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Spencer Tracy

Spencer Bonaventure Tracy (April 5, 1900 – June 10, 1967) was an American actor. He was known for his natural performing style and versatility. One of the major stars of Hollywood's Golden Age, Tracy was the first actor to win two consecutive Academy Awards for Best Actor, from nine nominations. During his career, he appeared in 75 films and developed a reputation among his peers as one of the screen's greatest actors. In 1999, the American Film Institute ranked Tracy as the 9th greatest male star of Classic Hollywood Cinema.[1]

Spencer Tracy
Tracy in State of the Union (1948)
Born(1900-04-05)April 5, 1900
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.
DiedJune 10, 1967(1967-06-10) (aged 67)
Burial placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale
Alma materRipon College
American Academy of Dramatic Arts
OccupationActor
Years active1921–1967
Spouse
(m. 1923; sep. 1933)
PartnerKatharine Hepburn (1941–1967)
Children2
Signature

Tracy first discovered his talent for acting while attending Ripon College, and he later received a scholarship for the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. He spent seven years in the theatre, working in a succession of stock companies and intermittently on Broadway. His breakthrough came in 1930, when his lead performance in The Last Mile caught the attention of Hollywood. After a successful film debut in John Ford's Up the River (in which he starred with Humphrey Bogart), he was signed to a contract with Fox Film Corporation. Tracy's five years with Fox featured one acting tour de force after another that were usually ignored at the box office, and he remained largely unknown to movie audiences after 25 films, nearly all of them starring him as the leading man. None of them were hits, although his performance in The Power and the Glory (1933) was highly praised at the time.

In 1935, he joined Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), at the time Hollywood's most prestigious studio. His career flourished from his fifth MGM film Fury (1936) onwards, and in 1937 and 1938 he won consecutive Oscars for Captains Courageous and Boys Town. He teamed with Clark Gable, the studio's most prominent leading man for three major box office successes, so that by the early 1940s Tracy was one of MGM's top stars. In 1942, he appeared with Katharine Hepburn in Woman of the Year, beginning a professional and personal partnership, which led to nine films over 25 years. In 1955, Tracy won the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actor for his performance in the film Bad Day at Black Rock.

Tracy left MGM in 1955, and continued to work regularly as a freelance star, despite several health issues and an increasing weariness and irritability as he aged. His personal life was troubled, with a lifelong struggle against severe alcoholism and guilt over his son's deafness. Tracy and his wife Louise became estranged in the 1930s, but the couple never divorced; his 25-year long relationship with Katharine Hepburn was an open secret. Towards the end of his life, Tracy worked almost exclusively for director Stanley Kramer. It was for Kramer that he made his last film, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), completed just 17 days before he died.

Early life edit

 
Tracy at the Northwestern Military and Naval Academy in 1919

Spencer Bonaventure Tracy was born in Milwaukee on April 5, 1900,[2] the second son of Caroline (née Brown; 1874–1942) and truck salesman John Edward Tracy (1873–1928). His mother was from a wealthy Presbyterian Midwestern family, while his father was of Irish Catholic descent.[3] He had a brother Carroll, who was four years older.[4]

Tracy was a difficult and hyperactive child [5] with poor school attendance.[6] Raised Catholic, he was placed in the care of Dominican Order nuns at the age of nine in an attempt to transform his behavior.[7] Later in life, he remarked that he "never would have gone back to school if there had been any other way of learning to read the subtitles in the movies".[6] He became fascinated with movies, watching the same ones repeatedly and later re-enacting scenes to his friends and neighbors.[8] He attended several Jesuit academies in his teenage years, which he claimed took the "badness" out of him and helped him improve his grades.[9]

It helped me develop memory for lines that has been a godsend since I started stage work; it gave me something of a stage presence; and it helped get rid of my awkwardness. Also, I gradually developed the ability to speak extemporaneously.

— Tracy was a key member of his college debating team, which he later said helped with his acting career.[10]

At Marquette Academy, he began attending plays with lifelong friend and fellow actor Pat O'Brien, awakening his interest in the theatre.[11] With little care for their studies and "itching for a chance to go and see some excitement",[11] Tracy and O'Brien enlisted in the Navy together when Tracy turned 18. They were sent to the Naval Training Station in northern Illinois, where they were still students when World War I came to an end.[12] Tracy achieved the rank of seaman second class, but never went to sea and was discharged in February 1919.[13] His father's desire to see one of his sons gain a college degree drove Tracy back to high school to finish his diploma.[13] Studies at two more institutions, plus the additional allowance of "war credits", won Tracy a place at Ripon College. He entered in February 1921, declaring his intention to major in medicine.[14]

Tracy was a popular student at Ripon, where he served as president of his hall and was involved in a number of college activities.[15] He made his stage debut in June 1921, playing the male lead in The Truth.[16] He was very well received in the role[17] and quickly developed a passion for the stage; he was reportedly "obsessive about acting to the degree that he talked about little else".[18] He and some friends formed an acting company called the Campus Players, which they took on tour.[19] As a member of the college debate team, Tracy excelled in arguing and public speaking.[15] It was during a tour with the debate team that he auditioned for the American Academy of Dramatic Arts (AADA) in New York City. He was offered a scholarship to attend the school after performing a scene from one of his earlier roles.[20]

Tracy left Ripon and began classes at AADA in April 1922. O'Brien was also enrolled there and the two shared a small studio apartment. Money was scarce, and the two often lived on meals of rice and pretzels and shared one decent suit between them.[21] Tracy was deemed fit to progress to the senior class, allowing him to join the academy's stock company.[22] He made his New York debut in a play called The Wedding Guests, which opened in October 1922.[23] He made his debut Broadway appearance three months later, playing a wordless robot in R.U.R.[24] He graduated from AADA in March 1923.[25]

Career edit

Stock theatre and Broadway (1923–1930) edit

Immediately following graduation, Tracy joined a new stock company based in White Plains, New York, where he was given peripheral roles.[26] Unhappy there, he moved to a company in Cincinnati, but failed to make an impact.[27] In November 1923, he landed a small part on Broadway in the comedy A Royal Fandango, starring Ethel Barrymore. Reviews for the show were poor and it closed after 25 performances; Tracy later said of the failure, "My ego took an awful beating."[28] When he took a position with a struggling company in New Jersey, Tracy was living on an allowance of 35 cents a day.[29] In January 1924, he played his first leading role with a company in Winnipeg, but the organization soon closed.[30]

Tracy finally achieved some success by joining forces with the notable stock manager William H. Wright in the spring of 1924.[30] A stage partnership was formed with the young actress Selena Royle, who had already made her name on Broadway.[31] It proved a popular draw and their productions were favorably received.[32] One of these performances brought Tracy to the attention of a Broadway producer, who offered him the lead in a new play. The Sheepman previewed in October 1925, but it received poor reviews and closed after its trial run in Connecticut.[33] Dejected, Tracy was forced back to Wright and the stock circuit.[34]

 
Tracy (background) in The Last Mile – the 1930 Broadway role that saw him scouted for Hollywood

In the fall of 1926, Tracy was offered his third shot at Broadway: a role in a new George M. Cohan play called Yellow. Tracy swore that if the play failed to be a hit he would leave stock and work in a "regular" business instead.[35] Tracy was nervous about working with Cohan, one of the most important figures in American theatre,[35] but during rehearsals Cohan announced, "Tracy, you're the best goddamned actor I've ever seen!"[36] Yellow opened on September 21; reviews were mixed but it ran for 135 performances.[37] It was the beginning of an important collaboration for Tracy: "I'd have quit the stage completely," he later commented, "if it hadn't been for George M. Cohan."[38] Cohan wrote a part specifically for Tracy in his next play, The Baby Cyclone.[39] It opened on Broadway in September 1927 and was a hit.[40]

Tracy followed this success with another Cohan play, Whispering Friends, and in 1929 took over from Clark Gable in Conflict, a Broadway drama.[41] Other roles followed, but it was the lead in Dread, written by Pulitzer Prize-winning dramatist Owen Davis that gave Tracy high hopes for success.[42] The story of a man's descent into madness, Dread previewed in Brooklyn to an excellent reception, but on the next day—October 29—the New York stock market crashed.[43] Unable to obtain funding, Dread did not open on Broadway. Following this disappointment, Tracy again considered leaving the theatre and returning to Milwaukee for a more stable life.[44]

In January 1930, Tracy was approached about a new play called The Last Mile. Looking to cast the lead role of a murderer on death row, producer Herman Shumlin met with Tracy, and later recounted: "beneath the surface, here was a man of passion, violence, sensitivity and desperation: no ordinary man, and just the man for the part."[45] The Last Mile opened on Broadway in February, where Tracy's performance was met by a standing ovation that lasted 14 curtain calls.[46] The Commonweal described him as "one of our best and most versatile young actors".[47] The play was a hit with critics,[48] and ran for 289 performances.[49]

Fox (1930–1935) edit

 
With Dickie Moore in Disorderly Conduct (1932), Tracy's seventh film

In 1930, Broadway was being scouted to find actors to work in the new medium of sound films.[47] Tracy was cast in two Vitaphone shorts (Taxi Talks and The Hard Guy), but he had not considered becoming a film actor: "I had no ambition in that direction and I was perfectly happy on the stage", he later explained in an interview.[47] One person who saw Tracy in The Last Mile was director John Ford.

Ford wanted Tracy for the lead role in his next picture, a prison movie. Production company Fox Film Corporation was unsure about Tracy, saying that he did not photograph well, but Ford convinced them that he was right for the role.[50] Up the River (1930) marked the film debut of both Tracy and Humphrey Bogart. After seeing the rushes, Fox immediately offered Tracy a long-term contract.[51] Knowing that he needed the money for his family, with his young son deaf and recovering from polio, Tracy signed with Fox and moved to California.[52] He appeared on the stage only once more in his life.

Winfield Sheehan, the head of Fox, committed to making Tracy a bankable commodity.[53] The studio promoted the actor, releasing ads for his second film Quick Millions (1931) with the headline "A New Star Shines".[54] Three films were made in quick succession, all of which were unsuccessful at the box office.[55] Tracy found himself typecast in comedies, usually playing a crook or a con man.[56] The mold was broken with his seventh picture, Disorderly Conduct (1932), and it was the first of his films since Up the River to return a profit.[57]

In mid-1932, after nine pictures, Tracy remained virtually unknown to the public.[58] He considered leaving Fox once his contract was up for renewal, but a raise in his weekly salary to $1,500 convinced him to stay.[59] He continued to appear in unpopular films, with Me and My Gal (1932) setting an all-time low attendance record for the Roxy Theatre in New York City.[60] He was loaned to Warner Bros. for 20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932), a prison drama co-starring Bette Davis. Tracy was hopeful that it would be his break-out role, but despite good reviews, this failed to materialize.[61]

 
Tracy appeared with Loretta Young in Man's Castle (1933)

Critics began to notice Tracy with The Power and the Glory (1933). The story of a man's rise to prosperity had a screenplay by Preston Sturges and Tracy's performance as railroad tycoon Tom Garner received uniformly strong reviews.[62] William Wilkerson of The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "This sterling performer has finally been given an opportunity to show an ability that has been boxed in by gangster roles ... [the film] has introduced Mr. Tracy as one of the screen's best performers".[63] Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times stated: "No more convincing performance has been given on the screen than Spencer Tracy's impersonation of Tom Garner."[64] Shanghai Madness (1933), meanwhile, revealed Tracy to have a previously unseen sex appeal and served to advance his standing.[63] Despite this attention, Tracy's next two movies went largely unnoticed. Man's Castle (1933) with Loretta Young was anticipated to be a hit, but made only a small profit.[65] The Show-Off (1934), for which he was lent to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, proved popular, but his subsequent outings continued to be unsuccessful.[66]

Tracy drank heavily during his years with Fox and gained a reputation as an alcoholic.[62] He failed to report for filming on Marie Galante in June 1934, and was found in his hotel room, virtually unconscious after a two-week binge.[67] Tracy was removed from the Fox payroll while he recovered in a hospital,[68] and then sued for $125,000 for delaying the production.[69] He completed only two more pictures with the studio.

The details on how Tracy's relationship with Fox ended are unclear: later in life Tracy maintained that he was fired for his drunken behavior, but the Fox records do not support such an account.[70] He was still under contract with the studio when MGM expressed their interest in the actor.[71] They were in need of a new male star, and contacted Tracy on April 2, 1935, offering him a seven-year deal.[71] That afternoon, the contract between Tracy and Fox was terminated "by mutual consent".[71] Tracy made a total of 25 pictures in the five years he was with Fox Film Corporation, most of which lost money at the box office.[72]

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (1935–1955) edit

Growing reputation edit

 
Tracy in Fritz Lang's Fury (1936), his first major hit

In the 1930s, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer was the most respected movie production studio in Hollywood.[73] When Tracy arrived there, he was all but unknown. Biographer James Curtis writes: "Tracy was scarcely a blip on the box office barometer in 1935, a critics' darling and little more".[74] He was, however, well known for being a troublemaker.[75] Producer Irving Thalberg was nevertheless enthusiastic about working with the actor, telling journalist Louella Parsons: "Spencer Tracy will become one of MGM's most valuable stars."[76]

Curtis notes that the studio managed Tracy with care, a welcome change from the ineptitude and apathy he had known while at Fox, which was like "a shot of adrenaline" for the actor.[76] His first film under the new contract was the quickly produced The Murder Man (1935),[77] which included the feature film debut of James Stewart. Thalberg then began a strategy of pairing Tracy with the studio's top actresses:[78] Whipsaw (1935) co-starred Myrna Loy and was a commercial success.[79] Riffraff (1936) put Tracy opposite Jean Harlow. Both films were, however, designed and promoted to showcase their leading ladies, thus continuing Tracy's reputation as a secondary star.[80]

Fury (1936) was the first film to prove that Tracy could make a success on his own merit.[81] Directed by Fritz Lang, Tracy played an innocent man who swears revenge after narrowly escaping death by a lynch mob. The film and performance received excellent reviews.[82] It made a profit of $1.3 million worldwide.[83] Curtis writes: "audiences who, just a year earlier, had no clear handle on him, were suddenly turning out to see him. It was a transition that was nothing short of miraculous ... [and showed] a willingness on the part of the public to embrace a leading man who was not textbook handsome nor bigger than life."[81]

 
Lobby card with Clark Gable and Myrna Loy in Test Pilot (1938), one of the three enormously successful films that fixed Gable and Tracy as a team in the public imagination.

Fury was followed one month later with the release of the big-budget disaster movie San Francisco (1936). Tracy played a supporting role alongside Clark Gable in the film, allowing audiences to see him with the top male star in Hollywood.[79] Taking on the role of a priest, Tracy reportedly felt a heavy responsibility in representing the church.[84] Despite having only 17 minutes of screen time, Tracy was highly praised for his performance and received an Oscar nomination for Best Actor.[85] San Francisco became the highest-grossing picture of 1936.[citation needed] Donald Deschner, in his book on Tracy, credits Fury and San Francisco as the "two films that changed his career and gave him the status of a major star".[86]

By this point, Tracy entered a period of self-imposed sobriety and MGM expressed pleasure with Tracy's professionalism.[87] His public reputation continued to grow with Libeled Lady (also 1936), a screwball comedy that cast him with William Powell, Loy and Harlow. According to Curtis, "Powell, Harlow and Loy were among the biggest draws in the industry, and equal billing in such a powerhouse company could only serve to advance Tracy's standing".[88] Libeled Lady was his third hit picture in the space of six months.[89]

Oscar wins edit

Tracy appeared in four films released in 1937. They Gave Him a Gun, a crime-drama, went largely unnoticed,[90] but Captains Courageous was one of the major film events of the year.[90] Tracy played a Portuguese fisherman in the adventure movie, based on the novel by Rudyard Kipling. He was uncomfortable feigning a foreign accent,[91] and resented having his hair curled,[92] but the role was a hit with audiences and Tracy won the Academy Award for Best Actor. Captains Courageous was followed by Big City with Luise Rainer and Mannequin with Joan Crawford, the latter of which performed well at the box office.[93] With two years of hit movies and industry recognition, Tracy became a star in the United States. A 1937 poll of 20 million people to find the "King and Queen of Hollywood" ranked Tracy sixth among males.[94]

Tracy was reunited with Clark Gable and Myrna Loy for Test Pilot (1938). The film was another enormous commercial and critical success,[95] permanently cementing the notion of Gable and Tracy as a team in the public imagination.

 
Tracy and Freddie Bartholomew in Captains Courageous (1937)

Based on the positive response he had received in San Francisco, MGM again cast Tracy as a priest in Boys Town (also 1938).[96] Portraying Edward J. Flanagan, a Catholic priest and founder of Boys Town in Nebraska, was a role Tracy took seriously: "I'm so anxious to do a good job as Father Flanagan that it worries me, keeps me awake at night."[97] Tracy received strong reviews for his performance, and the movie grossed $4 million worldwide.[98] For the second year running, Tracy received an Academy Award for Best Actor. He was humble about the recognition, saying in his acceptance speech: "I honestly do not feel that I can accept this award ... I can accept it only as it was meant to be for a great man—Father Flanagan".[99] Although he did keep his Oscar, a second statuette was struck and immediately sent to Flanagan.[100] Tracy was listed as the fifth biggest box office star of 1938.[101]

Tracy was absent from screens for almost a year before returning to Fox on loan and appearing as Henry M. Stanley in Stanley and Livingstone (1939) with Nancy Kelly. Curtis maintains that Tracy's non-visibility did little to affect his standing with the public or exhibitors.[102] In October 1939, a Fortune magazine survey of the nation's favorite movie actors listed Tracy in first place.[103]

Established star edit

MGM capitalized on Tracy's popularity, casting him in four movies for 1940. I Take This Woman with Hedy Lamarr was a critical and commercial failure,[104] but the historical drama Northwest Passage—Tracy's first film in Technicolor—proved popular.[104] He then portrayed Thomas Edison in Edison, the Man. Howard Barnes of the New York Herald Tribune was not charmed by the story, but wrote that Tracy, "by sheer persuasion of his acting", made the film worthy.[105] Boom Town was the third and final Gable-Tracy picture, also starring Claudette Colbert and Hedy Lamarr, making it one of the most anticipated films of the year.[106] The film opened to the biggest crowd since Gone With the Wind.[107]

Tracy signed a new contract with MGM in April 1941, which paid $5,000 a week and limited him to three pictures a year (Tracy had previously expressed a need to reduce his workload).[108] The contract also stated for the first time that his billing was to be "that of a star". Contrary to popular belief, the contract did not include a clause that he receive top billing, but from this point onward, every film Tracy appeared in featured his name first.[109]

Tracy returned to the role of Father Flanagan for the sequel Men of Boys Town (1941). It was followed by Tracy's only venture into the horror genre, an adaptation of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (also 1941), co-starring Ingrid Bergman and Lana Turner. Tracy was unhappy with the film, disliking the heavy make-up he needed to portray Hyde.[110] Critical response to the film was mixed and brought Tracy the only negative reviews of his career.[111] Theodore Strauss of The New York Times wrote that "Mr. Tracy's portrait of Hyde is not so much evil incarnate as it is the ham rampant."[112] The film was financially successful, however, taking in more than $2 million at the box office.[113]

 
Lobby card for Woman of the Year (1942), the first of nine pictures Tracy made with Katharine Hepburn

Tracy was set to star in a film version of The Yearling for 1942, but several on-set difficulties and bad weather on location forced MGM to shelve the production.[114] With the end of that project, he became available for the new Katharine Hepburn film, Woman of the Year (1942). Hepburn greatly admired Tracy, calling him "the best movie actor there was".[115] She had wanted him for her comeback vehicle, The Philadelphia Story (1940).[116] Hepburn was delighted that Tracy was available for Woman of the Year, saying "I was just damned grateful he was willing to work with me."[117] The romantic comedy performed well at the box office and received strong reviews.[118] William Boehnel wrote in the New York World-Telegram, "To begin with, it has Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy in the leading roles. This in itself would be enough to make any film memorable. But when you get Tracy and Hepburn turning in brilliant performances to boot, you've got something to cheer about."[118]

Woman of the Year was followed by an adaptation of John Steinbeck's Tortilla Flat (also 1942) which met with a tepid response.[119] MGM did not hesitate to repeat the teaming of Tracy and Hepburn and cast them in the dark mystery Keeper of the Flame (1943). Despite a weak critical reception the film out-grossed Woman of the Year confirming the strength of their partnership.[120]

Tracy's next three appearances were all war-based. A Guy Named Joe (1943) with Irene Dunne surpassed San Francisco to become his highest-grossing film to date.[121] The Seventh Cross (1944), a suspense film about an escape from a Nazi concentration camp, met with critical acclaim.[122] It was followed by the aviation film Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944). On the strength of these three releases, the annual Quigley poll revealed Tracy was MGM's biggest money-making star of 1944,[123] His only film the following year was his third with Hepburn, Without Love (1945), a light romantic comedy that performed well at the box office despite muted enthusiasm from critics.[124]

Stage and screen edit

 
The Sea of Grass (1947)

In 1945, Tracy returned to the stage for the first time in 15 years. He had been through a dark patch personally—culminating with a hospital stay—and Hepburn felt that a play would help restore his focus.[125] Tracy told a journalist in April, "I'm coming back to Broadway to see if I can still act."[124] The play was The Rugged Path by Robert E. Sherwood. It first previewed in Providence on September 28, to a sold-out crowd and tepid response.[126] It was a difficult production; director Garson Kanin later wrote: "In the ten days prior to the New York opening all the important relationships had deteriorated. Spencer was tense and unbending, could not, or would not, take direction".[127] Tracy considered leaving the show before it even opened on Broadway,[128] and lasted there just six weeks before announcing his intention to close the show.[129] It closed on January 19, 1946, after 81 performances.[130] Tracy later explained to a friend: "I couldn't say those goddamn lines over and over and over again every night ... At least every day is a new day for me in films ... But this thing—every day, every day, over and over again."[131]

Tracy was absent from screens in 1946, the first year since his motion picture debut that there was no Spencer Tracy release.[130] His next film was The Sea of Grass (1947), a melodrama set in the American Old West with Hepburn. Similar to Keeper of the Flame and Without Love, a lukewarm response from critics did not stop it from being a financial success both at home and abroad.[132] He followed it later that year with Cass Timberlane, in which he played a judge. It was a commercial success, but Curtis notes that co-star Lana Turner overshadowed Tracy in most of the reviews.[133]

A fifth film with Hepburn, Frank Capra's political drama State of the Union, was released in 1948. Tracy played a presidential candidate in the movie, which was warmly received.[134] He then appeared in Edward, My Son (1949) with Deborah Kerr. Tracy disliked the role, and told director George Cukor, "It's rather disconcerting to me to find how easily I play a heel."[135] Upon its release, The New Yorker wrote of the "hopeless miscasting of Mr. Tracy".[136] The film became Tracy's biggest money-loser at MGM.[137]

Tracy finished off the 1940s with Malaya (1949), an adventure film with James Stewart, and Adam's Rib (also 1949), a comedy with Tracy and Hepburn playing married lawyers who oppose each other in court. Tracy and Hepburn's friends, Garson Kanin and Ruth Gordon, wrote the parts specifically for the two leads. The film received strong reviews and became the highest-grossing Tracy-Hepburn picture to date.[138] Film critic Bosley Crowther wrote, "Mr. Tracy and Miss Hepburn are the stellar performers in this show and their perfect compatibility in comic capers is delightful to see."[139]

Final MGM years edit

 
Tracy and Elizabeth Taylor in a promotional image for Father of the Bride (1950). The comedic role of Stanley Banks was one of Tracy's nine Oscar-nominated performances.

Tracy received his first Academy Award nomination in 12 years for playing the role of Stanley Banks in Father of the Bride (1950). In the comedy film, Banks attempts to handle preparations for the upcoming wedding of his daughter (Elizabeth Taylor). "It's the second strong comedy in a row for Spencer Tracy, doing the title role, and he socks it", Variety commented.[140] The film was the biggest commercial success of Tracy's career to date, earning $6 million worldwide.[140] MGM wanted a sequel, and while Tracy was unsure, he accepted.[141] Father's Little Dividend (1951) was released ten months later and performed well at the box office.[142] On the strength of the two movies, Tracy polled as one of the nation's top stars once more.[142]

Tracy portrayed a lawyer in The People Against O'Hara (1951) and re-teamed with Hepburn for the sports comedy Pat and Mike (1952), the second feature written expressly for them by Kanin and Gordon. Pat and Mike became one of the duo's most popular and critically acclaimed films.[143] Tracy followed it with Plymouth Adventure (also 1952), an historical drama set aboard the Mayflower, co-starring Gene Tierney. It met with poor critical and box office response and posted a loss of $1.8 million for MGM.[144] Tracy returned to the role of a concerned father in The Actress (1953). Producer Lawrence Weingarten recalled: "That film ... got more [acclaim] from the critics than any film I ever made in all the years, and we didn't make enough to pay for the ushers in the theatre."[145] For his performance in The Actress, Tracy won a Golden Globe Award and received a nomination for the British Academy Film Award.

MGM lent Tracy to Fox for the well-received Western film Broken Lance, his only film released in 1954.[146] In 1955, Tracy turned down William Wyler's The Desperate Hours because he refused to take second-billing to Humphrey Bogart.[147] Instead, Tracy appeared as a one-armed protagonist who faces the hostility of a small desert town in Bad Day at Black Rock (1955), a film directed by John Sturges. For his work, Tracy received a fifth Oscar nomination and was awarded the Best Actor prize at the Cannes Film Festival.

Tracy had personally been unhappy with the picture and threatened to leave during production.[148] This behavior became a regular occurrence for Tracy, who was increasingly lethargic and cynical. He began production on Tribute to a Bad Man in the summer of 1955, but pulled out when he claimed that the shooting location in the Colorado mountains gave him altitude sickness.[149] The problems caused by the picture fractured Tracy's relationship with MGM. In June 1955, he was one of the two remaining stars of the studio's peak years (the other being Robert Taylor), but with his contract up for renewal, Tracy opted to freelance for the first time in his movie career.[150]

Independent player (1956–1967) edit

Tracy's first post-MGM appearance was in The Mountain (1956) with Robert Wagner, who played his much younger brother (Wagner had earlier played his son in Broken Lance). The location filming in the French Alps proved a difficult experience, and he threatened to leave the project.[151] His performance earned a BAFTA nomination for Best Foreign Actor. Tracy and Hepburn then paired together for the eighth time in the office-based comedy Desk Set (1957). He again had to be convinced to stay with the film,[152] one which met with a weak response.[153]

 
Lobby card for John Ford's The Last Hurrah (1958)

Tracy appeared in The Old Man and the Sea (1958), a project that had been in development for five years. An adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's novella of the same title, Hemingway's agent, Leland Hayward, had previously written to the author: "Of all Hollywood people, the one that comes the closest to me in quality, in personality and voice, in personal dignity and ability, is Spencer Tracy."[154] Tracy was delighted to be offered the role.[154] He was told to lose some of his 210 pounds before filming began but failed to do so.[155] Hemingway thus reported that Tracy was a "terrible liability to the picture", and had to be reassured that the star was being carefully photographed to disguise his weight problem.[156] Appearing alone on screen for most of the film, Tracy considered The Old Man and the Sea the toughest part he ever played.[157] In reviewing the performance, Jack Moffitt of The Hollywood Reporter said it was "so intimate and revealing of universal human experience that, to me, it almost transcended acting and became reality".[158] Tracy received Oscar and BAFTA Award nominations for the work.

After abandoning two projects, including a proposed remake of The Blue Angel with Marilyn Monroe,[159] Tracy's next feature was The Last Hurrah (1958). It reunited him with his debut director, John Ford, after 28 years and his childhood friend Pat O'Brien. Tracy took a year to commit to the project, in which he played an Irish-American mayor seeking re-election.[160] The movie was favorably reviewed, but not commercially successful.[161] At the end of 1958, the National Board of Review named Tracy the year's Best Actor. He nevertheless began to ponder retirement, with Curtis writing that he was "chronically tired, unhappy, ill, and uninterested in work".[162]

Stanley Kramer partnership edit

 
Inherit the Wind (1960), the first of four films Tracy made with Stanley Kramer, depicted the Scopes "Monkey Trial" of 1925

Tracy did not appear on the screen again until the release of Inherit the Wind (1960), a film based on the 1925 Scopes "Monkey Trial" which debated the right to teach evolution in schools. Director Stanley Kramer sought Tracy for the role of lawyer Henry Drummond (based on Clarence Darrow), from the outset.[163] Starring opposite Tracy was Fredric March, a pairing Variety described as "a stroke of casting genius ... Both men are spellbinders in the most laudatory sense of the word."[164] The film garnered Tracy some of the strongest reviews of his career—he was nominated for an Academy Award, BAFTA Award and Golden Globe Award for the performance—but it was not a commercial hit.[165]

In the volcano disaster movie The Devil at 4 O'Clock (1961), Tracy played a priest for the fourth time in his career. His co-star, Frank Sinatra, ceded top-billing to guarantee Tracy for the picture.[166] Continuing his pattern of indecisiveness,[167] Tracy briefly pulled out of the production before recommitting.[164] Critics were unenthusiastic about the film, which was nevertheless Tracy's most successful box-office outing since Father of the Bride.[168]

Inherit the Wind began an enduring collaboration between Stanley Kramer and Tracy—Kramer directed Tracy's three final films. Judgment at Nuremberg, released at the end of 1961, was their second feature together. The film depicts the "Judges' Trial", the trial of Nazi judges for their role in the Holocaust. Abby Mann wrote the role of Judge Haywood with Tracy in mind;[169] Tracy called it the best script he had ever read.[170] At the end of the film, Tracy delivered a 13-minute speech. He recorded it in one take and received a round of applause from the cast and crew.[171] Upon seeing the film, Mann wrote to Tracy: "Every writer ought to have the experience of having Spencer Tracy do his lines. There is nothing in the world quite like it."[172] The film met with positive reviews and a large audience; Tracy received an eighth Oscar nomination for his performance.[173]

 
In Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967). Tracy died 17 days after filming was completed.

Tracy turned down roles in Long Day's Journey into Night (1962) and The Leopard (1963),[174] and had to pull out of MGM's all-star How the West Was Won (1962) when it clashed with Judgment at Nuremberg. He was, however, able to record the film's narration track.[175] Tracy was in very poor health by this time, and working became a challenge. In 1962, he took the role of Captain T. G. Culpeper in Kramer's comedy It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), a small but key part that he was able to complete in nine non-consecutive days.[176] The film was released in November 1963. Tracy's name topped the list of performers, and the comedy became one of the highest-grossing American films of the year.[177] As his health worsened, he had to cancel commitments to Cheyenne Autumn (1964) and The Cincinnati Kid (1965).[178] Film offers continued to come, but Tracy did not work again until 1967 when he took the starring role in Kramer's Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), Tracy's ninth and final film with Hepburn.

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner explored the topic of interracial marriage, with Tracy playing a liberal-minded newspaper publisher whose values are challenged when his daughter wishes to marry a black man, played by Sidney Poitier. Tracy appeared happy to be working again, but he told journalists visiting the set that the movie would be his last for he would permanently retire after filming due to his health problems.[179] To commence filming, Tracy had to be insured for the high premium of $71,000 if he died during filming; Hepburn and Kramer both put their salaries in escrow until Tracy completed his scenes.[180] In poor health, Tracy could work for only two or three hours each day.[181] He completed his last scene on May 24, 1967.[182] Tracy died 17 days later from a heart attack on June 10.[183]

The film was released in December 1967, and although reviews were mixed, Curtis notes that "Tracy's performance was singled out for praise in nearly every instance."[184] Brendan Gill of The New Yorker wrote that Tracy gave "a faultless and, under the circumstances, heartbreaking performance".[184] The movie became Tracy's highest grossing picture.[185] He received a posthumous nomination for Best Actor—his ninth—at the 40th Academy Awards, along with a Golden Globe Award nomination and a BAFTA win for Best Actor.

Personal life edit

Marriage and family edit

Tracy met actress Louise Treadwell while they were both members of the Wood Players in White Plains, New York—the first stock company Tracy joined after graduating. The couple was engaged in May 1923,[186] and married on September 10 of that year between the matinee and evening performances of his show.[187]

Their son, John Ten Broeck Tracy, was born in June 1924.[188] When John was 10 months old, Louise discovered that the boy was deaf.[189] She resisted telling Tracy for three months. Tracy was devastated by the news[190] and felt lifelong guilt over his son's deafness. He was convinced that John's hearing impairment was a punishment for his own sins.[191] As a result, Tracy had trouble connecting with his son[192] and distanced himself from his family. Joseph L. Mankiewicz, a friend of Tracy's, later theorized: "[Tracy] didn't leave Louise. He left the scene of his guilt."[193] A second child, Louise "Susie" Treadwell Tracy, was born in July 1932.[194] The children were raised in their mother's Episcopal faith.[195]

Tracy left the family home in 1933,[196] and he and Louise openly discussed the separation with the media, maintaining that they were still friends and had not taken divorce action.[197] From September 1933 to June 1934, Tracy had a public affair with Loretta Young, his co-star in Man's Castle.[198] He reconciled with Louise in 1935.[199] There was never again an official separation between Tracy and his wife, but the marriage continued to be troubled.[200] Tracy increasingly lived in hotels and by the 1940s, the two were effectively living separate lives.[201] Tracy frequently engaged in extramarital affairs,[202] including with co-stars Joan Crawford in 1937[203] and Ingrid Bergman in 1941.[204] He had an affair with Myrna Loy in 1935 and 1936.[205][206][207] In 1990, during a phone interview with educator Alan Greenberg, Loy revealed she was in love with Tracy. "I loved Spence, he was adorable...I loved him and I really did love him. I loved him. I mean I was in love with him and she [Katharine Hepburn] got in the way."[208] Later, during the 1940s, Loy regularly visited Tracy at Beverly Hills in his hotel room.[209]

Katharine Hepburn edit

 
Tracy's relationship with his frequent co-star Katharine Hepburn lasted from 1941 until his death. He never divorced his wife, Louise Tracy. Promotional image for Without Love (1945).

While making Woman of the Year in September 1941, Tracy began what was to become a lifelong relationship with Katharine Hepburn. The actress became devoted to him,[210] and their relationship lasted until his death 26 years later.[211] Tracy never returned to live in the family home, although he visited regularly.[212][213]

The MGM moguls were careful to protect their stars from controversy,[214] and Tracy wished to conceal his relationship with Hepburn from his wife,[215] so it was hidden from the public. The couple did not live together until the final years of Tracy's life,[216] when they shared a cottage on George Cukor's estate in Beverly Hills.[211] In Hollywood, however, the intimate nature of the Tracy-Hepburn partnership was an open secret.[217] Angela Lansbury, who worked with the pair on State of the Union, later said: "We all knew, but nobody ever said anything. In those days it wasn't discussed."[211][218] Tracy was not someone to express his emotions,[219] but Tracy's friend, actress Betsy Drake believed that he "was utterly dependent upon Hepburn".[220] Tracy's infidelity apparently continued, however,[221] and he reportedly had an affair with Gene Tierney during the making of Plymouth Adventure in 1952.[222]

Neither Tracy nor his wife ever pursued a divorce, despite their estrangement. He told Joan Fontaine, "I can get a divorce whenever I want to, but my wife and Kate like things just as they are."[223] Louise, meanwhile, reportedly commented, "I will be Mrs. Spencer Tracy until the day I die."[134] Hepburn did not interfere and never fought for marriage.[224]

Character edit

Tracy was an avowed Catholic, but his cousin, Jane Feely, said that he did not devoutly follow the religion: "he was often not a practical Catholic either. I would call him a spiritual Catholic."[225] Garson Kanin, a friend of Tracy's for 25 years, described him as "a true believer"[226] who respected his religion.[227] At periods in his life, Tracy attended Mass regularly.[228] Tracy did not believe actors should publicize their political views, but in 1940 lent his name to the "Hollywood for Roosevelt" committee[229] and personally identified as a Democrat.[230]

Tracy struggled with alcoholism throughout his adult life,[231] an ailment that ran in his father's side of the family.[232] Rather than being a steady drinker, as commonly thought, he was prone to periods of binging on alcohol.[233] Loretta Young remarked that Tracy was "awful" when he was drunk,[234] and he was twice arrested for his behavior while intoxicated.[235] Because of this bad reaction to alcohol, Tracy regularly embarked on prolonged periods of sobriety and developed an all-or-nothing routine.[236] Myrna Loy said: "Days of drinking had left him belligerent."[237] Hepburn commented that he would stop drinking for "months, even years at a time" before falling off the wagon without warning.[238]

Tracy was prone to bouts of depression and anxiety: he was described by Mrs. Tracy as having "the most volatile disposition I've ever seen—up in the clouds one minute and down in the depths the next. And when he's low, he's very, very low."[239] He was plagued by insomnia throughout his life.[240] As a result, Tracy became dependent on barbiturates to sleep, followed by dexedrine to function.[241] Hepburn, who adopted a nursing role towards Tracy,[242] was unable to understand her partner's unhappiness. She wrote in her autobiography: "What was it? ... Never at peace ... Tortured by some sort of guilt. Some terrible misery."[238][243]

Illness and death edit

 
Tracy's memorial at Forest Lawn

Tracy's adult life of alcoholism, smoking cigarettes, taking pills and being overweight left him in poor health by the time he reached his 60s. On July 21, 1963, Tracy was hospitalized after a severe attack of breathlessness.[244] Doctors found that he was suffering from pulmonary edema, where fluid accumulates in the lungs due to an inability of the heart to pump properly.[245] They also declared his blood pressure dangerously high.[246] From this point on Tracy remained very weak, and Hepburn moved into his home to provide constant care.[247] In January 1965, he was diagnosed with hypertensive heart disease and also began treatment for a previously ignored diagnosis of Type II diabetes.[248] Tracy almost died in September 1965: a stay in the hospital following a prostatectomy resulted in his kidneys failing, and he spent the night in a coma.[249] His recovery the next day was described by his attending doctor as "a kind of miracle".[250]

Tracy spent most of the next two years at home with Hepburn, living what she described as a quiet life: reading, painting, and listening to music.[251] On June 10, 1967, 17 days after completing what was his last film role in Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, Tracy awakened at 3:00 am to make himself a cup of tea in his apartment in Beverly Hills, California. Hepburn described in her autobiography how she followed him to the kitchen: "Just as I was about to give [the door] a push, there was a sound of a cup smashing to the floor—then clump—a loud clump."[252] She entered the room to find Tracy lying dead from a heart attack. He was 67.[253] Hepburn recalled, "He looked so happy to be done with living, which for all his accomplishments had been a frightful burden for him."[254] MGM publicist Howard Strickling told the media that Tracy had been alone when he died and was found by his housekeeper.[255][256]

A Requiem Mass was held for Tracy on June 12 at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church in East Hollywood.[257] Active pallbearers included George Cukor, Stanley Kramer, Frank Sinatra, James Stewart, and John Ford.[258] Out of consideration for Tracy's family, Hepburn did not attend the funeral.[259] Tracy is interred at Glendale's Forest Lawn Memorial Park, near his wife Louise, son John and daughter Susie.[260][261][262]

Reputation and acting style edit

Tracy had a solid reputation among his peers and received considerable praise from the film industry.[263] After his death, MGM head Dore Schary said that there "can be no question that [Tracy] was the best and most protean actor of our screen".[264] He was referred to as the greatest actor of his generation by Clark Gable,[265] James Cagney,[266] Humphrey Bogart,[267] John Ford,[160] Garson Kanin,[268] and Katharine Hepburn.[269] Actor Richard Widmark, who idolized Tracy, called him "the greatest movie actor there ever was" and said that he had "learned more about acting from watching Tracy than in any other way".[270]

Tracy was particularly respected for his naturalism onscreen. Hume Cronyn, who worked with Tracy on The Seventh Cross, admired his screen presence: "His method appeared to be as simple as it is difficult to achieve. He appeared to do nothing. He listened, he felt, he said the words without forcing anything."[271] Joan Crawford likewise expressed her admiration for Tracy's seemingly effortless performances, stating that it was "inspiring" to co-star with him and that "his is such simplicity of performance, such naturalness and humor [...] he walks through a scene [and] makes it seem so easy".[272] His four-time co-star Joan Bennett said that she "never had the feeling he was 'acting' in a scene, but the truth of the situation was actually happening, spontaneously, at the moment he spoke his lines".[272] Cagney noted that Tracy was rarely the target of impressionists because "you can't mimic reserve and control very well [...] there's nothing to imitate except his genius and that can't be mimicked".[273]

I've never known what acting is. Who can honestly say what it is? ... I wonder what actors are supposed to be, if not themselves ... I've finally narrowed it down to where, when I begin a part, I say to myself, this is Spencer Tracy as a judge, or this is Spencer Tracy as a priest or as a lawyer, and let it go at that. Look, the only thing an actor has to offer a director and finally an audience is his instinct. That's all.[274]

–Tracy giving his opinion on acting.

Tracy was praised for his listening and reacting skills; Barry Nelson said that he "brought the art of reacting to a new height",[275] while Stanley Kramer declared that he "thought and listened better than anyone in the history of motion pictures".[276] Millard Kaufman noted that Tracy "listened with every fiber of his entire body".[277] In his memoir, Burt Reynolds noted Tracy's emphasis on naturalism when, as a rookie actor, he observed Tracy on the set of Inherit the Wind. Reynolds later introduced himself to Tracy as an actor and Tracy replied, "An actor, huh? Just remember not to ever let anyone catch you at it."[278]

Despite the perception that he was able to turn up to a shoot and perform effortlessly, Tracy's acquaintances said that he would carefully prepare for each role in private. Joseph L. Mankiewicz lived with him during the production of Test Pilot, and recounted that Tracy would lock himself in his bedroom "working extremely hard" each night.[279] Many co-workers commented on his strong work ethic and professionalism.[280] However, he did not like to rehearse and would quickly lose his "effectiveness" after shooting two or three takes of the same scene.[281] Kanin described him as "an instinctive player, who trusted the moment of creation".[282] Tracy's close friend Chester Erskine pinpointed his acting style as one of "selection", stating that he strove to give as little as was needed to be effective and reached "a minimum to make the maximum".[283]

Tracy disliked being asked about his technique or what advice he would give to others.[284] He often belittled the profession of acting,[285] once saying to Kanin, "Why do actors think they're so goddamn important? They're not. Acting is not an important job in the scheme of things. Plumbing is."[286] He was also humble about his abilities, telling a journalist, "It's just that I try no tricks. No profile. No 'great lover' act ... I just project myself as I am—plain, trying to be honest."[135] He was known to have enjoyed the quip once made by Alfred Lunt, "The art of acting is: learn your lines and don't bump into the furniture!"[287] Hepburn, in an interview six years after Tracy's death, suggested that Tracy wished he had held a different profession.[288]

Assessment and legacy edit

 
Tracy's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 6814 Hollywood Boulevard[289]

In the 21st century, Tracy is best known to general audiences for his association with Katharine Hepburn.[290][291] He continues to receive praise from film scholars: critic Leonard Maltin calls Tracy "one of the 20th century's finest actors",[292] while film historian Jeanine Basinger describes his career as a "golden record of movie achievement".[291] Charles Matthews, writing for The Washington Post, argues that "Tracy deserves to be remembered for himself, as a master of acting technique".[290]

An award for excellence in film acting is bestowed in Tracy's name at the University of California, Los Angeles. Past recipients of the UCLA Spencer Tracy Award include Kirk Douglas, Michael Douglas, Morgan Freeman, Tom Hanks, Anthony Hopkins, James Stewart, and Denzel Washington.[293]

A 1986 PBS documentary titled The Spencer Tracy Legacy was hosted by Hepburn.[211][294] It includes clips from Tracy's films, and behind-the-scenes archival footage and home movies of Tracy's private life and career, as well as newly filmed interviews with many of his former co-stars,[294] and with his daughter Susie Tracy.[211] In 2009, Tracy provided inspiration for the character Carl in Pixar's Oscar-winning film Up. Director Pete Docter explained that there is "something sweet about these grumpy old guys".[295] In 2014, a film about Tracy's relationship with Katharine Hepburn was announced to be in development.[296]

Several of Tracy's films, particularly his comedies, are regarded as classics of American cinema. He starred in four of the titles on the American Film Institute's list of "100 Years ... 100 Laughs": Adam's Rib, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, Father of the Bride and Woman of the Year.[297] Guess Who's Coming to Dinner was included on AFI's list of the 100 greatest American movies,[298] while Captains Courageous was featured on their list of America's most inspiring movies.[299]

Awards and nominations edit

Tracy was nominated for nine Academy Awards for Best Actor, a category record he holds with Laurence Olivier. He was the first of nine actors to win the award twice, and is one of two actors to receive it consecutively, the other being Tom Hanks.[300] Tracy was also nominated for five British Academy Film Awards, of which he won two, and four Golden Globe Awards, winning once. In addition, he received the Cannes Film Festival award for Best Actor and was once named Best Actor by the National Board of Review.

Tracy was recognized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for the following performances:

Filmography edit

Selected filmography:

References edit

  1. ^ "AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Stars". American Film Institute. June 16, 1999. from the original on January 13, 2013. Retrieved February 20, 2012.
  2. ^ "Los Angeles Times Hollywood Star Walk – Spencer Tracy". Los Angeles Times. from the original on May 7, 2016. Retrieved April 20, 2017.
  3. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 27.
  4. ^ Curtis (2011), p. 29.
  5. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 31.
  6. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 36.
  7. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 37.
  8. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 40.
  9. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 42.
  10. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 34.
  11. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 43.
  12. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 45. (The quote about joining the Navy comes from a 1937 interview with Tracy.)
  13. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 46.
  14. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 49; Deschner (1972) p. 34.
  15. ^ a b . Ripon College. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved November 30, 2011.
  16. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 53.
  17. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 54.
  18. ^ Cutis (2011) p. 55.
  19. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 59.
  20. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 66; Kanin (1971) p. 10.
  21. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 67.
  22. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 70.
  23. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 71.
  24. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 72.
  25. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 73.
  26. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 6.
  27. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 13–15.
  28. ^ Deschner (1972) pp. 36–37.
  29. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 17.
  30. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 18.
  31. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 21–22.
  32. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 24, 76, 82, 85.
  33. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 37; Curtis (2011) p. 86.
  34. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 87.
  35. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 91.
  36. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 92; Deschner (1972) p. 39.
  37. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 39.
  38. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 35.
  39. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 40.
  40. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 106.
  41. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 109, 114.
  42. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 117.
  43. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 118.
  44. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 119.
  45. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 124.
  46. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 130.
  47. ^ a b c Curtis (2011) p. 132.
  48. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 131; Deschner (1972) p. 43.
  49. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 888.
  50. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 135–137.
  51. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 43.
  52. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 145; Kanin (1971) p. 109, quotes Tracy talking about signing for Fox: "So with me, it was just to pick up the dough I needed."
  53. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 168.
  54. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 157.
  55. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 161.
  56. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 170, 177.
  57. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 176.
  58. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 178. In a survey conducted by Variety magazine of the 133 biggest money-makers in the movie industry, Tracy did not make the list.
  59. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 183–184.
  60. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 188.
  61. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 202.
  62. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 208.
  63. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 200.
  64. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 209.
  65. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 223.
  66. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 231.
  67. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 241.
  68. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 242.
  69. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 244.
  70. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 254–255.
  71. ^ a b c Curtis (2011) p. 259.
  72. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 234.
  73. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 224.
  74. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 365.
  75. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 258.
  76. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 260.
  77. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 261.
  78. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 326.
  79. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 272.
  80. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 266, 293. Deschner (1972) p. 47, quotes Louella Parsons saying: "Instead of being a star himself, he was a leading man to all MGM's glamour girls."
  81. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 293.
  82. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 291.
  83. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 292.
  84. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 277.
  85. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 310.
  86. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 44.
  87. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 278.
  88. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 299.
  89. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 308.
  90. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 316.
  91. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 300.
  92. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 305.
  93. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 339.
  94. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 333. The poll was conducted by 55 metropolitan newspapers. Ahead of Tracy in the poll were Clark Gable, Robert Taylor, Tyrone Power, William Powell and Nelson Eddy.
  95. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 347.
  96. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 343.
  97. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 345.
  98. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 362.
  99. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 363.
  100. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 364.
  101. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 359.
  102. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 390.
  103. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 391.
  104. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 399.
  105. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 49.
  106. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 400.
  107. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 406.
  108. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 385.
  109. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 415.
  110. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 411.
  111. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 422–423.
  112. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 170.
  113. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 423.
  114. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 420.
  115. ^ Berg (2004) p. 146.
  116. ^ Berg (2004) p. 138.
  117. ^ Berg (2004) p. 171.
  118. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 457.
  119. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 479.
  120. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 479–480; Kanin (1971) p. 5.
  121. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 500.
  122. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 505.
  123. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 512.
  124. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 515.
  125. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 517 for hospital stay; p. 512 for "Hepburn's strategy".
  126. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 525–256.
  127. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 97.
  128. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 528.
  129. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 531.
  130. ^ a b Deschner (1972) p. 51.
  131. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 530.
  132. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 549.
  133. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 559.
  134. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 546.
  135. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 567.
  136. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 579.
  137. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 580.
  138. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 587.
  139. ^ Crowther, Bosley (December 26, 1949). "'Adam's Rib,' 'Tight Little Island,' 'Amazing Mr. Beecham' Among Movie Newcomers". The New York Times. from the original on December 28, 2013. Retrieved August 25, 2011.
  140. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 599.
  141. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 600.
  142. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 609.
  143. ^ Berg (2004) p. 198.
  144. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 637.
  145. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 652.
  146. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 674.
  147. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 680.
  148. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 670 for threatening to leave; p. 680 for negativity toward the film.
  149. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 687.
  150. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 689.
  151. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 695.
  152. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 723.
  153. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 738.
  154. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 644.
  155. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 707, 732.
  156. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 732.
  157. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 725.
  158. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 748.
  159. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 738–739. The second film was Ten North Frederick.
  160. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 741. John Ford comment: "When I say Spencer Tracy is the best actor we ever had, I'm giving you something of my philosophy on acting. The best is most natural."
  161. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 752.
  162. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 745.
  163. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 750.
  164. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 768.
  165. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 769.
  166. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 767.
  167. ^ Deschner (1972), p. 21.
  168. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 798.
  169. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 765.
  170. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 774.
  171. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 794.
  172. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 796.
  173. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 803.
  174. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 797.
  175. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 806.
  176. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 811.
  177. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 818.
  178. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 818, 822. Both roles eventually went to Edward G. Robinson.
  179. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 836.
  180. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 839; Berg (2004) p. 243.
  181. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 847.
  182. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 856.
  183. ^ Hepburn (1991) p. 402; Curtis (2011) p. 803.
  184. ^ a b Curtis (2011) p. 873.
  185. ^ Berg (2004) p. 249.
  186. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 12.
  187. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 14–15.
  188. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 21.
  189. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 78.
  190. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 84.
  191. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 85, 95, 108, 112, 166, 338, 586, 647.
  192. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 96, 565.
  193. ^ Cutis (2011) p. 338.
  194. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 177.
  195. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 485.
  196. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 205.
  197. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 206, 216, 226.
  198. ^ Curtis (2011), p. 210 for beginning of affair, p. 235 for break-up. For public nature of the relationship see pp. 213, 215.
  199. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 253.
  200. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 319.
  201. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 426.
  202. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 450, quotes Claire Trevor saying: "He did have quite a line of conquests. Women loved him." Similar quotations are given from Joseph L. Mankiewicz and Clark Gable.
  203. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 327.
  204. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 413.
  205. ^ Christopher Andersen, An Affair to Remember: The Remarkable Love Story of Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, William Morrow et Company, 1997, p.86.
  206. ^ Darwin Porter, Katharine the Great: A Lifetime of Secrets, 2004, p. 372.
  207. ^ Jane Ellen Wayne, The Leading Men of MGM, First Carroll and Graf, 2005, p.207.
  208. ^ Myrna Loy: loving Spencer Tracy & hating Katherine Hepburn - https://www.youtube.com
  209. ^ Myrna Loy Being and Becoming, James Kotsilibas-Davis et Myrna Loy, éditions Knopf 1987, page 154
  210. ^ Hepburn (1991) p. 389, "His interests and demands came first"; p. 393: "I wanted him to be happy—safe—comfortable. I liked to wait on him—listen to him—feed him—work for him. I tried not to disturb him ... I was happy to do this"; Bacall (2005), p. 488: "Her sole aim was to please him, which she unfailingly did"; Curtis (2011) p. 749, "[Hepburn continued] being all that she could be for him."
  211. ^ a b c d e Kramer and Heeley (2015).
  212. ^ King, Larry (host) (June 30, 2003). "Tribute to Katharine Hepburn". Larry King Live. CNN. Tribute to Katharine Hepburn. Retrieved July 7, 2023. See comment from Susie Tracy: "there came a point where he did not live in the house anymore ... But I saw him every weekend and he always came to the ranch".
  213. ^ Berg (2004) p. 171; Kanin (1971) pp. 81–82.
  214. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 356.
  215. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 583.
  216. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 814.
  217. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 481, 508, 543, 548, 556, 627.
  218. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 556.
  219. ^ Hepburn (1991) p. 396, wrote: "I have no idea how Spence felt about me ... He wouldn't talk about it and I didn't talk about it." Curtis (2011), p. 748, quotes Sally Erskine saying "I thought he showed love ... I [just] don't think he ever said anything". see also p. 497.
  220. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 747.
  221. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 635. Tracy's friend William Self is quoted as saying: "once in a while Carroll and Spence would talk about some affair he was having or thinking of having while he was very involved with Hepburn",
  222. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 626–627.
  223. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 612.
  224. ^ Hepburn (1991) p. 405.
  225. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 212.
  226. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 250.
  227. ^ Kanin (1971), p. 14. "To Spence, [life] was all—save his religion—a surpassing joke."
  228. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 32, 607; Kanin (1971) p. 166.
  229. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 407. Kanin (1971), p. 64 also notes Tracy's admiration for Roosevelt.
  230. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 492 quotes Tracy's friend Lincoln Cromwell describing him as "a dedicated Democrat"; p. 837 quotes his daughter saying "He was a Democrat surrounded by Republicans [the rest of his family]".
  231. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 702, quotes Tracy's daughter as saying: "[alcoholism] was something [my father] had to battle all his life."
  232. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 34. Tracy's grandmother, father and uncle were all alcoholics.
  233. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 348, 459, 683, 702, 718, 735.
  234. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 232.
  235. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 213, 256.
  236. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 464.
  237. ^ James Kotsilibas-Davis and Myrna Loy, Being and Becoming, Knopf 1987, page 154
  238. ^ a b "Katharine Hepburn: All About Me", Directed by David Healy, Top Hat Productions, Turner Network Television, January 18, 1993. (Stated by Hepburn in this documentary.)
  239. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 181. For anxiety and hypochondria, see p. 463.
  240. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 123; Curtis (2011) pp. 508, 662, 670, 727.
  241. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 481.
  242. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 182; Higham (2004) pp. 114, 198.
  243. ^ Hepburn (1991) p. 399.
  244. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 814
  245. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 815.
  246. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 816.
  247. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 816, 823, 829.
  248. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 823.
  249. ^ Curtis (2011) pp. 825–826.
  250. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 827.
  251. ^ Berg (2004) p. 214.
  252. ^ Hepburn (1991) p. 402.
  253. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 861.
  254. ^ Hepburn (1991) p. 403.
  255. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 863.
  256. ^ "Spencer Tracy, two-time Oscar winner, dies at 67". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. June 11, 1967. p. 2.
  257. ^ "Sarasota Journal". news.google.com. Retrieved September 11, 2016 – via Google News Archive Search.
  258. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 866.
  259. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 878.
  260. ^ "The Tuscaloosa News". news.google.com. Retrieved September 11, 2016 – via Google News Archive Search.
  261. ^ Wayne, Gary. "Forest Lawn Glendale, part 3: Stars' Graves". www.seeing-stars.com. from the original on September 22, 2016. Retrieved September 11, 2016.
  262. ^ "Gainesville Sun". news.google.com. Retrieved September 11, 2016 – via Google News Archive Search.
  263. ^ French, Philip (January 27, 2008). "Philip French's screen legends: Spencer Tracy". The Guardian. from the original on November 18, 2013. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
  264. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 21.
  265. ^ Swindell (1973), p. 142. "The guy's good and there's nobody in the business who can touch him, so you're a fool to try."
  266. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 239. "Spence? He's the most difficult son-of-a-bitch I've ever known. And the best. Certainly the best actor."
  267. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 49. "As far as actors go—living ones—I'd say Spence is the best by far ... I rate him tops."
  268. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 246. "Spencer was, indubitably, the finest screen actor of his generation."
  269. ^ Hepburn (1991) p. 412. In a letter to Tracy: "There you were—really the greatest movie actor. I say this because I believe it and also I have heard many people of standing in our business say it."
  270. ^ Roth, Lillian & Helen Ross (1962). The Player: A Profile of an Art. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 305. ASIN B0006AY01Y.
  271. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 498.
  272. ^ a b Deschner (1972) p. 13; Crawford's comment: "It was inspiring to play opposite Tracy," she said. "His is such simplicity of performance, such naturalness and humor. He walks through a scene.... He makes it seem so easy."
  273. ^ Kanin (1971), p. 239; Curtis (2011) p. 755.
  274. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 23.
  275. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 289.
  276. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 14.
  277. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 676.
  278. ^ Burt Reynolds. "But Enough About Me: A Memoir. G.P. Putnam's Sons 2015. ISBN 978-0399173547
  279. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 337.
  280. ^ Deschner (1972) pp. 13, 26, 28.
  281. ^ For lack of rehearsal, see Curtis (2011) p. 672; Kanin (1971) p. 6; Hepburn (1991) p. 394; for minimum takes see Kanin (1971) p. 6; Curtis (2011) p. 621; Deschner (1972) p. 16.
  282. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 6.
  283. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 784.
  284. ^ Deschner (1972) p. 17.
  285. ^ Curtis (2011) p. 196.
  286. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 51.
  287. ^ Kanin (1971) p. 7. Deschner (1972) p. 28 attributes the quote originally to Lunt ("Learn your lines and don't bump into the furniture.")
  288. ^ "Katharine Hepburn: Part 2". The Dick Cavett Show. October 3, 1973. American Broadcasting Company.
  289. ^ "Spencer Tracy | Hollywood Walk of Fame". www.walkoffame.com. from the original on October 5, 2016. Retrieved August 27, 2016.
  290. ^ a b Matthews, Charles (October 21, 2011). ""Spencer Tracy: A Life" by James Curtis". The Washington Post. from the original on May 14, 2015. Retrieved December 10, 2011.
  291. ^ a b Basinger, Jeanine (October 29, 2011). "Book Review: Spencer Tracy. 'Hollywood's Favorite Actor'". The Wall Street Journal. from the original on March 5, 2016.
  292. ^ Maltin, Leonard (November 9, 2011). "Spencer Tracy: A Biography – Book review". Leonard Maltin's Movie Crazy. Indiewire. from the original on April 3, 2012. Retrieved March 4, 2012.
  293. ^ "Morgan gets UCLA's Spencer Tracy Award". The Gadsden Times. Associated Press. February 22, 2006. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  294. ^ a b . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2016. Archived from the original on March 7, 2016. Retrieved March 4, 2012.
  295. ^ James Keast (February 6, 2009). "Pixar Reveals Early Look At Up". Exclaim!. from the original on July 17, 2015. Retrieved October 16, 2011.
  296. ^ McNary, Dave (February 14, 2014). "Katharine Hepburn-Spencer Tracy Movie in Development". Variety. from the original on August 24, 2014. Retrieved January 25, 2015.
  297. ^ "AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Laughs". American Film Institute. from the original on November 16, 2015. Retrieved October 9, 2011.
  298. ^ "AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Movies". American Film Institute. from the original on June 11, 2016. Retrieved October 9, 2011.
  299. ^ "AFI's 100 Years ... 100 CHEERS". American Film Institute. from the original on January 13, 2012. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
  300. ^ . filmsite. Archived from the original on January 4, 2013. Retrieved February 26, 2012.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Wise, James (1997). Stars in Blue: Movie Actors in America's Sea Services. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-937-9

External links edit

spencer, tracy, band, band, spencer, bonaventure, tracy, april, 1900, june, 1967, american, actor, known, natural, performing, style, versatility, major, stars, hollywood, golden, tracy, first, actor, consecutive, academy, awards, best, actor, from, nine, nomi. For the band see Spencer Tracy band Spencer Bonaventure Tracy April 5 1900 June 10 1967 was an American actor He was known for his natural performing style and versatility One of the major stars of Hollywood s Golden Age Tracy was the first actor to win two consecutive Academy Awards for Best Actor from nine nominations During his career he appeared in 75 films and developed a reputation among his peers as one of the screen s greatest actors In 1999 the American Film Institute ranked Tracy as the 9th greatest male star of Classic Hollywood Cinema 1 Spencer TracyTracy in State of the Union 1948 Born 1900 04 05 April 5 1900Milwaukee Wisconsin U S DiedJune 10 1967 1967 06 10 aged 67 Beverly Hills California U S Burial placeForest Lawn Memorial Park GlendaleAlma materRipon CollegeAmerican Academy of Dramatic ArtsOccupationActorYears active1921 1967SpouseLouise Treadwell m 1923 sep 1933 wbr PartnerKatharine Hepburn 1941 1967 Children2Signature Tracy first discovered his talent for acting while attending Ripon College and he later received a scholarship for the American Academy of Dramatic Arts He spent seven years in the theatre working in a succession of stock companies and intermittently on Broadway His breakthrough came in 1930 when his lead performance in The Last Mile caught the attention of Hollywood After a successful film debut in John Ford s Up the River in which he starred with Humphrey Bogart he was signed to a contract with Fox Film Corporation Tracy s five years with Fox featured one acting tour de force after another that were usually ignored at the box office and he remained largely unknown to movie audiences after 25 films nearly all of them starring him as the leading man None of them were hits although his performance in The Power and the Glory 1933 was highly praised at the time In 1935 he joined Metro Goldwyn Mayer MGM at the time Hollywood s most prestigious studio His career flourished from his fifth MGM film Fury 1936 onwards and in 1937 and 1938 he won consecutive Oscars for Captains Courageous and Boys Town He teamed with Clark Gable the studio s most prominent leading man for three major box office successes so that by the early 1940s Tracy was one of MGM s top stars In 1942 he appeared with Katharine Hepburn in Woman of the Year beginning a professional and personal partnership which led to nine films over 25 years In 1955 Tracy won the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actor for his performance in the film Bad Day at Black Rock Tracy left MGM in 1955 and continued to work regularly as a freelance star despite several health issues and an increasing weariness and irritability as he aged His personal life was troubled with a lifelong struggle against severe alcoholism and guilt over his son s deafness Tracy and his wife Louise became estranged in the 1930s but the couple never divorced his 25 year long relationship with Katharine Hepburn was an open secret Towards the end of his life Tracy worked almost exclusively for director Stanley Kramer It was for Kramer that he made his last film Guess Who s Coming to Dinner 1967 completed just 17 days before he died Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Stock theatre and Broadway 1923 1930 2 2 Fox 1930 1935 2 3 Metro Goldwyn Mayer 1935 1955 2 3 1 Growing reputation 2 3 2 Oscar wins 2 3 3 Established star 2 3 4 Stage and screen 2 3 5 Final MGM years 2 4 Independent player 1956 1967 2 4 1 Stanley Kramer partnership 3 Personal life 3 1 Marriage and family 3 2 Katharine Hepburn 3 3 Character 3 4 Illness and death 4 Reputation and acting style 5 Assessment and legacy 6 Awards and nominations 7 Filmography 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Tracy at the Northwestern Military and Naval Academy in 1919 Spencer Bonaventure Tracy was born in Milwaukee on April 5 1900 2 the second son of Caroline nee Brown 1874 1942 and truck salesman John Edward Tracy 1873 1928 His mother was from a wealthy Presbyterian Midwestern family while his father was of Irish Catholic descent 3 He had a brother Carroll who was four years older 4 Tracy was a difficult and hyperactive child 5 with poor school attendance 6 Raised Catholic he was placed in the care of Dominican Order nuns at the age of nine in an attempt to transform his behavior 7 Later in life he remarked that he never would have gone back to school if there had been any other way of learning to read the subtitles in the movies 6 He became fascinated with movies watching the same ones repeatedly and later re enacting scenes to his friends and neighbors 8 He attended several Jesuit academies in his teenage years which he claimed took the badness out of him and helped him improve his grades 9 It helped me develop memory for lines that has been a godsend since I started stage work it gave me something of a stage presence and it helped get rid of my awkwardness Also I gradually developed the ability to speak extemporaneously Tracy was a key member of his college debating team which he later said helped with his acting career 10 At Marquette Academy he began attending plays with lifelong friend and fellow actor Pat O Brien awakening his interest in the theatre 11 With little care for their studies and itching for a chance to go and see some excitement 11 Tracy and O Brien enlisted in the Navy together when Tracy turned 18 They were sent to the Naval Training Station in northern Illinois where they were still students when World War I came to an end 12 Tracy achieved the rank of seaman second class but never went to sea and was discharged in February 1919 13 His father s desire to see one of his sons gain a college degree drove Tracy back to high school to finish his diploma 13 Studies at two more institutions plus the additional allowance of war credits won Tracy a place at Ripon College He entered in February 1921 declaring his intention to major in medicine 14 Tracy was a popular student at Ripon where he served as president of his hall and was involved in a number of college activities 15 He made his stage debut in June 1921 playing the male lead in The Truth 16 He was very well received in the role 17 and quickly developed a passion for the stage he was reportedly obsessive about acting to the degree that he talked about little else 18 He and some friends formed an acting company called the Campus Players which they took on tour 19 As a member of the college debate team Tracy excelled in arguing and public speaking 15 It was during a tour with the debate team that he auditioned for the American Academy of Dramatic Arts AADA in New York City He was offered a scholarship to attend the school after performing a scene from one of his earlier roles 20 Tracy left Ripon and began classes at AADA in April 1922 O Brien was also enrolled there and the two shared a small studio apartment Money was scarce and the two often lived on meals of rice and pretzels and shared one decent suit between them 21 Tracy was deemed fit to progress to the senior class allowing him to join the academy s stock company 22 He made his New York debut in a play called The Wedding Guests which opened in October 1922 23 He made his debut Broadway appearance three months later playing a wordless robot in R U R 24 He graduated from AADA in March 1923 25 Career editStock theatre and Broadway 1923 1930 edit Immediately following graduation Tracy joined a new stock company based in White Plains New York where he was given peripheral roles 26 Unhappy there he moved to a company in Cincinnati but failed to make an impact 27 In November 1923 he landed a small part on Broadway in the comedy A Royal Fandango starring Ethel Barrymore Reviews for the show were poor and it closed after 25 performances Tracy later said of the failure My ego took an awful beating 28 When he took a position with a struggling company in New Jersey Tracy was living on an allowance of 35 cents a day 29 In January 1924 he played his first leading role with a company in Winnipeg but the organization soon closed 30 Tracy finally achieved some success by joining forces with the notable stock manager William H Wright in the spring of 1924 30 A stage partnership was formed with the young actress Selena Royle who had already made her name on Broadway 31 It proved a popular draw and their productions were favorably received 32 One of these performances brought Tracy to the attention of a Broadway producer who offered him the lead in a new play The Sheepman previewed in October 1925 but it received poor reviews and closed after its trial run in Connecticut 33 Dejected Tracy was forced back to Wright and the stock circuit 34 nbsp Tracy background in The Last Mile the 1930 Broadway role that saw him scouted for Hollywood In the fall of 1926 Tracy was offered his third shot at Broadway a role in a new George M Cohan play called Yellow Tracy swore that if the play failed to be a hit he would leave stock and work in a regular business instead 35 Tracy was nervous about working with Cohan one of the most important figures in American theatre 35 but during rehearsals Cohan announced Tracy you re the best goddamned actor I ve ever seen 36 Yellow opened on September 21 reviews were mixed but it ran for 135 performances 37 It was the beginning of an important collaboration for Tracy I d have quit the stage completely he later commented if it hadn t been for George M Cohan 38 Cohan wrote a part specifically for Tracy in his next play The Baby Cyclone 39 It opened on Broadway in September 1927 and was a hit 40 Tracy followed this success with another Cohan play Whispering Friends and in 1929 took over from Clark Gable in Conflict a Broadway drama 41 Other roles followed but it was the lead in Dread written by Pulitzer Prize winning dramatist Owen Davis that gave Tracy high hopes for success 42 The story of a man s descent into madness Dread previewed in Brooklyn to an excellent reception but on the next day October 29 the New York stock market crashed 43 Unable to obtain funding Dread did not open on Broadway Following this disappointment Tracy again considered leaving the theatre and returning to Milwaukee for a more stable life 44 In January 1930 Tracy was approached about a new play called The Last Mile Looking to cast the lead role of a murderer on death row producer Herman Shumlin met with Tracy and later recounted beneath the surface here was a man of passion violence sensitivity and desperation no ordinary man and just the man for the part 45 The Last Mile opened on Broadway in February where Tracy s performance was met by a standing ovation that lasted 14 curtain calls 46 The Commonweal described him as one of our best and most versatile young actors 47 The play was a hit with critics 48 and ran for 289 performances 49 Fox 1930 1935 edit nbsp With Dickie Moore in Disorderly Conduct 1932 Tracy s seventh film In 1930 Broadway was being scouted to find actors to work in the new medium of sound films 47 Tracy was cast in two Vitaphone shorts Taxi Talks and The Hard Guy but he had not considered becoming a film actor I had no ambition in that direction and I was perfectly happy on the stage he later explained in an interview 47 One person who saw Tracy in The Last Mile was director John Ford Ford wanted Tracy for the lead role in his next picture a prison movie Production company Fox Film Corporation was unsure about Tracy saying that he did not photograph well but Ford convinced them that he was right for the role 50 Up the River 1930 marked the film debut of both Tracy and Humphrey Bogart After seeing the rushes Fox immediately offered Tracy a long term contract 51 Knowing that he needed the money for his family with his young son deaf and recovering from polio Tracy signed with Fox and moved to California 52 He appeared on the stage only once more in his life Winfield Sheehan the head of Fox committed to making Tracy a bankable commodity 53 The studio promoted the actor releasing ads for his second film Quick Millions 1931 with the headline A New Star Shines 54 Three films were made in quick succession all of which were unsuccessful at the box office 55 Tracy found himself typecast in comedies usually playing a crook or a con man 56 The mold was broken with his seventh picture Disorderly Conduct 1932 and it was the first of his films since Up the River to return a profit 57 In mid 1932 after nine pictures Tracy remained virtually unknown to the public 58 He considered leaving Fox once his contract was up for renewal but a raise in his weekly salary to 1 500 convinced him to stay 59 He continued to appear in unpopular films with Me and My Gal 1932 setting an all time low attendance record for the Roxy Theatre in New York City 60 He was loaned to Warner Bros for 20 000 Years in Sing Sing 1932 a prison drama co starring Bette Davis Tracy was hopeful that it would be his break out role but despite good reviews this failed to materialize 61 nbsp Tracy appeared with Loretta Young in Man s Castle 1933 Critics began to notice Tracy with The Power and the Glory 1933 The story of a man s rise to prosperity had a screenplay by Preston Sturges and Tracy s performance as railroad tycoon Tom Garner received uniformly strong reviews 62 William Wilkerson of The Hollywood Reporter wrote This sterling performer has finally been given an opportunity to show an ability that has been boxed in by gangster roles the film has introduced Mr Tracy as one of the screen s best performers 63 Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times stated No more convincing performance has been given on the screen than Spencer Tracy s impersonation of Tom Garner 64 Shanghai Madness 1933 meanwhile revealed Tracy to have a previously unseen sex appeal and served to advance his standing 63 Despite this attention Tracy s next two movies went largely unnoticed Man s Castle 1933 with Loretta Young was anticipated to be a hit but made only a small profit 65 The Show Off 1934 for which he was lent to Metro Goldwyn Mayer proved popular but his subsequent outings continued to be unsuccessful 66 Tracy drank heavily during his years with Fox and gained a reputation as an alcoholic 62 He failed to report for filming on Marie Galante in June 1934 and was found in his hotel room virtually unconscious after a two week binge 67 Tracy was removed from the Fox payroll while he recovered in a hospital 68 and then sued for 125 000 for delaying the production 69 He completed only two more pictures with the studio The details on how Tracy s relationship with Fox ended are unclear later in life Tracy maintained that he was fired for his drunken behavior but the Fox records do not support such an account 70 He was still under contract with the studio when MGM expressed their interest in the actor 71 They were in need of a new male star and contacted Tracy on April 2 1935 offering him a seven year deal 71 That afternoon the contract between Tracy and Fox was terminated by mutual consent 71 Tracy made a total of 25 pictures in the five years he was with Fox Film Corporation most of which lost money at the box office 72 Metro Goldwyn Mayer 1935 1955 edit Growing reputation edit nbsp Tracy in Fritz Lang s Fury 1936 his first major hit In the 1930s Metro Goldwyn Mayer was the most respected movie production studio in Hollywood 73 When Tracy arrived there he was all but unknown Biographer James Curtis writes Tracy was scarcely a blip on the box office barometer in 1935 a critics darling and little more 74 He was however well known for being a troublemaker 75 Producer Irving Thalberg was nevertheless enthusiastic about working with the actor telling journalist Louella Parsons Spencer Tracy will become one of MGM s most valuable stars 76 Curtis notes that the studio managed Tracy with care a welcome change from the ineptitude and apathy he had known while at Fox which was like a shot of adrenaline for the actor 76 His first film under the new contract was the quickly produced The Murder Man 1935 77 which included the feature film debut of James Stewart Thalberg then began a strategy of pairing Tracy with the studio s top actresses 78 Whipsaw 1935 co starred Myrna Loy and was a commercial success 79 Riffraff 1936 put Tracy opposite Jean Harlow Both films were however designed and promoted to showcase their leading ladies thus continuing Tracy s reputation as a secondary star 80 Fury 1936 was the first film to prove that Tracy could make a success on his own merit 81 Directed by Fritz Lang Tracy played an innocent man who swears revenge after narrowly escaping death by a lynch mob The film and performance received excellent reviews 82 It made a profit of 1 3 million worldwide 83 Curtis writes audiences who just a year earlier had no clear handle on him were suddenly turning out to see him It was a transition that was nothing short of miraculous and showed a willingness on the part of the public to embrace a leading man who was not textbook handsome nor bigger than life 81 nbsp Lobby card with Clark Gable and Myrna Loy in Test Pilot 1938 one of the three enormously successful films that fixed Gable and Tracy as a team in the public imagination Fury was followed one month later with the release of the big budget disaster movie San Francisco 1936 Tracy played a supporting role alongside Clark Gable in the film allowing audiences to see him with the top male star in Hollywood 79 Taking on the role of a priest Tracy reportedly felt a heavy responsibility in representing the church 84 Despite having only 17 minutes of screen time Tracy was highly praised for his performance and received an Oscar nomination for Best Actor 85 San Francisco became the highest grossing picture of 1936 citation needed Donald Deschner in his book on Tracy credits Fury and San Francisco as the two films that changed his career and gave him the status of a major star 86 By this point Tracy entered a period of self imposed sobriety and MGM expressed pleasure with Tracy s professionalism 87 His public reputation continued to grow with Libeled Lady also 1936 a screwball comedy that cast him with William Powell Loy and Harlow According to Curtis Powell Harlow and Loy were among the biggest draws in the industry and equal billing in such a powerhouse company could only serve to advance Tracy s standing 88 Libeled Lady was his third hit picture in the space of six months 89 Oscar wins edit Tracy appeared in four films released in 1937 They Gave Him a Gun a crime drama went largely unnoticed 90 but Captains Courageous was one of the major film events of the year 90 Tracy played a Portuguese fisherman in the adventure movie based on the novel by Rudyard Kipling He was uncomfortable feigning a foreign accent 91 and resented having his hair curled 92 but the role was a hit with audiences and Tracy won the Academy Award for Best Actor Captains Courageous was followed by Big City with Luise Rainer and Mannequin with Joan Crawford the latter of which performed well at the box office 93 With two years of hit movies and industry recognition Tracy became a star in the United States A 1937 poll of 20 million people to find the King and Queen of Hollywood ranked Tracy sixth among males 94 Tracy was reunited with Clark Gable and Myrna Loy for Test Pilot 1938 The film was another enormous commercial and critical success 95 permanently cementing the notion of Gable and Tracy as a team in the public imagination nbsp Tracy and Freddie Bartholomew in Captains Courageous 1937 Based on the positive response he had received in San Francisco MGM again cast Tracy as a priest in Boys Town also 1938 96 Portraying Edward J Flanagan a Catholic priest and founder of Boys Town in Nebraska was a role Tracy took seriously I m so anxious to do a good job as Father Flanagan that it worries me keeps me awake at night 97 Tracy received strong reviews for his performance and the movie grossed 4 million worldwide 98 For the second year running Tracy received an Academy Award for Best Actor He was humble about the recognition saying in his acceptance speech I honestly do not feel that I can accept this award I can accept it only as it was meant to be for a great man Father Flanagan 99 Although he did keep his Oscar a second statuette was struck and immediately sent to Flanagan 100 Tracy was listed as the fifth biggest box office star of 1938 101 Tracy was absent from screens for almost a year before returning to Fox on loan and appearing as Henry M Stanley in Stanley and Livingstone 1939 with Nancy Kelly Curtis maintains that Tracy s non visibility did little to affect his standing with the public or exhibitors 102 In October 1939 a Fortune magazine survey of the nation s favorite movie actors listed Tracy in first place 103 Established star edit MGM capitalized on Tracy s popularity casting him in four movies for 1940 I Take This Woman with Hedy Lamarr was a critical and commercial failure 104 but the historical drama Northwest Passage Tracy s first film in Technicolor proved popular 104 He then portrayed Thomas Edison in Edison the Man Howard Barnes of the New York Herald Tribune was not charmed by the story but wrote that Tracy by sheer persuasion of his acting made the film worthy 105 Boom Town was the third and final Gable Tracy picture also starring Claudette Colbert and Hedy Lamarr making it one of the most anticipated films of the year 106 The film opened to the biggest crowd since Gone With the Wind 107 Tracy signed a new contract with MGM in April 1941 which paid 5 000 a week and limited him to three pictures a year Tracy had previously expressed a need to reduce his workload 108 The contract also stated for the first time that his billing was to be that of a star Contrary to popular belief the contract did not include a clause that he receive top billing but from this point onward every film Tracy appeared in featured his name first 109 Tracy returned to the role of Father Flanagan for the sequel Men of Boys Town 1941 It was followed by Tracy s only venture into the horror genre an adaptation of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde also 1941 co starring Ingrid Bergman and Lana Turner Tracy was unhappy with the film disliking the heavy make up he needed to portray Hyde 110 Critical response to the film was mixed and brought Tracy the only negative reviews of his career 111 Theodore Strauss of The New York Times wrote that Mr Tracy s portrait of Hyde is not so much evil incarnate as it is the ham rampant 112 The film was financially successful however taking in more than 2 million at the box office 113 nbsp Lobby card for Woman of the Year 1942 the first of nine pictures Tracy made with Katharine Hepburn Tracy was set to star in a film version of The Yearling for 1942 but several on set difficulties and bad weather on location forced MGM to shelve the production 114 With the end of that project he became available for the new Katharine Hepburn film Woman of the Year 1942 Hepburn greatly admired Tracy calling him the best movie actor there was 115 She had wanted him for her comeback vehicle The Philadelphia Story 1940 116 Hepburn was delighted that Tracy was available for Woman of the Year saying I was just damned grateful he was willing to work with me 117 The romantic comedy performed well at the box office and received strong reviews 118 William Boehnel wrote in the New York World Telegram To begin with it has Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy in the leading roles This in itself would be enough to make any film memorable But when you get Tracy and Hepburn turning in brilliant performances to boot you ve got something to cheer about 118 Woman of the Year was followed by an adaptation of John Steinbeck s Tortilla Flat also 1942 which met with a tepid response 119 MGM did not hesitate to repeat the teaming of Tracy and Hepburn and cast them in the dark mystery Keeper of the Flame 1943 Despite a weak critical reception the film out grossed Woman of the Year confirming the strength of their partnership 120 Tracy s next three appearances were all war based A Guy Named Joe 1943 with Irene Dunne surpassed San Francisco to become his highest grossing film to date 121 The Seventh Cross 1944 a suspense film about an escape from a Nazi concentration camp met with critical acclaim 122 It was followed by the aviation film Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo 1944 On the strength of these three releases the annual Quigley poll revealed Tracy was MGM s biggest money making star of 1944 123 His only film the following year was his third with Hepburn Without Love 1945 a light romantic comedy that performed well at the box office despite muted enthusiasm from critics 124 Stage and screen edit nbsp The Sea of Grass 1947 In 1945 Tracy returned to the stage for the first time in 15 years He had been through a dark patch personally culminating with a hospital stay and Hepburn felt that a play would help restore his focus 125 Tracy told a journalist in April I m coming back to Broadway to see if I can still act 124 The play was The Rugged Path by Robert E Sherwood It first previewed in Providence on September 28 to a sold out crowd and tepid response 126 It was a difficult production director Garson Kanin later wrote In the ten days prior to the New York opening all the important relationships had deteriorated Spencer was tense and unbending could not or would not take direction 127 Tracy considered leaving the show before it even opened on Broadway 128 and lasted there just six weeks before announcing his intention to close the show 129 It closed on January 19 1946 after 81 performances 130 Tracy later explained to a friend I couldn t say those goddamn lines over and over and over again every night At least every day is a new day for me in films But this thing every day every day over and over again 131 Tracy was absent from screens in 1946 the first year since his motion picture debut that there was no Spencer Tracy release 130 His next film was The Sea of Grass 1947 a melodrama set in the American Old West with Hepburn Similar to Keeper of the Flame and Without Love a lukewarm response from critics did not stop it from being a financial success both at home and abroad 132 He followed it later that year with Cass Timberlane in which he played a judge It was a commercial success but Curtis notes that co star Lana Turner overshadowed Tracy in most of the reviews 133 A fifth film with Hepburn Frank Capra s political drama State of the Union was released in 1948 Tracy played a presidential candidate in the movie which was warmly received 134 He then appeared in Edward My Son 1949 with Deborah Kerr Tracy disliked the role and told director George Cukor It s rather disconcerting to me to find how easily I play a heel 135 Upon its release The New Yorker wrote of the hopeless miscasting of Mr Tracy 136 The film became Tracy s biggest money loser at MGM 137 Tracy finished off the 1940s with Malaya 1949 an adventure film with James Stewart and Adam s Rib also 1949 a comedy with Tracy and Hepburn playing married lawyers who oppose each other in court Tracy and Hepburn s friends Garson Kanin and Ruth Gordon wrote the parts specifically for the two leads The film received strong reviews and became the highest grossing Tracy Hepburn picture to date 138 Film critic Bosley Crowther wrote Mr Tracy and Miss Hepburn are the stellar performers in this show and their perfect compatibility in comic capers is delightful to see 139 Final MGM years edit nbsp Tracy and Elizabeth Taylor in a promotional image for Father of the Bride 1950 The comedic role of Stanley Banks was one of Tracy s nine Oscar nominated performances Tracy received his first Academy Award nomination in 12 years for playing the role of Stanley Banks in Father of the Bride 1950 In the comedy film Banks attempts to handle preparations for the upcoming wedding of his daughter Elizabeth Taylor It s the second strong comedy in a row for Spencer Tracy doing the title role and he socks it Variety commented 140 The film was the biggest commercial success of Tracy s career to date earning 6 million worldwide 140 MGM wanted a sequel and while Tracy was unsure he accepted 141 Father s Little Dividend 1951 was released ten months later and performed well at the box office 142 On the strength of the two movies Tracy polled as one of the nation s top stars once more 142 Tracy portrayed a lawyer in The People Against O Hara 1951 and re teamed with Hepburn for the sports comedy Pat and Mike 1952 the second feature written expressly for them by Kanin and Gordon Pat and Mike became one of the duo s most popular and critically acclaimed films 143 Tracy followed it with Plymouth Adventure also 1952 an historical drama set aboard the Mayflower co starring Gene Tierney It met with poor critical and box office response and posted a loss of 1 8 million for MGM 144 Tracy returned to the role of a concerned father in The Actress 1953 Producer Lawrence Weingarten recalled That film got more acclaim from the critics than any film I ever made in all the years and we didn t make enough to pay for the ushers in the theatre 145 For his performance in The Actress Tracy won a Golden Globe Award and received a nomination for the British Academy Film Award MGM lent Tracy to Fox for the well received Western film Broken Lance his only film released in 1954 146 In 1955 Tracy turned down William Wyler s The Desperate Hours because he refused to take second billing to Humphrey Bogart 147 Instead Tracy appeared as a one armed protagonist who faces the hostility of a small desert town in Bad Day at Black Rock 1955 a film directed by John Sturges For his work Tracy received a fifth Oscar nomination and was awarded the Best Actor prize at the Cannes Film Festival Tracy had personally been unhappy with the picture and threatened to leave during production 148 This behavior became a regular occurrence for Tracy who was increasingly lethargic and cynical He began production on Tribute to a Bad Man in the summer of 1955 but pulled out when he claimed that the shooting location in the Colorado mountains gave him altitude sickness 149 The problems caused by the picture fractured Tracy s relationship with MGM In June 1955 he was one of the two remaining stars of the studio s peak years the other being Robert Taylor but with his contract up for renewal Tracy opted to freelance for the first time in his movie career 150 Independent player 1956 1967 edit Tracy s first post MGM appearance was in The Mountain 1956 with Robert Wagner who played his much younger brother Wagner had earlier played his son in Broken Lance The location filming in the French Alps proved a difficult experience and he threatened to leave the project 151 His performance earned a BAFTA nomination for Best Foreign Actor Tracy and Hepburn then paired together for the eighth time in the office based comedy Desk Set 1957 He again had to be convinced to stay with the film 152 one which met with a weak response 153 nbsp Lobby card for John Ford s The Last Hurrah 1958 Tracy appeared in The Old Man and the Sea 1958 a project that had been in development for five years An adaptation of Ernest Hemingway s novella of the same title Hemingway s agent Leland Hayward had previously written to the author Of all Hollywood people the one that comes the closest to me in quality in personality and voice in personal dignity and ability is Spencer Tracy 154 Tracy was delighted to be offered the role 154 He was told to lose some of his 210 pounds before filming began but failed to do so 155 Hemingway thus reported that Tracy was a terrible liability to the picture and had to be reassured that the star was being carefully photographed to disguise his weight problem 156 Appearing alone on screen for most of the film Tracy considered The Old Man and the Sea the toughest part he ever played 157 In reviewing the performance Jack Moffitt of The Hollywood Reporter said it was so intimate and revealing of universal human experience that to me it almost transcended acting and became reality 158 Tracy received Oscar and BAFTA Award nominations for the work After abandoning two projects including a proposed remake of The Blue Angel with Marilyn Monroe 159 Tracy s next feature was The Last Hurrah 1958 It reunited him with his debut director John Ford after 28 years and his childhood friend Pat O Brien Tracy took a year to commit to the project in which he played an Irish American mayor seeking re election 160 The movie was favorably reviewed but not commercially successful 161 At the end of 1958 the National Board of Review named Tracy the year s Best Actor He nevertheless began to ponder retirement with Curtis writing that he was chronically tired unhappy ill and uninterested in work 162 Stanley Kramer partnership edit nbsp Inherit the Wind 1960 the first of four films Tracy made with Stanley Kramer depicted the Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925 Tracy did not appear on the screen again until the release of Inherit the Wind 1960 a film based on the 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial which debated the right to teach evolution in schools Director Stanley Kramer sought Tracy for the role of lawyer Henry Drummond based on Clarence Darrow from the outset 163 Starring opposite Tracy was Fredric March a pairing Variety described as a stroke of casting genius Both men are spellbinders in the most laudatory sense of the word 164 The film garnered Tracy some of the strongest reviews of his career he was nominated for an Academy Award BAFTA Award and Golden Globe Award for the performance but it was not a commercial hit 165 In the volcano disaster movie The Devil at 4 O Clock 1961 Tracy played a priest for the fourth time in his career His co star Frank Sinatra ceded top billing to guarantee Tracy for the picture 166 Continuing his pattern of indecisiveness 167 Tracy briefly pulled out of the production before recommitting 164 Critics were unenthusiastic about the film which was nevertheless Tracy s most successful box office outing since Father of the Bride 168 Inherit the Wind began an enduring collaboration between Stanley Kramer and Tracy Kramer directed Tracy s three final films Judgment at Nuremberg released at the end of 1961 was their second feature together The film depicts the Judges Trial the trial of Nazi judges for their role in the Holocaust Abby Mann wrote the role of Judge Haywood with Tracy in mind 169 Tracy called it the best script he had ever read 170 At the end of the film Tracy delivered a 13 minute speech He recorded it in one take and received a round of applause from the cast and crew 171 Upon seeing the film Mann wrote to Tracy Every writer ought to have the experience of having Spencer Tracy do his lines There is nothing in the world quite like it 172 The film met with positive reviews and a large audience Tracy received an eighth Oscar nomination for his performance 173 nbsp In Guess Who s Coming to Dinner 1967 Tracy died 17 days after filming was completed Tracy turned down roles in Long Day s Journey into Night 1962 and The Leopard 1963 174 and had to pull out of MGM s all star How the West Was Won 1962 when it clashed with Judgment at Nuremberg He was however able to record the film s narration track 175 Tracy was in very poor health by this time and working became a challenge In 1962 he took the role of Captain T G Culpeper in Kramer s comedy It s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World 1963 a small but key part that he was able to complete in nine non consecutive days 176 The film was released in November 1963 Tracy s name topped the list of performers and the comedy became one of the highest grossing American films of the year 177 As his health worsened he had to cancel commitments to Cheyenne Autumn 1964 and The Cincinnati Kid 1965 178 Film offers continued to come but Tracy did not work again until 1967 when he took the starring role in Kramer s Guess Who s Coming to Dinner 1967 Tracy s ninth and final film with Hepburn Guess Who s Coming to Dinner explored the topic of interracial marriage with Tracy playing a liberal minded newspaper publisher whose values are challenged when his daughter wishes to marry a black man played by Sidney Poitier Tracy appeared happy to be working again but he told journalists visiting the set that the movie would be his last for he would permanently retire after filming due to his health problems 179 To commence filming Tracy had to be insured for the high premium of 71 000 if he died during filming Hepburn and Kramer both put their salaries in escrow until Tracy completed his scenes 180 In poor health Tracy could work for only two or three hours each day 181 He completed his last scene on May 24 1967 182 Tracy died 17 days later from a heart attack on June 10 183 The film was released in December 1967 and although reviews were mixed Curtis notes that Tracy s performance was singled out for praise in nearly every instance 184 Brendan Gill of The New Yorker wrote that Tracy gave a faultless and under the circumstances heartbreaking performance 184 The movie became Tracy s highest grossing picture 185 He received a posthumous nomination for Best Actor his ninth at the 40th Academy Awards along with a Golden Globe Award nomination and a BAFTA win for Best Actor Personal life editMarriage and family edit Tracy met actress Louise Treadwell while they were both members of the Wood Players in White Plains New York the first stock company Tracy joined after graduating The couple was engaged in May 1923 186 and married on September 10 of that year between the matinee and evening performances of his show 187 Their son John Ten Broeck Tracy was born in June 1924 188 When John was 10 months old Louise discovered that the boy was deaf 189 She resisted telling Tracy for three months Tracy was devastated by the news 190 and felt lifelong guilt over his son s deafness He was convinced that John s hearing impairment was a punishment for his own sins 191 As a result Tracy had trouble connecting with his son 192 and distanced himself from his family Joseph L Mankiewicz a friend of Tracy s later theorized Tracy didn t leave Louise He left the scene of his guilt 193 A second child Louise Susie Treadwell Tracy was born in July 1932 194 The children were raised in their mother s Episcopal faith 195 Tracy left the family home in 1933 196 and he and Louise openly discussed the separation with the media maintaining that they were still friends and had not taken divorce action 197 From September 1933 to June 1934 Tracy had a public affair with Loretta Young his co star in Man s Castle 198 He reconciled with Louise in 1935 199 There was never again an official separation between Tracy and his wife but the marriage continued to be troubled 200 Tracy increasingly lived in hotels and by the 1940s the two were effectively living separate lives 201 Tracy frequently engaged in extramarital affairs 202 including with co stars Joan Crawford in 1937 203 and Ingrid Bergman in 1941 204 He had an affair with Myrna Loy in 1935 and 1936 205 206 207 In 1990 during a phone interview with educator Alan Greenberg Loy revealed she was in love with Tracy I loved Spence he was adorable I loved him and I really did love him I loved him I mean I was in love with him and she Katharine Hepburn got in the way 208 Later during the 1940s Loy regularly visited Tracy at Beverly Hills in his hotel room 209 Katharine Hepburn edit nbsp Tracy s relationship with his frequent co star Katharine Hepburn lasted from 1941 until his death He never divorced his wife Louise Tracy Promotional image for Without Love 1945 While making Woman of the Year in September 1941 Tracy began what was to become a lifelong relationship with Katharine Hepburn The actress became devoted to him 210 and their relationship lasted until his death 26 years later 211 Tracy never returned to live in the family home although he visited regularly 212 213 The MGM moguls were careful to protect their stars from controversy 214 and Tracy wished to conceal his relationship with Hepburn from his wife 215 so it was hidden from the public The couple did not live together until the final years of Tracy s life 216 when they shared a cottage on George Cukor s estate in Beverly Hills 211 In Hollywood however the intimate nature of the Tracy Hepburn partnership was an open secret 217 Angela Lansbury who worked with the pair on State of the Union later said We all knew but nobody ever said anything In those days it wasn t discussed 211 218 Tracy was not someone to express his emotions 219 but Tracy s friend actress Betsy Drake believed that he was utterly dependent upon Hepburn 220 Tracy s infidelity apparently continued however 221 and he reportedly had an affair with Gene Tierney during the making of Plymouth Adventure in 1952 222 Neither Tracy nor his wife ever pursued a divorce despite their estrangement He told Joan Fontaine I can get a divorce whenever I want to but my wife and Kate like things just as they are 223 Louise meanwhile reportedly commented I will be Mrs Spencer Tracy until the day I die 134 Hepburn did not interfere and never fought for marriage 224 Character edit Tracy was an avowed Catholic but his cousin Jane Feely said that he did not devoutly follow the religion he was often not a practical Catholic either I would call him a spiritual Catholic 225 Garson Kanin a friend of Tracy s for 25 years described him as a true believer 226 who respected his religion 227 At periods in his life Tracy attended Mass regularly 228 Tracy did not believe actors should publicize their political views but in 1940 lent his name to the Hollywood for Roosevelt committee 229 and personally identified as a Democrat 230 Tracy struggled with alcoholism throughout his adult life 231 an ailment that ran in his father s side of the family 232 Rather than being a steady drinker as commonly thought he was prone to periods of binging on alcohol 233 Loretta Young remarked that Tracy was awful when he was drunk 234 and he was twice arrested for his behavior while intoxicated 235 Because of this bad reaction to alcohol Tracy regularly embarked on prolonged periods of sobriety and developed an all or nothing routine 236 Myrna Loy said Days of drinking had left him belligerent 237 Hepburn commented that he would stop drinking for months even years at a time before falling off the wagon without warning 238 Tracy was prone to bouts of depression and anxiety he was described by Mrs Tracy as having the most volatile disposition I ve ever seen up in the clouds one minute and down in the depths the next And when he s low he s very very low 239 He was plagued by insomnia throughout his life 240 As a result Tracy became dependent on barbiturates to sleep followed by dexedrine to function 241 Hepburn who adopted a nursing role towards Tracy 242 was unable to understand her partner s unhappiness She wrote in her autobiography What was it Never at peace Tortured by some sort of guilt Some terrible misery 238 243 Illness and death edit nbsp Tracy s memorial at Forest Lawn Tracy s adult life of alcoholism smoking cigarettes taking pills and being overweight left him in poor health by the time he reached his 60s On July 21 1963 Tracy was hospitalized after a severe attack of breathlessness 244 Doctors found that he was suffering from pulmonary edema where fluid accumulates in the lungs due to an inability of the heart to pump properly 245 They also declared his blood pressure dangerously high 246 From this point on Tracy remained very weak and Hepburn moved into his home to provide constant care 247 In January 1965 he was diagnosed with hypertensive heart disease and also began treatment for a previously ignored diagnosis of Type II diabetes 248 Tracy almost died in September 1965 a stay in the hospital following a prostatectomy resulted in his kidneys failing and he spent the night in a coma 249 His recovery the next day was described by his attending doctor as a kind of miracle 250 Tracy spent most of the next two years at home with Hepburn living what she described as a quiet life reading painting and listening to music 251 On June 10 1967 17 days after completing what was his last film role in Guess Who s Coming to Dinner Tracy awakened at 3 00 am to make himself a cup of tea in his apartment in Beverly Hills California Hepburn described in her autobiography how she followed him to the kitchen Just as I was about to give the door a push there was a sound of a cup smashing to the floor then clump a loud clump 252 She entered the room to find Tracy lying dead from a heart attack He was 67 253 Hepburn recalled He looked so happy to be done with living which for all his accomplishments had been a frightful burden for him 254 MGM publicist Howard Strickling told the media that Tracy had been alone when he died and was found by his housekeeper 255 256 A Requiem Mass was held for Tracy on June 12 at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church in East Hollywood 257 Active pallbearers included George Cukor Stanley Kramer Frank Sinatra James Stewart and John Ford 258 Out of consideration for Tracy s family Hepburn did not attend the funeral 259 Tracy is interred at Glendale s Forest Lawn Memorial Park near his wife Louise son John and daughter Susie 260 261 262 Reputation and acting style editTracy had a solid reputation among his peers and received considerable praise from the film industry 263 After his death MGM head Dore Schary said that there can be no question that Tracy was the best and most protean actor of our screen 264 He was referred to as the greatest actor of his generation by Clark Gable 265 James Cagney 266 Humphrey Bogart 267 John Ford 160 Garson Kanin 268 and Katharine Hepburn 269 Actor Richard Widmark who idolized Tracy called him the greatest movie actor there ever was and said that he had learned more about acting from watching Tracy than in any other way 270 Tracy was particularly respected for his naturalism onscreen Hume Cronyn who worked with Tracy on The Seventh Cross admired his screen presence His method appeared to be as simple as it is difficult to achieve He appeared to do nothing He listened he felt he said the words without forcing anything 271 Joan Crawford likewise expressed her admiration for Tracy s seemingly effortless performances stating that it was inspiring to co star with him and that his is such simplicity of performance such naturalness and humor he walks through a scene and makes it seem so easy 272 His four time co star Joan Bennett said that she never had the feeling he was acting in a scene but the truth of the situation was actually happening spontaneously at the moment he spoke his lines 272 Cagney noted that Tracy was rarely the target of impressionists because you can t mimic reserve and control very well there s nothing to imitate except his genius and that can t be mimicked 273 I ve never known what acting is Who can honestly say what it is I wonder what actors are supposed to be if not themselves I ve finally narrowed it down to where when I begin a part I say to myself this is Spencer Tracy as a judge or this is Spencer Tracy as a priest or as a lawyer and let it go at that Look the only thing an actor has to offer a director and finally an audience is his instinct That s all 274 Tracy giving his opinion on acting Tracy was praised for his listening and reacting skills Barry Nelson said that he brought the art of reacting to a new height 275 while Stanley Kramer declared that he thought and listened better than anyone in the history of motion pictures 276 Millard Kaufman noted that Tracy listened with every fiber of his entire body 277 In his memoir Burt Reynolds noted Tracy s emphasis on naturalism when as a rookie actor he observed Tracy on the set of Inherit the Wind Reynolds later introduced himself to Tracy as an actor and Tracy replied An actor huh Just remember not to ever let anyone catch you at it 278 Despite the perception that he was able to turn up to a shoot and perform effortlessly Tracy s acquaintances said that he would carefully prepare for each role in private Joseph L Mankiewicz lived with him during the production of Test Pilot and recounted that Tracy would lock himself in his bedroom working extremely hard each night 279 Many co workers commented on his strong work ethic and professionalism 280 However he did not like to rehearse and would quickly lose his effectiveness after shooting two or three takes of the same scene 281 Kanin described him as an instinctive player who trusted the moment of creation 282 Tracy s close friend Chester Erskine pinpointed his acting style as one of selection stating that he strove to give as little as was needed to be effective and reached a minimum to make the maximum 283 Tracy disliked being asked about his technique or what advice he would give to others 284 He often belittled the profession of acting 285 once saying to Kanin Why do actors think they re so goddamn important They re not Acting is not an important job in the scheme of things Plumbing is 286 He was also humble about his abilities telling a journalist It s just that I try no tricks No profile No great lover act I just project myself as I am plain trying to be honest 135 He was known to have enjoyed the quip once made by Alfred Lunt The art of acting is learn your lines and don t bump into the furniture 287 Hepburn in an interview six years after Tracy s death suggested that Tracy wished he had held a different profession 288 Assessment and legacy edit nbsp Tracy s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6814 Hollywood Boulevard 289 In the 21st century Tracy is best known to general audiences for his association with Katharine Hepburn 290 291 He continues to receive praise from film scholars critic Leonard Maltin calls Tracy one of the 20th century s finest actors 292 while film historian Jeanine Basinger describes his career as a golden record of movie achievement 291 Charles Matthews writing for The Washington Post argues that Tracy deserves to be remembered for himself as a master of acting technique 290 An award for excellence in film acting is bestowed in Tracy s name at the University of California Los Angeles Past recipients of the UCLA Spencer Tracy Award include Kirk Douglas Michael Douglas Morgan Freeman Tom Hanks Anthony Hopkins James Stewart and Denzel Washington 293 A 1986 PBS documentary titled The Spencer Tracy Legacy was hosted by Hepburn 211 294 It includes clips from Tracy s films and behind the scenes archival footage and home movies of Tracy s private life and career as well as newly filmed interviews with many of his former co stars 294 and with his daughter Susie Tracy 211 In 2009 Tracy provided inspiration for the character Carl in Pixar s Oscar winning film Up Director Pete Docter explained that there is something sweet about these grumpy old guys 295 In 2014 a film about Tracy s relationship with Katharine Hepburn was announced to be in development 296 Several of Tracy s films particularly his comedies are regarded as classics of American cinema He starred in four of the titles on the American Film Institute s list of 100 Years 100 Laughs Adam s Rib It s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World Father of the Bride and Woman of the Year 297 Guess Who s Coming to Dinner was included on AFI s list of the 100 greatest American movies 298 while Captains Courageous was featured on their list of America s most inspiring movies 299 Awards and nominations editMain article List of awards and nominations received by Spencer Tracy Tracy was nominated for nine Academy Awards for Best Actor a category record he holds with Laurence Olivier He was the first of nine actors to win the award twice and is one of two actors to receive it consecutively the other being Tom Hanks 300 Tracy was also nominated for five British Academy Film Awards of which he won two and four Golden Globe Awards winning once In addition he received the Cannes Film Festival award for Best Actor and was once named Best Actor by the National Board of Review Tracy was recognized by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for the following performances 1937 Nomination for San Francisco 1938 Win for Captains Courageous 1939 Win for Boys Town 1951 Nomination for Father of the Bride 1956 Nomination for Bad Day at Black Rock 1959 Nomination for The Old Man and the Sea 1961 Nomination for Inherit the Wind 1962 Nomination for Judgment at Nuremberg 1968 Nomination for Guess Who s Coming to Dinner posthumous nomination Filmography editMain article Spencer Tracy filmography Selected filmography Up the River 1930 with Humphrey Bogart Quick Millions 1931 20 000 Years in Sing Sing 1932 with Bette Davis The Power and the Glory 1933 with Colleen Moore Man s Castle 1933 with Loretta Young Whipsaw 1935 with Myrna Loy Fury 1936 with Sylvia Sidney San Francisco 1936 with Clark Gable Libeled Lady 1936 with Jean Harlow Captains Courageous 1937 with Freddie Bartholomew and Lionel Barrymore They Gave Him a Gun 1937 Mannequin 1937 with Joan Crawford and Alan Curtis Test Pilot 1938 with Clark Gable and Myrna Loy Boys Town 1938 with Mickey Rooney Boom Town 1940 with Clark Gable Edison the Man 1940 with Gene Lockhart Northwest Passage 1940 with Robert Young and Walter Brennan Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1941 with Ingrid Bergman Woman of the Year 1942 with Katharine Hepburn Ring of Steel 1942 as narrator Keeper of the Flame 1943 with Katharine Hepburn A Guy Named Joe 1943 with Irene Dunne The Seventh Cross 1944 with Hume Cronyn Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo 1944 with Van Johnson Without Love 1945 with Katharine Hepburn Sea of Grass 1947 with Katharine Hepburn State of the Union 1948 with Katharine Hepburn Adam s Rib 1949 with Katharine Hepburn Malaya 1949 with James Stewart Father of the Bride 1950 with Elizabeth Taylor Father s Little Dividend 1951 with Joan Bennett Plymouth Adventure 1952 with Gene Tierney Pat and Mike 1952 with Katharine Hepburn The Actress 1953 with Jean Simmons Broken Lance 1954 with Richard Widmark Bad Day at Black Rock 1955 with Robert Ryan The Mountain 1956 with Robert Wagner Desk Set 1957 with Katharine Hepburn The Old Man and the Sea 1958 The Last Hurrah 1958 with Jeffrey Hunter Inherit the Wind 1960 with Fredric March The Devil at 4 O Clock 1961 with Frank Sinatra Kerwin Mathews Judgment at Nuremberg 1961 with Burt Lancaster It s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World 1963 with Jonathan Winters Milton Berle Mickey Rooney Sid Caesar Ethel Merman Guess Who s Coming to Dinner 1967 with Katharine HepburnReferences edit AFI s 100 Years 100 Stars American Film Institute June 16 1999 Archived from the original on January 13 2013 Retrieved February 20 2012 Los Angeles Times Hollywood Star Walk Spencer Tracy Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on May 7 2016 Retrieved April 20 2017 Curtis 2011 p 27 Curtis 2011 p 29 Curtis 2011 p 31 a b Curtis 2011 p 36 Curtis 2011 p 37 Curtis 2011 p 40 Curtis 2011 p 42 Deschner 1972 p 34 a b Curtis 2011 p 43 Curtis 2011 p 45 The quote about joining the Navy comes from a 1937 interview with Tracy a b Curtis 2011 p 46 Curtis 2011 p 49 Deschner 1972 p 34 a b Spencer Tracy Ripon College Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved November 30 2011 Curtis 2011 p 53 Curtis 2011 p 54 Cutis 2011 p 55 Curtis 2011 p 59 Curtis 2011 p 66 Kanin 1971 p 10 Curtis 2011 p 67 Curtis 2011 p 70 Curtis 2011 p 71 Curtis 2011 p 72 Curtis 2011 p 73 Curtis 2011 p 6 Curtis 2011 pp 13 15 Deschner 1972 pp 36 37 Curtis 2011 p 17 a b Curtis 2011 p 18 Curtis 2011 p 21 22 Curtis 2011 pp 24 76 82 85 Deschner 1972 p 37 Curtis 2011 p 86 Curtis 2011 p 87 a b Curtis 2011 p 91 Curtis 2011 p 92 Deschner 1972 p 39 Deschner 1972 p 39 Kanin 1971 p 35 Deschner 1972 p 40 Curtis 2011 p 106 Curtis 2011 pp 109 114 Curtis 2011 p 117 Curtis 2011 p 118 Curtis 2011 p 119 Curtis 2011 p 124 Curtis 2011 p 130 a b c Curtis 2011 p 132 Curtis 2011 p 131 Deschner 1972 p 43 Curtis 2011 p 888 Curtis 2011 pp 135 137 Deschner 1972 p 43 Curtis 2011 p 145 Kanin 1971 p 109 quotes Tracy talking about signing for Fox So with me it was just to pick up the dough I needed Curtis 2011 p 168 Curtis 2011 p 157 Curtis 2011 p 161 Curtis 2011 pp 170 177 Curtis 2011 p 176 Curtis 2011 p 178 In a survey conducted by Variety magazine of the 133 biggest money makers in the movie industry Tracy did not make the list Curtis 2011 pp 183 184 Curtis 2011 p 188 Curtis 2011 p 202 a b Curtis 2011 p 208 a b Curtis 2011 p 200 Curtis 2011 p 209 Curtis 2011 p 223 Curtis 2011 p 231 Curtis 2011 p 241 Curtis 2011 p 242 Curtis 2011 p 244 Curtis 2011 pp 254 255 a b c Curtis 2011 p 259 Curtis 2011 p 234 Curtis 2011 p 224 Curtis 2011 p 365 Curtis 2011 p 258 a b Curtis 2011 p 260 Curtis 2011 p 261 Curtis 2011 p 326 a b Curtis 2011 p 272 Curtis 2011 pp 266 293 Deschner 1972 p 47 quotes Louella Parsons saying Instead of being a star himself he was a leading man to all MGM s glamour girls a b Curtis 2011 p 293 Curtis 2011 p 291 Curtis 2011 p 292 Curtis 2011 p 277 Curtis 2011 p 310 Deschner 1972 p 44 Curtis 2011 p 278 Curtis 2011 p 299 Curtis 2011 p 308 a b Curtis 2011 p 316 Curtis 2011 p 300 Curtis 2011 p 305 Curtis 2011 p 339 Curtis 2011 p 333 The poll was conducted by 55 metropolitan newspapers Ahead of Tracy in the poll were Clark Gable Robert Taylor Tyrone Power William Powell and Nelson Eddy Curtis 2011 p 347 Curtis 2011 p 343 Curtis 2011 p 345 Curtis 2011 p 362 Curtis 2011 p 363 Curtis 2011 p 364 Curtis 2011 p 359 Curtis 2011 p 390 Curtis 2011 p 391 a b Curtis 2011 p 399 Deschner 1972 p 49 Curtis 2011 p 400 Curtis 2011 p 406 Curtis 2011 p 385 Curtis 2011 p 415 Curtis 2011 p 411 Curtis 2011 pp 422 423 Deschner 1972 p 170 Curtis 2011 p 423 Curtis 2011 p 420 Berg 2004 p 146 Berg 2004 p 138 Berg 2004 p 171 a b Curtis 2011 p 457 Curtis 2011 p 479 Curtis 2011 pp 479 480 Kanin 1971 p 5 Curtis 2011 p 500 Curtis 2011 p 505 Curtis 2011 p 512 a b Curtis 2011 p 515 Curtis 2011 p 517 for hospital stay p 512 for Hepburn s strategy Curtis 2011 pp 525 256 Kanin 1971 p 97 Curtis 2011 p 528 Curtis 2011 p 531 a b Deschner 1972 p 51 Curtis 2011 p 530 Curtis 2011 p 549 Curtis 2011 p 559 a b Curtis 2011 p 546 a b Curtis 2011 p 567 Curtis 2011 p 579 Curtis 2011 p 580 Curtis 2011 p 587 Crowther Bosley December 26 1949 Adam s Rib Tight Little Island Amazing Mr Beecham Among Movie Newcomers The New York Times Archived from the original on December 28 2013 Retrieved August 25 2011 a b Curtis 2011 p 599 Curtis 2011 p 600 a b Curtis 2011 p 609 Berg 2004 p 198 Curtis 2011 p 637 Curtis 2011 p 652 Curtis 2011 p 674 Curtis 2011 p 680 Curtis 2011 p 670 for threatening to leave p 680 for negativity toward the film Curtis 2011 p 687 Curtis 2011 p 689 Curtis 2011 p 695 Curtis 2011 p 723 Curtis 2011 p 738 a b Curtis 2011 p 644 Curtis 2011 pp 707 732 Curtis 2011 p 732 Curtis 2011 p 725 Curtis 2011 p 748 Curtis 2011 pp 738 739 The second film was Ten North Frederick a b Curtis 2011 p 741 John Ford comment When I say Spencer Tracy is the best actor we ever had I m giving you something of my philosophy on acting The best is most natural Curtis 2011 p 752 Curtis 2011 p 745 Curtis 2011 p 750 a b Curtis 2011 p 768 Curtis 2011 p 769 Curtis 2011 p 767 Deschner 1972 p 21 Curtis 2011 p 798 Curtis 2011 p 765 Curtis 2011 p 774 Curtis 2011 p 794 Curtis 2011 p 796 Curtis 2011 p 803 Curtis 2011 p 797 Curtis 2011 p 806 Curtis 2011 p 811 Curtis 2011 p 818 Curtis 2011 pp 818 822 Both roles eventually went to Edward G Robinson Curtis 2011 p 836 Curtis 2011 p 839 Berg 2004 p 243 Curtis 2011 p 847 Curtis 2011 p 856 Hepburn 1991 p 402 Curtis 2011 p 803 a b Curtis 2011 p 873 Berg 2004 p 249 Curtis 2011 p 12 Curtis 2011 pp 14 15 Curtis 2011 p 21 Curtis 2011 p 78 Curtis 2011 p 84 Curtis 2011 pp 85 95 108 112 166 338 586 647 Curtis 2011 pp 96 565 Cutis 2011 p 338 Curtis 2011 p 177 Curtis 2011 p 485 Curtis 2011 p 205 Curtis 2011 pp 206 216 226 Curtis 2011 p 210 for beginning of affair p 235 for break up For public nature of the relationship see pp 213 215 Curtis 2011 p 253 Curtis 2011 p 319 Curtis 2011 p 426 Curtis 2011 p 450 quotes Claire Trevor saying He did have quite a line of conquests Women loved him Similar quotations are given from Joseph L Mankiewicz and Clark Gable Curtis 2011 p 327 Curtis 2011 p 413 Christopher Andersen An Affair to Remember The Remarkable Love Story of Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy William Morrow et Company 1997 p 86 Darwin Porter Katharine the Great A Lifetime of Secrets 2004 p 372 Jane Ellen Wayne The Leading Men of MGM First Carroll and Graf 2005 p 207 Myrna Loy loving Spencer Tracy amp hating Katherine Hepburn https www youtube com Myrna Loy Being and Becoming James Kotsilibas Davis et Myrna Loy editions Knopf 1987 page 154 Hepburn 1991 p 389 His interests and demands came first p 393 I wanted him to be happy safe comfortable I liked to wait on him listen to him feed him work for him I tried not to disturb him I was happy to do this Bacall 2005 p 488 Her sole aim was to please him which she unfailingly did Curtis 2011 p 749 Hepburn continued being all that she could be for him a b c d e Kramer and Heeley 2015 King Larry host June 30 2003 Tribute to Katharine Hepburn Larry King Live CNN Tribute to Katharine Hepburn Retrieved July 7 2023 See comment from Susie Tracy there came a point where he did not live in the house anymore But I saw him every weekend and he always came to the ranch Berg 2004 p 171 Kanin 1971 pp 81 82 Curtis 2011 p 356 Curtis 2011 p 583 Curtis 2011 p 814 Curtis 2011 pp 481 508 543 548 556 627 Curtis 2011 p 556 Hepburn 1991 p 396 wrote I have no idea how Spence felt about me He wouldn t talk about it and I didn t talk about it Curtis 2011 p 748 quotes Sally Erskine saying I thought he showed love I just don t think he ever said anything see also p 497 Curtis 2011 p 747 Curtis 2011 p 635 Tracy s friend William Self is quoted as saying once in a while Carroll and Spence would talk about some affair he was having or thinking of having while he was very involved with Hepburn Curtis 2011 pp 626 627 Curtis 2011 p 612 Hepburn 1991 p 405 Curtis 2011 p 212 Kanin 1971 p 250 Kanin 1971 p 14 To Spence life was all save his religion a surpassing joke Curtis 2011 pp 32 607 Kanin 1971 p 166 Curtis 2011 p 407 Kanin 1971 p 64 also notes Tracy s admiration for Roosevelt Curtis 2011 p 492 quotes Tracy s friend Lincoln Cromwell describing him as a dedicated Democrat p 837 quotes his daughter saying He was a Democrat surrounded by Republicans the rest of his family Curtis 2011 p 702 quotes Tracy s daughter as saying alcoholism was something my father had to battle all his life Curtis 2011 p 34 Tracy s grandmother father and uncle were all alcoholics Curtis 2011 pp 348 459 683 702 718 735 Curtis 2011 p 232 Curtis 2011 pp 213 256 Curtis 2011 p 464 James Kotsilibas Davis and Myrna Loy Being and Becoming Knopf 1987 page 154 a b Katharine Hepburn All About Me Directed by David Healy Top Hat Productions Turner Network Television January 18 1993 Stated by Hepburn in this documentary Curtis 2011 p 181 For anxiety and hypochondria see p 463 Kanin 1971 p 123 Curtis 2011 pp 508 662 670 727 Curtis 2011 p 481 Kanin 1971 p 182 Higham 2004 pp 114 198 Hepburn 1991 p 399 Curtis 2011 p 814 Curtis 2011 p 815 Curtis 2011 p 816 Curtis 2011 pp 816 823 829 Curtis 2011 p 823 Curtis 2011 pp 825 826 Curtis 2011 p 827 Berg 2004 p 214 Hepburn 1991 p 402 Curtis 2011 p 861 Hepburn 1991 p 403 Curtis 2011 p 863 Spencer Tracy two time Oscar winner dies at 67 Spokesman Review Spokane Washington Associated Press June 11 1967 p 2 Sarasota Journal news google com Retrieved September 11 2016 via Google News Archive Search Curtis 2011 p 866 Curtis 2011 p 878 The Tuscaloosa News news google com Retrieved September 11 2016 via Google News Archive Search Wayne Gary Forest Lawn Glendale part 3 Stars Graves www seeing stars com Archived from the original on September 22 2016 Retrieved September 11 2016 Gainesville Sun news google com Retrieved September 11 2016 via Google News Archive Search French Philip January 27 2008 Philip French s screen legends Spencer Tracy The Guardian Archived from the original on November 18 2013 Retrieved August 27 2012 Deschner 1972 p 21 Swindell 1973 p 142 The guy s good and there s nobody in the business who can touch him so you re a fool to try Kanin 1971 p 239 Spence He s the most difficult son of a bitch I ve ever known And the best Certainly the best actor Kanin 1971 p 49 As far as actors go living ones I d say Spence is the best by far I rate him tops Kanin 1971 p 246 Spencer was indubitably the finest screen actor of his generation Hepburn 1991 p 412 In a letter to Tracy There you were really the greatest movie actor I say this because I believe it and also I have heard many people of standing in our business say it Roth Lillian amp Helen Ross 1962 The Player A Profile of an Art New York Simon amp Schuster p 305 ASIN B0006AY01Y Curtis 2011 p 498 a b Deschner 1972 p 13 Crawford s comment It was inspiring to play opposite Tracy she said His is such simplicity of performance such naturalness and humor He walks through a scene He makes it seem so easy Kanin 1971 p 239 Curtis 2011 p 755 Deschner 1972 p 23 Curtis 2011 p 289 Deschner 1972 p 14 Curtis 2011 p 676 Burt Reynolds But Enough About Me A Memoir G P Putnam s Sons 2015 ISBN 978 0399173547 Curtis 2011 p 337 Deschner 1972 pp 13 26 28 For lack of rehearsal see Curtis 2011 p 672 Kanin 1971 p 6 Hepburn 1991 p 394 for minimum takes see Kanin 1971 p 6 Curtis 2011 p 621 Deschner 1972 p 16 Kanin 1971 p 6 Curtis 2011 p 784 Deschner 1972 p 17 Curtis 2011 p 196 Kanin 1971 p 51 Kanin 1971 p 7 Deschner 1972 p 28 attributes the quote originally to Lunt Learn your lines and don t bump into the furniture Katharine Hepburn Part 2 The Dick Cavett Show October 3 1973 American Broadcasting Company Spencer Tracy Hollywood Walk of Fame www walkoffame com Archived from the original on October 5 2016 Retrieved August 27 2016 a b Matthews Charles October 21 2011 Spencer Tracy A Life by James Curtis The Washington Post Archived from the original on May 14 2015 Retrieved December 10 2011 a b Basinger Jeanine October 29 2011 Book Review Spencer Tracy Hollywood s Favorite Actor The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Maltin Leonard November 9 2011 Spencer Tracy A Biography Book review Leonard Maltin s Movie Crazy Indiewire Archived from the original on April 3 2012 Retrieved March 4 2012 Morgan gets UCLA s Spencer Tracy Award The Gadsden Times Associated Press February 22 2006 Retrieved February 12 2012 a b The Spencer Tracy Legacy 1986 Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2016 Archived from the original on March 7 2016 Retrieved March 4 2012 James Keast February 6 2009 Pixar Reveals Early Look At Up Exclaim Archived from the original on July 17 2015 Retrieved October 16 2011 McNary Dave February 14 2014 Katharine Hepburn Spencer Tracy Movie in Development Variety Archived from the original on August 24 2014 Retrieved January 25 2015 AFI s 100 Years 100 Laughs American Film Institute Archived from the original on November 16 2015 Retrieved October 9 2011 AFI s 100 Years 100 Movies American Film Institute Archived from the original on June 11 2016 Retrieved October 9 2011 AFI s 100 Years 100 CHEERS American Film Institute Archived from the original on January 13 2012 Retrieved February 12 2012 Academy Awards Best Actor filmsite Archived from the original on January 4 2013 Retrieved February 26 2012 Sources editBacall Lauren 2005 By Myself and Then Some It Books ISBN 0 06 075535 0 Berg Scott A 2004 Kate Remembered Katharine Hepburn a Personal Biography Pocket ISBN 0 7434 1563 9 Curtis James 2011 Spencer Tracy A Biography London Hutchinson ISBN 978 0 09 178524 6 Deschner Donald 1972 The Films of Spencer Tracy Secaucus New Jersey The Citadel Press ISBN 0 8065 0272 X Hepburn Katharine 1991 Me Stories of My Life Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 679 40051 6 Higham Charles 2004 1975 Kate The Life of Katharine Hepburn New York City NY W W Norton ISBN 0 393 32598 9 Kanin Garson 1971 Tracy and Hepburn An Intimate Memoir New York Viking ISBN 0 670 72293 6 Kramer Joan Heeley David 2015 In the Company of Legends New York Beaufort Books ISBN 978 0 825 30742 3 Swindell Larry 1973 1969 Spencer Tracy London Coronet Books ISBN 0 340 16951 6 Further reading editWise James 1997 Stars in Blue Movie Actors in America s Sea Services Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 937 9External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Spencer Tracy nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Spencer Tracy Spencer Tracy at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Spencer Tracy at IMDb Spencer Tracy at the TCM Movie Database nbsp Profile at Turner Classic Movies Genealogical Profile at TraceyClann Chang David A Spencer Tracy s Boyhood Truth Fiction and Hollywood Dreams Wisconsin Magazine of History vol 84 no 1 Autumn 2000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spencer Tracy amp oldid 1219757154, wikipedia, wiki, 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