 separated June 2012 89 Death edit nbsp Grave and Crypt of Mickey Rooney at Hollywood Forever CemeteryRooney died of natural causes including complications from diabetes in Studio City Los Angeles California on April 6 2014 104 at the age of 93 105 A group of family members and friends including Mickey Rourke held a memorial service on April 18 A private funeral organized by another set of family members was held at Hollywood Forever Cemetery where he was buried on April 19 His eight surviving children said in a statement that they were barred from seeing Rooney during his final years 106 107 108 At his death Vanity Fair called Rooney the original Hollywood train wreck 3 Despite earning millions during his career he had to file for bankruptcy in 1962 due to mismanagement of his finances In his later years Rooney had entrusted his finances to his stepson who funneled Rooney s earnings to pay for his own lavish lifestyle His millions in earnings had dwindled to an estate that was valued at only 18 000 He died owing medical bills and back taxes and contributions were solicited from the public 109 110 Legacy edit nbsp Rooney in 1986Rooney was one of the last surviving actors of the silent film era His film career spanned 88 years from 1926 to 2014 continuing until shortly before his death During his peak years from the late 1930s to the early 1940s Rooney was among the top box office stars in the United States 111 and in 1939 was the biggest box office draw followed immediately by Tyrone Power 112 He made 43 films between the ages of 15 and 25 Among those his role as Andy Hardy became one of Hollywood s best loved characters with Marlon Brando calling him the best actor in films 23 There was nothing he couldn t do said actress Margaret O Brien 111 MGM boss Louis B Mayer treated him like a son and saw in Rooney the embodiment of the amiable American boy who stands for family humbug and sentiment wrote critic and author David Thomson 113 By the time Rooney was 20 his consistent portrayals of characters with youth and energy suggested that his future success was unlimited Thomson also explains that Rooney s characters were able to cover a wide range of emotional types and gives three examples where Rooney is not just an actor of genius but an artist able to maintain a stylized commentary on the demon impulse of the small belligerent man 113 Rooney s Puck in A Midsummer Night s Dream 1935 is truly inhuman one of cinema s most arresting pieces of magic His toughie in Boys Town 1938 struts and bullies like something out of a nightmare and then comes clean in a grotesque but utterly frank outburst of sentimentality in which he aspires to the boy community His role as Baby Face Nelson 1957 the manic destructive response of the runt against a pig society 113 By the end of the 1940s Rooney was no longer in demand and his career declined In 1938 he said I starred in eight pictures In 1948 and 1949 together I starred in only three 62 Film historian Jeanine Basinger observed while his career reached the heights and plunged to the depths Rooney kept on working and growing the mark of a professional Some of the films that reinvigorated his profile were Requiem for a Heavyweight 1962 It s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World 1963 and The Black Stallion 1979 In the early 1980s he returned to Broadway in Sugar Babies and found himself once more back on top 62 Basinger tries to encapsulate Rooney s career Rooney s abundant talent like his film image might seem like a metaphor for America a seemingly endless supply of natural resources that could never dry up but which it turned out could be ruined by excessive use and abuse by arrogance or power and which had to be carefully tended to be returned to full capacity From child star to character actor from movie shorts to television specials and from films to Broadway Rooney ultimately did prove he could do it all do it well and keep on doing it His is a unique career both for its versatility and its longevity 62 Acting credits and awards editMain article Mickey Rooney filmography One of the most enduring performers in show business history Rooney appeared in over 300 films in 88 years 2 See also editList of oldest and youngest Academy Award winners and nominees Youngest nominees for Best Actor in a Leading Role List of actors with Academy Award nominations List of actors with two or more Academy Award nominations in acting categories List of members of the American LegionNotes edit The film was long believed lost but in 2014 was reported found in the Netherlands 16 The Mickey McGuire films were adapted from the Toonerville Trolley comic strip which contained a character named Mickey McGuire Joe Yule briefly became Mickey McGuire legally to trump an attempted copyright lawsuit so the film producer Larry Darmour would not have to pay the comic strip writers royalties His mother also changed her surname to McGuire in an attempt to bolster the argument but the film producers lost The litigation settlement awarded damages to the owners of the cartoon character compelling the 12 year old actor to refrain from calling himself Mickey McGuire on and off screen 17 18 During an interruption in the series in 1932 Mrs Yule made plans to take her son on a 10 week vaudeville tour as McGuire and Fox sued successfully to stop him from using the name Mrs Yule suggested the stage name of Mickey Looney for her comedian son He altered this to Rooney which did not infringe upon the copyright of Warner Bros animation series called Looney Tunes 15 References edit Mickey Rooney s Own Story The Mail Adelaide Vol 29 no 1 470 South Australia July 27 1940 p 5 Magazine Section Retrieved October 13 2022 via National Library of Australia a b Mickey Rooney an enduring star The Boston Globe April 7 2014 Retrieved September 3 2019 a b c d Sales Nancy Jo April 7 2014 Mickey Rooney Blew Through Wives and Fortunes but God What a Talent Vanity Fair Retrieved January 27 2015 a b c d e f g Gary Baum and Scott Feinberg October 21 2015 Tears and Terror The Disturbing Final Years of Mickey Rooney The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved October 22 2015 Iconic Actor Mickey Rooney Dies At 93 Dallas News April 7 2014 Retrieved September 3 2019 Mickey Rooney A long and remarkable career in film TV Los Angeles Times April 7 2014 Archived from the original on April 8 2014 Retrieved November 16 2015 a b c Harmetz Aljean April 7 2014 Mickey Rooney Master of Putting On a Show Dies at 93 The New York Times p 1 Retrieved April 9 2014 Joe Yule 55 Father Of Mickey Rooney The New York Times March 31 1950 p 30 Retrieved May 28 2018 Ogle Vanessa March 24 2015 Authors share obscure history of Greenpoint Brooklyn Paper Retrieved February 22 2019 Rooney Mickey 1991 Life is too short Villard Books ISBN 0 679 40195 4 OCLC 778940948 page needed Bernstein Adam April 7 2014 Mickey Rooney dies at 93 The Washington Post Retrieved April 10 2014 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 pp 24 27 a b Duke Alan Leopold Todd April 7 2014 Legendary actor Mickey Rooney dies at 93 CNN Retrieved November 16 2015 Hollywood Professional School seeing stars com Archived from the original on October 7 2008 a b c Current Biography 1942 H W Wilson Co January 1942 pp 704 06 ISBN 99903 960 3 5 Barnes Mike March 30 2014 Lost Mickey Rooney Film Is Found and Set for Preservation The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved April 4 2014 Server Lee 2007 Ava Gardner Love Is Nothing St Martin s Press ISBN 978 1 4299 0874 0 Coons Robbin August 29 1930 Mother of Mickey McGuire Seeks to Change Her Name The Evening Review East Liverpool Ohio Retrieved January 10 2016 via Newspapers com The Walter Lantz Cartune Encyclopedia 1931 The Internet Animation Database Retrieved September 3 2019 Krantz Les Their First Time in the Movies The Overlook Press N Y 2001 p 45 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Puck s Soliloquy September 6 2011 Retrieved June 18 2017 via YouTube Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine BravuraK February 12 2011 A Midsummer Night s Dream 1935 Puck Oberon s Servant Retrieved June 18 2017 via YouTube a b Monush Barry 2003 Screen World Presents the Encyclopedia of Hollywood Film Actors From the silent era to 1965 Applause Theatre amp Cinema Books pp 648 651 ISBN 978 1 55783 551 2 Marx 1986 p 68 a b Wayne Jane Ellen 2005 The Leading Men of MGM Carroll amp Graf Publishers p 246 ISBN 978 0 7867 1475 9 Eyman Scott 2005 Lion of Hollywood The Life and Legend of Louis B Mayer Pavilion Books p 323 ISBN 978 1 86105 892 8 Longworth Karina October 30 2015 The Long Fruitful and Tortured Relationships Between Judy Garland Mickey Rooney and MGM Slate Retrieved September 3 2019 Harris Aisha April 7 2014 Remembering Mickey Rooney With a Few of His Greatest Musical Performances Slate Retrieved September 3 2019 Rooney Mickey 1992 The Lion Reigns Supreme MGM When the Lion Roars a b Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 161 11th Academy Awards Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved July 6 2011 Branagh Kenneth 2009 1939 Hollywood s Greatest Year Movie Turner Classic Movies By 1939 Rooney was the top box office star in the world a title he held for three consecutive years Mathews Franklin K April 1941 Movies of the Month Boys Life p 22 ISSN 0006 8608 Freydkin Donna April 6 2014 Hollywood legend Mickey Rooney dies USA Today Retrieved September 3 2019 Young Tom Edison 1940 Turner Classic Movies Retrieved September 16 2013 Time put Rooney on the cover noting that his movies had grossed a whopping 30 million for MGM the previous year and praising him for his most sober and restrained performance to date as young Edison who like himself began at the bottom of the American heap like himself had to struggle like himself won but a boy whose main activity unlike Mickey s was investigating inventing thinking Cinema Success Story Time March 18 1940 Retrieved September 16 2013 Hollywood s No 1 box office bait in 1939 was not Clark Gable Errol Flynn or Tyrone Power but a rope haired kazoo voiced kid with a comic strip face who until this week had never appeared in a picture without mugging or overacting it His name assumed was Mickey Rooney and to a large part of the more articulate U S cinema audience his name was becoming a frequently used synonym for brat Legendary Actor Mickey Rooney Dies HuffPost April 6 2014 Retrieved September 3 2019 Eyman Scott 2005 Lion of Hollywood The Life and Legend of Louis B Mayer Pavilion Books p 224 ISBN 978 1 86105 892 8 Basinger Jeanine 2007 The Star Machine A A Knopf p 442 ISBN 978 1 4000 4130 5 Rooney Mickey Pfc Deceased TogetherWeServed Retrieved June 18 2017 Bowman John S 2014 Pergolesi in the Pentagon Xlibris Corporation pp 38 39 ISBN 978 1 4990 3877 4 self published source Marill Alvin H 2004 Mickey Rooney His Films Television Appearances Radio Work Stage Shows and Recordings McFarland amp Company p 37 ISBN 978 0 7864 2015 5 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 Bergan Ronald April 7 2014 Mickey Rooney obituary The Guardian Retrieved April 7 2014 U S World War II Draft Cards Young Men 1940 1947 for Mickey Rooney 15 February 1942 Ancestry com database on line Lehi UT USA Ancestry com Operations Inc 2011 Dunning John 1998 On the Air The Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio Oxford University Press USA p 310 ISBN 978 0 19 507678 3 Rooney s 25 000 Per Metro Picture He s Out to Cash in on Own Prods Variety April 13 1949 p 4 Retrieved September 3 2019 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 317 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 413 Hopper Hedda May 31 1956 Altoona s Own Hedda Hopper Writes From Hollywood The Altoona Mirror p 17 Durant Yvonne June 18 2006 Where Holly Hung Her Ever So Stylish Hat The New York Times Retrieved October 3 2010 Dargis Manohla July 20 2007 Dude Nyuck Nyuck I Love You as If The New York Times Retrieved March 6 2022 Yang Jeff April 8 2014 The Mickey Rooney Role Nobody Wants to Talk Much About The Wall Street Journal Retrieved April 9 2014 a b Marx 1986 p page needed a b c Marill Alvin H 2005 Mickey Rooney His Films Television Appearances Radio Work Stage Shows And Recordings Jefferson NC McFarland p 50 ISBN 0 7864 2015 4 Green Abel January 8 1964 A Year of Tragedy amp Trifles Variety p 3 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 362 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 450 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 452 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 482 Legendary Actor Mickey Rooney Dead at 93 ABC News Retrieved September 3 2019 a b c d Unterburger Amy L Lofting Claire 1997 Actors and actresses International dictionary of films and filmmakers Vol 3 St James Press pp 1053 1056 ISBN 978 1 55862 300 2 OCLC 264881830 a b c d e f Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 542 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 587 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 486 a b c d e f g Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 544 a b c d e f Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 545 a b Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 594 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 595 Mell Eila 2008 Mickey Rooney as Archie Bunker BearManor Media ISBN 978 1593931452 Downes Lawrence April 7 2014 Mickey Rooney s Quietest Role The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 3 2019 a b Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 540 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 484 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine 1 1 2002 Commercials Part 25 June 9 2013 Retrieved June 18 2017 via YouTube Video Ann Miller and Mickey Rooney at the Palladium 1988 on YouTube 8 min Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 351 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 547 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 539 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 548 Lertzman amp Birnes 2015 p 489 Iconic Hollywood actor Mickey Rooney dies at 93 obituary NPR Associated Press April 7 2014 Retrieved April 9 2014 Duke Alan May 9 2014 Mickey Rooney s widow contests late actor s will CNN a b c Alexander Bryan December 17 2014 Mickey Rooney gives one final Museum moment USA Today Retrieved January 10 2015 The films of Mickey Rooney Night at the Museum CBS News Sunday Morning Retrieved June 18 2017 Mickey Rooney makes panto debut Channel 4 News UK Retrieved September 3 2019 Mickey Rooney The Mickey show The Independent London UK December 14 2008 Archived from the original on May 14 2022 Retrieved January 16 2012 Cinderella with Mickey Rooney Milton Keynes Theatre West End Whingers review December 6 2009 Retrieved January 16 2012 via wordpress com Night at the Museum Mickey Rooney s highest paying job 2paragraphs December 21 2014 Retrieved September 3 2019 a b c Duke Alan May 11 2014 Mickey Rooney s widow contests late actor s will CNN Retrieved January 27 2015 a b c Mickey Rooney Dies at 93 People April 6 2014 Retrieved September 3 2019 a b Beller Kimberly April 7 2014 Breaking News Legendary Actor Mickey Rooney Dead at 93 Guardian Liberty Voice Retrieved September 3 2019 Wilson Tracy March 12 1997 Rooney Won t Be Charged With Abuse Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 19 2014 The Zany New World of Mickey Rooney The New York Times August 23 1981 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 3 2019 a b A Star Is Burned Mickey Rooney s Final Days Marred by Bizarre Family Feud The Hollywood Reporter April 9 2014 Retrieved September 3 2019 Mickey Rooney granted restraining order against stepson BBC February 16 2011 Retrieved January 16 2012 a b Feinberg Scott April 9 2014 A Star Is Burned Mickey Rooney s Final Days Marred by Bizarre Family Feud The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved April 9 2014 Mickey Rooney lawyer to control finances BBC March 27 2011 Retrieved January 16 2012 Mickey Rooney drops restraining order against stepson TMZ February 15 2011 Retrieved January 16 2012 Mickey Rooney Claims Elder Abuse Testifies Before Senate Committee AARP Bulletin 2011 Retrieved September 3 2019 Silverman Stephen M March 3 2011 Mickey Rooney Elder Abuse Made Me Feel Trapped People Retrieved January 16 2012 Hetherman Bill March 3 2013 Mickey Rooney s home to be sold for 1 3M to West Hills firm Daily Breeze Mickey Rooney s Wife Murder Suicide Victim The Charleston Daily Mail February 1 1966 p 1 Retrieved October 31 2017 via Newspapers com nbsp Barnes Mike July 4 2016 Teddy Rooney a Former Child Actor and a Son of Mickey Rooney Dies at 66 The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved June 18 2017 Nelson Valerie J April 6 2014 Mickey Rooney dies at 93 show business career spanned a lifetime Los Angeles Times After 80 year career Mickey Rooney estate 18K USA Today Associated Press April 9 2014 Retrieved August 11 2018 Durkin Erin April 20 2014 Mickey Rooney laid to rest in private funeral at Hollywood Forever Cemetery Daily News New York Retrieved April 22 2014 Stevens Matt April 19 2014 Mickey Rooney funeral set for today at Hollywood Forever Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 20 2014 Parker Mike April 13 2014 Mickey Rooney died too poor to pay for his own Hollywood funeral Daily Express Retrieved April 19 2014 Kim Victoria Ryan Harriet April 8 2014 Mickey Rooney s body goes unclaimed as family feuds over burial site Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 10 2014 The Official Mickey Rooney Site Archived from the original on June 9 2017 Retrieved April 11 2014 a b McCartney Anthony April 7 2014 Legendary star Mickey Rooney dies at age 93 Orange County Register Retrieved January 5 2020 International Motion Picture Almanac 1933 present Annual Quigley a b c Thomson David 2002 The New Biographical Dictionary of Film Knopf pp 754 755 ISBN 978 0 375 41128 1 Bibliography Best Marc 1971 Those endearing young charms Child performers of the screen A S Barnes and Company pp 220 224 OCLC 937145025 Dye David April 1988 Child and youth actors filmographies of their entire careers 1914 1985 McFarland pp 201 205 ISBN 978 0 89950 247 2 Edelson Edward 1979 Great Kids of the Movies Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 14127 7 Holmstrom John 1996 The moving picture boy an international encyclopaedia from 1895 to 1995 Michael Russell pp 100 102 ISBN 9780859551786 Lertzman Richard A Birnes William J 2015 The Life and Times of Mickey Rooney Gallery Books ISBN 978 1 5011 0096 3 Marx Arthur 1986 The Nine Lives of Mickey Rooney Stein amp Day ISBN 978 0 8128 3056 9 Parish James Robert 1976 Great child stars Ace Books OCLC 475567835 Rooney Mickey 1991 Life is too short Villard Books ISBN 0 679 40195 4 OCLC 778940948 Willson Dixie 1935 Little Hollywood stars Saalfield Pub Co OCLC 17445181 Zierold Norman J 1965 The child stars Coward McCann OCLC 475525671 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mickey Rooney Official website nbsp Mickey Rooney at IMDb Mickey Rooney at the TCM Movie Database Mickey Rooney at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Mickey Rooney at the Internet Off Broadway Database Mickey Rooney discography at Discogs Mickey Rooney at The Interviews An Oral History of Television The Phil Silvers Show Mickey Rooney The Phil Silvers Show Archived from the original on May 14 2006 Retrieved September 3 2019 Mickey Rooney on America Christ and Judy Garland The Hollywood Legend Speaks Out Montreal Mirror interview 1998 Republished on a blog as Montreal Mirror has dissolved Mickey Rooney Virtual History Retrieved September 3 2019 Fate Slaps Down Andy Hardy PDF Film Noir Foundation Archived from the original PDF on May 29 2013 Mickey Rooney Gets Emotional Reflects on His Career in One of His Final Interviews Video The Hollywood Reporter July 2010 Retrieved September 3 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mickey Rooney amp oldid 1196104426, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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