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Wallace Beery

Wallace Fitzgerald Beery (April 1, 1885 – April 15, 1949) was an American film and stage actor.[1] He is best known for his portrayal of Bill in Min and Bill (1930) opposite Marie Dressler, as General Director Preysing in Grand Hotel (1932), as Long John Silver in Treasure Island (1934), as Pancho Villa in Viva Villa! (1934), and his titular role in The Champ (1931), for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor. Beery appeared in some 250 films during a 36-year career. His contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer stipulated in 1932 that he would be paid $1 more than any other contract player at the studio. This made Beery the highest-paid film actor in the world during the early 1930s. He was the brother of actor Noah Beery and uncle of actor Noah Beery Jr.

Wallace Beery
Beery c. 1930
Born
Wallace Fitzgerald Beery

(1885-04-01)April 1, 1885
DiedApril 15, 1949(1949-04-15) (aged 64)
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, California, U.S.
Occupations
  • Actor
  • film director
Years active1904–1949
Spouse(s)
(m. 1916; div. 1918)

Rita Gilman
(m. 1924; div. 1939)
Children1
RelativesNoah Beery Sr. (brother)
Noah Beery Jr. (nephew)

For his contributions to the film industry, Beery was posthumously inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame with a motion-picture star in 1960. His star is located at 7001 Hollywood Boulevard.[2]

Early life

Beery was born the youngest of three boys in 1885 in Clay County, Missouri, near Smithville.[3] The Beery family left the farm in the 1890s and moved to nearby Kansas City, Missouri, where the father was a police officer.

Beery attended the Chase School in Kansas City and took piano lessons, as well, but showed little love for academic matters. He ran away from home twice, the first time returning after a short time, quitting school and working in the Kansas City train yards as an engine wiper.[3] Beery ran away from home a second time at age 16, and joined the Ringling Brothers Circus as an assistant elephant trainer. He left two years later, after being clawed by a leopard.

Career

 
Wallace Beery circa 1914
 
Beery as Sweedie the Swedish maid (1914)

Early career

Wallace Beery joined his older brother Noah in New York City in 1904, finding work in comic opera as a baritone, and began to appear on Broadway and in summer stock theatre. He appeared in The Belle of the West in 1905. His most notable early role came in 1907 when he starred in The Yankee Tourist to good reviews.[4]

Comedy film star – Essanay Studios

In 1913, he moved to Chicago to work for Essanay Studios. His first movie was likely a comedy short, His Athletic Wife (1913).

Beery was then cast as Sweedie, a Swedish maid character he played in drag in a series of short comedy films from 1914 to 1916. Sweedie Learns to Swim (1914) co-starred Ben Turpin. Sweedie Goes to College (1915) starred Gloria Swanson, whom Beery married the following year.[5]

Other Beery films (mostly shorts) from this period included In and Out (1914), The Ups and Downs (1914), Cheering a Husband (1914), Madame Double X (1914), Ain't It the Truth (1915), Two Hearts That Beat as Ten (1915), and The Fable of the Roistering Blades (1915).

The Slim Princess (1915), with Francis X. Bushman, was one of his earliest feature-length films. Beery also did The Broken Pledge (1915) and A Dash of Courage (1916), both with Swanson.

Beery was a German soldier in The Little American (1917) with Mary Pickford, directed by Cecil B. De Mille. He did some comedies for Mack Sennett, Maggie's First False Step (1917) and Teddy at the Throttle (1917), but he gradually left that genre and specialized in portrayals of villains prior to becoming a major leading man during the sound era.

Villainous roles

In 1917, Beery portrayed Pancho Villa in Patria at a time when Villa was still active in Mexico. (Beery reprised the role 17 years later in Viva Villa!.)

Beery was a villainous German in The Unpardonable Sin (1919) with Blanche Sweet. For Paramount, he did The Love Burglar (1919) with Wallace Reid; Victory (1919), with Jack Holt; Behind the Door (1919), as another villainous German; and The Life Line (1919) with Holt.

Beery was the villain in five major releases in 1920: 813; The Virgin of Stamboul for director Tod Browning; The Mollycoddle with Douglas Fairbanks, in which Fairbanks and Beery fistfought as they tumbled down a steep mountain (see the photograph in the gallery below); and in the noncomedic Western The Round-Up starring Roscoe Arbuckle as an obese cowboy in a well-received serious film with the tagline "Nobody loves a fat man." Beery continued his villainy cycle that year with The Last of the Mohicans, playing Magua.

Beery had a supporting part in The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1920) with Rudolph Valentino. He was a villainous Tong leader in A Tale of Two Worlds (1921), and was the bad guy again in Sleeping Acres (1922), Wild Honey (1922), and I Am the Law (1922), which also featured his brother Noah Beery Sr.

Historical films

Beery had a large then-rare heroic part as King Richard I (Richard the Lion-Hearted) in Robin Hood (1922), starring Douglas Fairbanks as Robin Hood. The lavish movie was a huge success and spawned a sequel the following year starring Beery in the title role of Richard the Lion-Hearted.

Beery had an important unbilled cameo as "the Ape-Man" in A Blind Bargain (1922) starring Lon Chaney (Beery is seen crouching, in full ape-man make-up, in the background of some of the movie's posters), and a supporting role in The Flame of Life (1923). He played another historical king, King Philip IV of Spain in The Spanish Dancer (1923) with Pola Negri.

Beery starred in an action melodrama, Stormswept (1923) for FBO Films alongside his elder brother, Noah Beery Sr. The tagline on the movie's posters was "Wallace and Noah Beery – The Two Greatest Character Actors on the American Screen".

Beery played his third royal, the Duc de Tours, in Ashes of Vengeance (1923) with Norma Talmadge, then did Drifting (1923) with Priscilla Dean for director Browning.

Beery had the titular role in Bavu (1923), about Bolsheviks and the Russian Revolution. He co-starred with Buster Keaton in the comedy Three Ages (1923), the first feature Keaton wrote, produced, directed, and starred in.

Beery was a villain in The Eternal Struggle (1923), a Mountie drama, produced by Louis B. Mayer, who eventually became crucial to Beery's career. He was reunited with Dean and Browning in White Tiger (1923), then played the title role in the aforementioned Richard the Lion-Hearted (1923), a sequel to Robin Hood based on Sir Walter Scott's The Talisman; a print of Richard the Lion-Hearted is held at the Archives du Film du CNC in Bois d'Arcy.[6]

Beery was in The Drums of Jeopardy (1923) and had a supporting role in The Sea Hawk (1924) for director Frank Lloyd. He also appeared in a supporting role for Clarence Brown's The Signal Tower (1925) starring Virginia Valli and Rockliffe Fellowes.

Paramount

Beery signed a contract with Paramount Pictures. He had a support role in Adventure (1925) directed by Victor Fleming.

At First National, he was given the star role of Professor Challenger in Arthur Conan Doyle's dinosaur epic The Lost World (1925), arguably his silent performance most frequently screened in the modern era. Beery was top billed in Paramount's The Devil's Cargo (1925) for Victor Fleming, and supported in The Night Club (1925), The Pony Express (1925) for James Cruze, and The Wanderer (1925) for Raoul Walsh.

Beery starred in a comedy with Raymond Hatton, Behind the Front (1926), and he was a villain in Volcano! (1926). He was a bos'n in Old Ironsides (1926) for director James Cruze, with Charles Farrell in the romantic lead.

Beery had the title role in the baseball movie Casey at the Bat (1927). He was reunited with Hatton in Fireman, Save My Child (1927) and Now We're in the Air (1927). The latter also featured Louise Brooks, who was Beery's costar in Beggars of Life (1928), directed by William Wellman, which was Paramount's first part-talkie movie.

He made a fourth comedy with Hatton, Wife Savers (1929), then Beery starred in Chinatown Nights (1929) for Wellman, produced by a young David O. Selznick. This film was shot silent with the voices dubbed in by the actors afterward, which worked spectacularly well with Beery's resonant voice, although the technique was not used again during the silent era for another full-length feature. Beery then played in Stairs of Sand (1929), a Western also starring Jean Arthur (who played the leading lady in the Western film Shane 24 years later) before being fired by Paramount.

MGM

 
Chester Morris and Wallace Beery in The Big House (1930)
 
 
Marie Dressler in Min and Bill
 
Jackie Cooper, Edward Brophy, and Wallace Beery in The Champ (1931)
 

Irving Thalberg signed Beery to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) as a character actor. The association began well when Beery played the savage convict Butch, a role originally intended for Lon Chaney (who died that same year), in the highly successful 1930 prison film The Big House, directed by George W. Hill; Beery was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor.

Beery's second film for MGM was also a huge success: Billy the Kid (1930), an early widescreen picture in which he played Pat Garrett. He supported John Gilbert in Way for a Sailor (1930) and Grace Moore in A Lady's Morals (1930), portraying P. T. Barnum in the latter.

Stardom

Beery was well established as a leading man and top-rank character actor. The picture that really made him one of the cinema's foremost stars was Min and Bill (1930) opposite Marie Dressler and directed by George W. Hill, a sensational success.[7]

Beery made a third film with Hill, The Secret Six (1931), a gangster movie with Jean Harlow and Clark Gable in key supporting roles. The picture was popular, but was surpassed at the box office by The Champ, which Beery made with Jackie Cooper for director King Vidor. The film, especially written for Beery, was another box-office sensation. Beery shared the Best Actor Oscar with Fredric March. Though March received one vote more than Beery, Academy rules at the time—since rescinded—defined results within one vote of each other as "ties".[8] (An alternate account has MGM head Louis B. Mayer storming backstage at the Oscars and demanding that March and Beery share that year's Academy Award for Best Actor since the vote was so close.)

Beery's career went from strength to strength. Hell Divers (1932), a naval airplane epic also starring a young Clark Gable billed under Beery, was a big hit. So, too, was the all-star Grand Hotel (1932), in which Beery was billed fourth, under Greta Garbo, John Barrymore, and Joan Crawford, one of the very few times he would not be top billed for the rest of his career. In 1932, his contract with MGM stipulated that he be paid a dollar more than any other contract player at the studio, making him the world's highest-paid actor.

Beery was a German wrestler in Flesh (1932), a hit directed by John Ford, but Ford removed his directorial credit before the film opened, so the picture screened with no director listed despite being labeled "A John Ford Production" in the opening title card. Next Beery was in another all-star ensemble blockbuster, Dinner at Eight (1933), with Jean Harlow holding her own as Beery's comically bickering wife. This time, Beery was billed third, under Marie Dressler and John Barrymore.

Beery was lent to the new 20th Century Pictures for the boisterously fast-paced comedy/drama The Bowery (1933), also starring George Raft, Jackie Cooper, and Fay Wray, and featuring Pert Kelton, under the direction of Raoul Walsh. The picture was a smash hit.

Back at MGM, he played the title role of Pancho Villa in Viva Villa! (1933) and was reunited with Dressler in Tugboat Annie (1933), a massive hit. He was Long John Silver in Treasure Island (1934), described as a box-office "disappointment"[9] despite being MGM's third-largest hit of the season, and remains currently viewed as featuring one of Beery's iconic performances.

Beery returned to 20th Century Productions for The Mighty Barnum (1934), in which he played P. T. Barnum again. Back at MGM, he was a kindly sergeant in West Point of the Air (1935) and was in an all-star spectacular, China Seas (1935), this time billed beneath Clark Gable.

O'Shaughnessy's Boy (1935) reunited Beery and Jackie Cooper. He had the lead as the drunken uncle in MGM's adaptation of Ah, Wilderness! (1936) and went back to 20th Century – now 20th Century Fox – for A Message to Garcia (1936) with Barbara Stanwyck.

At MGM, he was in Old Hutch (1936) and The Good Old Soak (1937), then he was back at Fox for Slave Ship (1937), taking second billing under Warner Baxter, a rarity for Beery after Min and Bill catapulted his career into the stratosphere in 1931, during which he received top billing in all but six films (Min and Bill, Grand Hotel, Tugboat Annie, Dinner at Eight, China Seas with Gable and Harlow, and Slave Ship).

Decline

The status of Beery's films went into a decline. After an abrupt European vacation,[10][11] Beery was in The Bad Man of Brimstone (1938) with Dennis O'Keefe (and Noah Beery Sr. in a cameo role as a bartender), Port of Seven Seas (1938) with Maureen O'Sullivan, Stablemates (1938) with Mickey Rooney, Stand Up and Fight (1939) with Robert Taylor, Sergeant Madden (1939) with Tom Brown, Thunder Afloat (1939) with Chester Morris, The Man from Dakota (1940) with Dolores del Río, and 20 Mule Team (1940) with Marjorie Rambeau, Anne Baxter, and Noah Beery Jr., enjoying top billing in all of them.

Wyoming (1940) teamed Beery with Marjorie Main. After The Bad Man (1941), which also stars Lionel Barrymore and future President of the United States Ronald Reagan, and was the remake of a Walter Huston picture, MGM reunited Beery and Main in Barnacle Bill (1941), The Bugle Sounds (1941), and Jackass Mail (1942).

Beery did a war film, a Technicolor comedy titled Salute to the Marines (1943), then was back with Main in Rationing (1944). Barbary Coast Gent (1944), a broad Western comedy in which Beery played a bombastic con man, teamed him with Binnie Barnes. He did another war film, This Man's Navy (1945), then made another Western with Main, Bad Bascomb (1946), a huge hit, helped by Margaret O'Brien's casting.

The Mighty McGurk (1947) put Beery with another child star of the studio, Dean Stockwell. Alias a Gentleman (1947) was the first of Beery's films to lose money during the sound era. Beery received top billing for the smash hit A Date with Judy (1949), a hugely popular musical featuring Elizabeth Taylor. Beery's last film, again featuring Main, Big Jack (1949), also lost money according to Mannix's reckoning.[12] Beery died of a heart attack three days after the picture's release.

Personal life

 
 

First marriage

On March 27, 1916, at the age of 30, Beery married 17-year-old actress Gloria Swanson in Los Angeles.[13] The two had co-starred in Sweedie Goes to College.[5] Although Beery had enjoyed popularity with his Sweedie shorts, his career had taken a dip, and during the marriage to Swanson, he relied on her as a breadwinner. According to Swanson's autobiography, Beery raped her on their wedding night, and later tricked her into swallowing an abortifacient when she was pregnant, which caused her to lose their child.[14] Swanson filed for divorce in 1917 and it was finalized in 1918.[13]

Second marriage and adoption

On August 4, 1924, Beery married actress Rita Gilman (née Mary Areta Gilman; 1898–1986) in Los Angeles.[15] The couple adopted Carol Ann Priester (1930–2013), daughter of Rita Beery's mother's half-sister, Juanita Priester (née Caplinger; 1899–1931) and her husband, Erwin William Priester (1897–1969). After 14 years of marriage, Rita filed for divorce on May 1, 1939, in Carson City, Ormsby County, Nevada. Within 20 minutes of filing, she won the decree. Rita remarried 15 days later, on May 16, 1939, to Jessen Albert D. Foyt (1907–1945), filing her marriage license with the same county clerk in Carson City.

Alleged fatal altercation

In December 1937, comedic actor and Three Stooges founder Ted Healy was involved in a drunken altercation at Cafe Trocadero on the Sunset Strip. E. J. Fleming, in his 2005 book, The Fixers: Eddie Mannix, Howard Strickling and the MGM Publicity Machine, asserts that Healy was attacked by three men:

  1. Future James Bond producer Albert "Cubby" Broccoli
  2. Local mob figure Pat DiCicco (who was Broccoli's cousin as well as the former husband of Thelma Todd and the future husband of Gloria Vanderbilt)
  3. Wallace Beery

Fleming writes that this beating led to Healy's death a few days later.[10][11]

Second adoption

Around December 1939, Beery, recently divorced, adopted a seven-month-old girl, Phyllis Ann Beery.[16] Phyllis appeared in MGM publicity photos when adopted, but was never mentioned again.[17] Beery told the press he had taken the girl in from a single mother, recently divorced, but he had filed no official adoption papers.[18]

Working relationship with peers

 
Brother Noah Beery Sr. in 1925

Beery was considered misanthropic and difficult to work with by many of his colleagues. Robert Young described Beery as a "shitty person". On set, he often never bothered to learn his lines and instead choose to take from other actors' characters and then resent it when his theft was pointed out. When prompting for another actor's close-up, Beery would read the wrong lines, making it harder for his co-stars to meet their marks. Beery was "loathed by everybody, and happily oblivious".[19]

Mickey Rooney was one of Beery's few co-stars to consistently speak highly of him in subsequent decades. In his memoir, Rooney described Beery as "... a lovable, shambling kind of guy who never seemed to know that his shirttail belonged inside his pants, but always knew when a little kid actor needed a smile and a wink or a word of encouragement". He did concede that "not everyone loved [Beery] as much as I did." Rooney noted that Howard Strickling, MGM's head of publicity, once went to Louis B. Mayer to complain that Beery was stealing props from the studio's sets. "And that wasn't all", Rooney continued. "He went on for some minutes about the trouble that Beery was always causing him ... Mayer sighed and said, 'Yes, Howard, Beery's a son of a bitch. But he's our son of a bitch.' Strickling got the point. A family has to be tolerant of its black sheep, particularly if they brought a lot of money into the family fold, which Beery certainly did."[20]

Child actors, in particular, recalled unpleasant encounters with Beery. Jackie Cooper, who made several films with him early in his career, called him "a big disappointment". Cooper accused Beery of upstaging and other attempts to undermine his performances out of what Cooper presumed was jealousy. He recalled impulsively throwing his arms around Beery after one especially heartfelt scene, only to be gruffly pushed away.[21] Child actress Margaret O'Brien claimed that she had to be protected by crew members from Beery's insistence on constantly pinching her.[22]

On another occasion, after having invited 12-year-old actor Darryl Hickman to lunch, Beery responded to Darryl's thanks with, "okay, kid, you owe me 75 cents." Beery also refused to leave tips at the MGM commissary because he explained tips are for special service, and since he was a movie star, he already got special service and therefore leaving a tip would be a waste of money.[citation needed]

Beery only met his match with co-star Marie Dressler. Having come up the hard and long way to her stardom, Dressler refused to take "nonsense from this baboon". She responded to one of Beery's insults by saying she would serve his head on a platter to MGM chief Louis B. Mayer. Although everyone expected Beery to explode, instead, he cowered and acted like "a little boy being very careful that Mommy didn't catch him with his hand in the cookie jar".[citation needed]

Future author Ray Bradbury recalled meeting Beery as a young boy on a Hollywood street, and that his autograph request resulted in Beery cursing and spitting on him.[citation needed]

Hobbies

Beery owned and flew his own planes,[23] one a Howard DGA-11. On April 15, 1933, he was commissioned a lieutenant commander in the United States Navy Reserve at NRAB Long Beach.[24] One of his proudest achievements was catching the largest giant black sea bass in the world — 515 pounds (234 kg) — off Santa Catalina Island in 1916, a record that stood for 35 years.[25]

Activism against National Park Lands

A noteworthy episode in Beery's life is chronicled in the fifth episode of Ken Burns' documentary The National Parks: America's Best Idea: In 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed an executive order creating Jackson Hole National Monument to protect the land adjoining the Grand Tetons in Wyoming. Local ranchers, outraged at the loss of grazing lands, compared FDR's action to Hitler's taking of Austria. Led by an aging Beery, they protested by herding 500 cattle across the monument lands without a permit.[26]

Paternity suit

On February 13, 1948, Gloria Schumm (or Gloria Smith Beery, née Florence W. Smith; 1916–1989) filed a paternity suit against Beery. Beery, through his lawyer, Norman Ronald Tyre (1910–2002), initially offered $6,000 as a settlement, but denied being the father. Gloria had given birth on February 7, 1948, to Johan Richard Wallace Schumm. Gloria, in 1944, divorced Stuttgart-born Hollywood actor Hans Schumm ( Johann Josef Eugen Schumm; 1896–1990), but remarried him August 21, 1947, after realizing that she was pregnant. Prior to remarrying Schumm, Gloria, on August 4, 1947, met with Beery at his home, where he gave her the name and address of a physician to submit an examination.[27] At or around that time, she also asked Beery to marry her to "legitimatize the expected child" (her words), which Beery refused.

According to newspapers, Gloria claimed to have been intimate with Wallace Beery on or about May 1, 1947, at his home in Beverly Hills (in the court proceedings, however, she claimed to have been intimate with Beery on May 17, 1947). Beery conceded that he had known Gloria for about 15 years, and that under the pseudonym "Gloria Whitney", she had played bit roles in six films in which he starred. She again separated from Hans Schumm on April 15, 1948.

Politics

Beery supported Thomas Dewey in the 1944 United States presidential election.[28]

Death, estate, and continuing paternity suit

 
Grave at Forest Lawn Glendale

Beery died of a heart attack on April 15, 1949 (14 months, 1 week, and 1 day after Johan Schumm's birth) — while the suit was pending. Beery had been reading a newspaper at his Beverly Hills home when he collapsed.[29] His body was interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California. The inscription on his grave reads, "No man is indispensable, but some are irreplaceable."

Beery died intestate. In the paternity suit, Gloria Schumm's attorneys demanded $104,135 against Beery's $2,220,000 estate. In February 1952, Judge Newcomb Condee approved a $26,750 settlement from the estate. Gloria Schumm accepted the settlement, and Beery's paternity of Johan Schumm was not acknowledged.[citation needed]

When Mickey Rooney's father died less than a year later, Rooney arranged to have him buried next to his old friend. "I thought it was fitting that these two comedians should rest in peace, side by side", he wrote.[30]

Enduring case law

The paternity suit, and subsequent suits – including appeals – extended through about 1952 and were internationally publicized, particularly in gossip columns and tabloids. The litigation has endured as case law with, among other things, treatises addressing the rights of illegitimate offspring against legitimate heirs in races for inheritance.[31][32][33][34][35]

The upshot was that Schumm's paternity suit against Beery's estate put would-be half-siblings and other would-be family legatees, including a would-be uncle, Noah Beery Sr., in the position as de facto defendants. Phyllis Ann Riley was not named in Beery's will. Part of plaintiff's claim, initially, hinged on whether an oral agreement was binding. Gloria had claimed that Beery, while alive, agreed to provide for the child. However, on November 17, 1949, Judge William B. McKesson (1895–1967) threw out Gloria's claim. The judge reasoned that any oral agreement between the two, specifically any that was intended to provide for maintenance and care of a minor, was not binding because the amount allegedly agreed upon was in excess of $500, which must be made in writing.[36]

Another matter in the case hinged on a "peppercorn" rule. That is, for any agreement, oral or written, between Wallace and Gloria to be binding, consideration must exist. The court, initially, found that Beery agreed to an oral contract where Gloria would (i) include the name "Wallace" in the child's name if a male, or "Wally" if a female, and (ii) refrain from filing a paternity suit that both agreed would damage Beery's "social and professional standing as a prominent motion picture star".

Generally, under California state law at the time, a father who neither marries the mother nor acknowledges paternity does not have a right to name the child. That right belongs to the mother. In exchange for Gloria's promise to name the child "Wallace" or "Wally" (the promise representing a form of consideration), Wallace Beery agreed to arrange for the payment of $100 per week to the child (as a third-party beneficiary under the contract), plus a lump sum of $25,000 to the child when he or she attained age 21, in addition to the customary obligation to pay for the "maintenance, support, and education according to the station in life and standard of living of Wallace Beery".[34]

Legacy

For his contributions to the film industry, Wallace Beery posthumously received a motion-picture star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960. His star is located at 7001 Hollywood Boulevard.[2]

Beery is mentioned in the film Barton Fink, in which the lead character has been hired to write a wrestling screenplay to star Beery.[37]

In the 1971 comedy The Projectionist, actor and comedian Chuck McCann impersonates Beery quoting a line from Min and Bill.

In the US clothing industry, a quarter-button men's shirt is called a Wallace Beery style after the undershirts and long underwear Beery's miner and outlaw characters wore beneath their outer shirt.

Selected filmography

Box office ranking

  • 1932 – 7th
  • 1933 – 5th
  • 1934 – 4th
  • 1935 – 8th
  • 1936 – 15th, 8th (UK)
  • 1937 – 15th
  • 1938 – 12th
  • 1939 – 15th
  • 1940 – 8th
  • 1941 – 19th
  • 1942 – 18th
  • 1943 – 18th
  • 1944 – 11th
  • 1946 – 11th

Awards and nominations

Academy Awards

Year Award Film Result
1930 Best Actor The Big House Nominated
1932 The Champ Won

Venice Film Festival

Year Award Film Result
1934 Volpi Cup for Best Actor Viva Villa! Won

See also

References

  1. ^ Obituary Variety, April 20, 1949.
  2. ^ a b Walk of Fame Stars-Wallace Beery
  3. ^ a b Dictionary of Missouri Biography, Lawrence O. Christensen, University of Missouri Press, 1999.
  4. ^ . www.ibdb.com. Archived from the original on January 31, 2021.
  5. ^ a b Sonneborn, Liz (May 14, 2014). A to Z of American Women in the Performing Arts. Infobase Publishing (published 2002). ISBN 9781438107905. OCLC 297504194.
  6. ^ Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Database: Richard the Lion-Hearted
  7. ^ Scott Eyman, Lion of Hollywood: The Life and Legend of Louis B. Mayer, Robson, 2005, p. 191 ISBN 9781861058928
  8. ^ History of the Academy Awards: The Fifth Academy Awards, 1931/32. About.com archive. Retrieved April 2, 2015.
  9. ^ DOUGLAS W. CHURCHILL (December 30, 1934). "THE YEAR IN HOLLYWOOD: 1984 May Be Remembered as the Beginning of the Sweetness-and-Light Era". The New York Times. p. X5.
  10. ^ a b The Fixers: Eddie Mannix, Howard Strickling, and the MGM Publicity Machine, by E J Fleming (né Edward J. Fleming IV; born 1954), McFarland & Company (2005); p. 176; OCLC 215262172
  11. ^ a b "A nyuk on the wild side: Did the Three Stooges Cover Up the Murder of Their Founder?," by Jim Mueller, Chicago Tribune, April 4, 2002 (retrieved September 3, 2017)
  12. ^ The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
  13. ^ a b Shearer, Stephen Michael (2013). Gloria Swanson: The Ultimate Star. Thomas Dunne Books. ISBN 9781250013668.
  14. ^ Swanson, Gloria (1980). Swanson on Swanson. Random House. pp. 69–75. ISBN 0-394-50662-6.
  15. ^ Katchmer, George A. (May 8, 2002). A Biographical Dictionary of Silent Film Western Actors and Actresses. McFarland. ISBN 9781476609058.
  16. ^ Time, December 4, 1939
  17. ^ A Certain Cinema, Acertaincinema.com
  18. ^ "Beery Will Add To Adopted Family". Palm Beach Post. Hollywood. UP. December 8, 1939. p. 22. Retrieved March 31, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  19. ^ Eyman, S (2005). Lion of Hollywood: The Life and Legend of Louis B. Mayer. New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 222–223. ISBN 0-7432-0481-6.
  20. ^ Rooney, M. Life is Too Short. Villard Books (1991), p. 77. ISBN 0679401954.
  21. ^ Bergan, R (May 5, 2011). Jackie Cooper Obituary. The Guardian archive. Retrieved August 20, 2012.
  22. ^ Private Screenings: Child Stars|date=March 2009
  23. ^ "Wallace Beery," (www.dmairfield.com)
  24. ^ Heiser, Wayne H., "U.S. Naval and Marine Corps Reserve Aviation V. I, 1916–1942." p.78.
  25. ^ "Quite a Record". The News Leader. December 18, 1977. p. 13. Retrieved March 31, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  26. ^ Episode Five: 1933–1945 Great Nature
  27. ^ "Links Beery to Physician". Long Beach Independent. Los Angeles. April 29, 1948. p. 12. Retrieved March 31, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  28. ^ Critchlow, Donald T. (October 21, 2013). When Hollywood Was Right: How Movie Stars, Studio Moguls, and Big Business Remade American Politics. ISBN 9781107650282.
  29. ^ "From the Archives: Wally Beery, Veteran Film Actor, Dies". Los Angeles Times. April 17, 1949.
  30. ^ Rooney, M. Life is Too Short. Villard Books (1991), p. 239. ISBN 0679401954.
  31. ^ "Johan Richard Wallace Schumm, a Minor, etc., Appellant, v Phil Berg, (Beery's agent) and Noah Beery Jr. (Beery's nephew), as Executors of the Estate of Wallace Beery Jr." (opinion of Justice Jesse W. Carter), citation: 37 Cal.2d 174 (1951), Supreme Court California Resources, Stanford Law School, Robert Crown Law Library
    (Philip Jay Berg, 1902–1983, was married to actress Leila Hyams)
  32. ^ 2 Photographs of Mrs. Gloria Schumm and son, Johann Schumm (age 4), April 17, 1952; OCLC 822257200, 857831052, 663235176
  33. ^ Ardor in the Court!: Sex and the Law, by Jeffrey Miller (born 1950), ECW Press (2002); OCLC 972272320
  34. ^ a b "Charitable Naming Rights Transactions: Gifts or Contracts?," by William Drennan, Michigan State Law Review, Michigan State University College of Law (2016), pps. 1324–1326 (Schumm v. Berg); ISSN 1087-5468
  35. ^ K: A Common Law Approach to Contracts (2nd ed.), by Tracey E. George, Russell Korobkin, Wolters Kluwer (2017), p. 32; ISBN 978-1-4548-6819-4; OCLC 951854766
  36. ^ "Court Rejects Claim Beery Millions". Los Angeles Times. November 18, 1949. p. I17. Retrieved March 31, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  37. ^ Rafferty, Terrence (July 27, 2003). "FILM; He's Nobody Important, Really. Just a Movie Writer". The New York Times.

Further reading

  • Wise, James. Stars in Blue: Movie Actors in America's Sea Services. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1997. ISBN 1557509379 OCLC 36824724

External links

wallace, beery, wallace, fitzgerald, beery, april, 1885, april, 1949, american, film, stage, actor, best, known, portrayal, bill, bill, 1930, opposite, marie, dressler, general, director, preysing, grand, hotel, 1932, long, john, silver, treasure, island, 1934. Wallace Fitzgerald Beery April 1 1885 April 15 1949 was an American film and stage actor 1 He is best known for his portrayal of Bill in Min and Bill 1930 opposite Marie Dressler as General Director Preysing in Grand Hotel 1932 as Long John Silver in Treasure Island 1934 as Pancho Villa in Viva Villa 1934 and his titular role in The Champ 1931 for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor Beery appeared in some 250 films during a 36 year career His contract with Metro Goldwyn Mayer stipulated in 1932 that he would be paid 1 more than any other contract player at the studio This made Beery the highest paid film actor in the world during the early 1930s He was the brother of actor Noah Beery and uncle of actor Noah Beery Jr Wallace BeeryBeery c 1930BornWallace Fitzgerald Beery 1885 04 01 April 1 1885Clay County Missouri U S DiedApril 15 1949 1949 04 15 aged 64 Beverly Hills California U S Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park Glendale California U S OccupationsActorfilm directorYears active1904 1949Spouse s Gloria Swanson m 1916 div 1918 wbr Rita Gilman m 1924 div 1939 wbr Children1RelativesNoah Beery Sr brother Noah Beery Jr nephew For his contributions to the film industry Beery was posthumously inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame with a motion picture star in 1960 His star is located at 7001 Hollywood Boulevard 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early career 2 2 Comedy film star Essanay Studios 2 3 Villainous roles 2 4 Historical films 2 5 Paramount 3 MGM 3 1 Stardom 3 2 Decline 4 Personal life 4 1 First marriage 4 2 Second marriage and adoption 4 3 Alleged fatal altercation 4 4 Second adoption 4 5 Working relationship with peers 4 6 Hobbies 4 7 Activism against National Park Lands 4 8 Paternity suit 4 9 Politics 4 10 Death estate and continuing paternity suit 4 11 Enduring case law 5 Legacy 6 Selected filmography 6 1 Box office ranking 7 Awards and nominations 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Wallace Beery news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Beery was born the youngest of three boys in 1885 in Clay County Missouri near Smithville 3 The Beery family left the farm in the 1890s and moved to nearby Kansas City Missouri where the father was a police officer Beery attended the Chase School in Kansas City and took piano lessons as well but showed little love for academic matters He ran away from home twice the first time returning after a short time quitting school and working in the Kansas City train yards as an engine wiper 3 Beery ran away from home a second time at age 16 and joined the Ringling Brothers Circus as an assistant elephant trainer He left two years later after being clawed by a leopard Career Edit Wallace Beery circa 1914 Beery as Sweedie the Swedish maid 1914 Early career Edit Wallace Beery joined his older brother Noah in New York City in 1904 finding work in comic opera as a baritone and began to appear on Broadway and in summer stock theatre He appeared in The Belle of the West in 1905 His most notable early role came in 1907 when he starred in The Yankee Tourist to good reviews 4 Comedy film star Essanay Studios Edit In 1913 he moved to Chicago to work for Essanay Studios His first movie was likely a comedy short His Athletic Wife 1913 Beery was then cast as Sweedie a Swedish maid character he played in drag in a series of short comedy films from 1914 to 1916 Sweedie Learns to Swim 1914 co starred Ben Turpin Sweedie Goes to College 1915 starred Gloria Swanson whom Beery married the following year 5 Other Beery films mostly shorts from this period included In and Out 1914 The Ups and Downs 1914 Cheering a Husband 1914 Madame Double X 1914 Ain t It the Truth 1915 Two Hearts That Beat as Ten 1915 and The Fable of the Roistering Blades 1915 The Slim Princess 1915 with Francis X Bushman was one of his earliest feature length films Beery also did The Broken Pledge 1915 and A Dash of Courage 1916 both with Swanson Beery was a German soldier in The Little American 1917 with Mary Pickford directed by Cecil B De Mille He did some comedies for Mack Sennett Maggie s First False Step 1917 and Teddy at the Throttle 1917 but he gradually left that genre and specialized in portrayals of villains prior to becoming a major leading man during the sound era Villainous roles Edit In 1917 Beery portrayed Pancho Villa in Patria at a time when Villa was still active in Mexico Beery reprised the role 17 years later in Viva Villa Beery was a villainous German in The Unpardonable Sin 1919 with Blanche Sweet For Paramount he did The Love Burglar 1919 with Wallace Reid Victory 1919 with Jack Holt Behind the Door 1919 as another villainous German and The Life Line 1919 with Holt Beery was the villain in five major releases in 1920 813 The Virgin of Stamboul for director Tod Browning The Mollycoddle with Douglas Fairbanks in which Fairbanks and Beery fistfought as they tumbled down a steep mountain see the photograph in the gallery below and in the noncomedic Western The Round Up starring Roscoe Arbuckle as an obese cowboy in a well received serious film with the tagline Nobody loves a fat man Beery continued his villainy cycle that year with The Last of the Mohicans playing Magua Beery had a supporting part in The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse 1920 with Rudolph Valentino He was a villainous Tong leader in A Tale of Two Worlds 1921 and was the bad guy again in Sleeping Acres 1922 Wild Honey 1922 and I Am the Law 1922 which also featured his brother Noah Beery Sr Historical films Edit Richard the Lion Hearted 1923 Beery had a large then rare heroic part as King Richard I Richard the Lion Hearted in Robin Hood 1922 starring Douglas Fairbanks as Robin Hood The lavish movie was a huge success and spawned a sequel the following year starring Beery in the title role of Richard the Lion Hearted Beery had an important unbilled cameo as the Ape Man in A Blind Bargain 1922 starring Lon Chaney Beery is seen crouching in full ape man make up in the background of some of the movie s posters and a supporting role in The Flame of Life 1923 He played another historical king King Philip IV of Spain in The Spanish Dancer 1923 with Pola Negri Beery starred in an action melodrama Stormswept 1923 for FBO Films alongside his elder brother Noah Beery Sr The tagline on the movie s posters was Wallace and Noah Beery The Two Greatest Character Actors on the American Screen Beery played his third royal the Duc de Tours in Ashes of Vengeance 1923 with Norma Talmadge then did Drifting 1923 with Priscilla Dean for director Browning Beery had the titular role in Bavu 1923 about Bolsheviks and the Russian Revolution He co starred with Buster Keaton in the comedy Three Ages 1923 the first feature Keaton wrote produced directed and starred in Beery was a villain in The Eternal Struggle 1923 a Mountie drama produced by Louis B Mayer who eventually became crucial to Beery s career He was reunited with Dean and Browning in White Tiger 1923 then played the title role in the aforementioned Richard the Lion Hearted 1923 a sequel to Robin Hood based on Sir Walter Scott s The Talisman a print of Richard the Lion Hearted is held at the Archives du Film du CNC in Bois d Arcy 6 Beery was in The Drums of Jeopardy 1923 and had a supporting role in The Sea Hawk 1924 for director Frank Lloyd He also appeared in a supporting role for Clarence Brown s The Signal Tower 1925 starring Virginia Valli and Rockliffe Fellowes Paramount Edit As Challenger in Arthur Conan Doyle s The Lost World 1925 Beery signed a contract with Paramount Pictures He had a support role in Adventure 1925 directed by Victor Fleming At First National he was given the star role of Professor Challenger in Arthur Conan Doyle s dinosaur epic The Lost World 1925 arguably his silent performance most frequently screened in the modern era Beery was top billed in Paramount s The Devil s Cargo 1925 for Victor Fleming and supported in The Night Club 1925 The Pony Express 1925 for James Cruze and The Wanderer 1925 for Raoul Walsh Beery starred in a comedy with Raymond Hatton Behind the Front 1926 and he was a villain in Volcano 1926 He was a bos n in Old Ironsides 1926 for director James Cruze with Charles Farrell in the romantic lead Beery had the title role in the baseball movie Casey at the Bat 1927 He was reunited with Hatton in Fireman Save My Child 1927 and Now We re in the Air 1927 The latter also featured Louise Brooks who was Beery s costar in Beggars of Life 1928 directed by William Wellman which was Paramount s first part talkie movie He made a fourth comedy with Hatton Wife Savers 1929 then Beery starred in Chinatown Nights 1929 for Wellman produced by a young David O Selznick This film was shot silent with the voices dubbed in by the actors afterward which worked spectacularly well with Beery s resonant voice although the technique was not used again during the silent era for another full length feature Beery then played in Stairs of Sand 1929 a Western also starring Jean Arthur who played the leading lady in the Western film Shane 24 years later before being fired by Paramount MGM Edit Chester Morris and Wallace Beery in The Big House 1930 With Marie Dressler in Min and Bill 1930 Marie Dressler in Min and Bill Jackie Cooper Edward Brophy and Wallace Beery in The Champ 1931 Tugboat Annie 1933 Irving Thalberg signed Beery to Metro Goldwyn Mayer MGM as a character actor The association began well when Beery played the savage convict Butch a role originally intended for Lon Chaney who died that same year in the highly successful 1930 prison film The Big House directed by George W Hill Beery was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor Beery s second film for MGM was also a huge success Billy the Kid 1930 an early widescreen picture in which he played Pat Garrett He supported John Gilbert in Way for a Sailor 1930 and Grace Moore in A Lady s Morals 1930 portraying P T Barnum in the latter Stardom Edit Beery was well established as a leading man and top rank character actor The picture that really made him one of the cinema s foremost stars was Min and Bill 1930 opposite Marie Dressler and directed by George W Hill a sensational success 7 Beery made a third film with Hill The Secret Six 1931 a gangster movie with Jean Harlow and Clark Gable in key supporting roles The picture was popular but was surpassed at the box office by The Champ which Beery made with Jackie Cooper for director King Vidor The film especially written for Beery was another box office sensation Beery shared the Best Actor Oscar with Fredric March Though March received one vote more than Beery Academy rules at the time since rescinded defined results within one vote of each other as ties 8 An alternate account has MGM head Louis B Mayer storming backstage at the Oscars and demanding that March and Beery share that year s Academy Award for Best Actor since the vote was so close Beery s career went from strength to strength Hell Divers 1932 a naval airplane epic also starring a young Clark Gable billed under Beery was a big hit So too was the all star Grand Hotel 1932 in which Beery was billed fourth under Greta Garbo John Barrymore and Joan Crawford one of the very few times he would not be top billed for the rest of his career In 1932 his contract with MGM stipulated that he be paid a dollar more than any other contract player at the studio making him the world s highest paid actor Beery was a German wrestler in Flesh 1932 a hit directed by John Ford but Ford removed his directorial credit before the film opened so the picture screened with no director listed despite being labeled A John Ford Production in the opening title card Next Beery was in another all star ensemble blockbuster Dinner at Eight 1933 with Jean Harlow holding her own as Beery s comically bickering wife This time Beery was billed third under Marie Dressler and John Barrymore Beery was lent to the new 20th Century Pictures for the boisterously fast paced comedy drama The Bowery 1933 also starring George Raft Jackie Cooper and Fay Wray and featuring Pert Kelton under the direction of Raoul Walsh The picture was a smash hit Back at MGM he played the title role of Pancho Villa in Viva Villa 1933 and was reunited with Dressler in Tugboat Annie 1933 a massive hit He was Long John Silver in Treasure Island 1934 described as a box office disappointment 9 despite being MGM s third largest hit of the season and remains currently viewed as featuring one of Beery s iconic performances Beery returned to 20th Century Productions for The Mighty Barnum 1934 in which he played P T Barnum again Back at MGM he was a kindly sergeant in West Point of the Air 1935 and was in an all star spectacular China Seas 1935 this time billed beneath Clark Gable O Shaughnessy s Boy 1935 reunited Beery and Jackie Cooper He had the lead as the drunken uncle in MGM s adaptation of Ah Wilderness 1936 and went back to 20th Century now 20th Century Fox for A Message to Garcia 1936 with Barbara Stanwyck At MGM he was in Old Hutch 1936 and The Good Old Soak 1937 then he was back at Fox for Slave Ship 1937 taking second billing under Warner Baxter a rarity for Beery after Min and Bill catapulted his career into the stratosphere in 1931 during which he received top billing in all but six films Min and Bill Grand Hotel Tugboat Annie Dinner at Eight China Seas with Gable and Harlow and Slave Ship Decline Edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Wallace Beery news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The status of Beery s films went into a decline After an abrupt European vacation 10 11 Beery was in The Bad Man of Brimstone 1938 with Dennis O Keefe and Noah Beery Sr in a cameo role as a bartender Port of Seven Seas 1938 with Maureen O Sullivan Stablemates 1938 with Mickey Rooney Stand Up and Fight 1939 with Robert Taylor Sergeant Madden 1939 with Tom Brown Thunder Afloat 1939 with Chester Morris The Man from Dakota 1940 with Dolores del Rio and 20 Mule Team 1940 with Marjorie Rambeau Anne Baxter and Noah Beery Jr enjoying top billing in all of them Wyoming 1940 teamed Beery with Marjorie Main After The Bad Man 1941 which also stars Lionel Barrymore and future President of the United States Ronald Reagan and was the remake of a Walter Huston picture MGM reunited Beery and Main in Barnacle Bill 1941 The Bugle Sounds 1941 and Jackass Mail 1942 Beery did a war film a Technicolor comedy titled Salute to the Marines 1943 then was back with Main in Rationing 1944 Barbary Coast Gent 1944 a broad Western comedy in which Beery played a bombastic con man teamed him with Binnie Barnes He did another war film This Man s Navy 1945 then made another Western with Main Bad Bascomb 1946 a huge hit helped by Margaret O Brien s casting The Mighty McGurk 1947 put Beery with another child star of the studio Dean Stockwell Alias a Gentleman 1947 was the first of Beery s films to lose money during the sound era Beery received top billing for the smash hit A Date with Judy 1949 a hugely popular musical featuring Elizabeth Taylor Beery s last film again featuring Main Big Jack 1949 also lost money according to Mannix s reckoning 12 Beery died of a heart attack three days after the picture s release Personal life Edit 20 Mule Team 1940 The Bad Man 1941 First marriage Edit On March 27 1916 at the age of 30 Beery married 17 year old actress Gloria Swanson in Los Angeles 13 The two had co starred in Sweedie Goes to College 5 Although Beery had enjoyed popularity with his Sweedie shorts his career had taken a dip and during the marriage to Swanson he relied on her as a breadwinner According to Swanson s autobiography Beery raped her on their wedding night and later tricked her into swallowing an abortifacient when she was pregnant which caused her to lose their child 14 Swanson filed for divorce in 1917 and it was finalized in 1918 13 Second marriage and adoption Edit On August 4 1924 Beery married actress Rita Gilman nee Mary Areta Gilman 1898 1986 in Los Angeles 15 The couple adopted Carol Ann Priester 1930 2013 daughter of Rita Beery s mother s half sister Juanita Priester nee Caplinger 1899 1931 and her husband Erwin William Priester 1897 1969 After 14 years of marriage Rita filed for divorce on May 1 1939 in Carson City Ormsby County Nevada Within 20 minutes of filing she won the decree Rita remarried 15 days later on May 16 1939 to Jessen Albert D Foyt 1907 1945 filing her marriage license with the same county clerk in Carson City Alleged fatal altercation Edit In December 1937 comedic actor and Three Stooges founder Ted Healy was involved in a drunken altercation at Cafe Trocadero on the Sunset Strip E J Fleming in his 2005 book The Fixers Eddie Mannix Howard Strickling and the MGM Publicity Machine asserts that Healy was attacked by three men Future James Bond producer Albert Cubby Broccoli Local mob figure Pat DiCicco who was Broccoli s cousin as well as the former husband of Thelma Todd and the future husband of Gloria Vanderbilt Wallace BeeryFleming writes that this beating led to Healy s death a few days later 10 11 Second adoption Edit Around December 1939 Beery recently divorced adopted a seven month old girl Phyllis Ann Beery 16 Phyllis appeared in MGM publicity photos when adopted but was never mentioned again 17 Beery told the press he had taken the girl in from a single mother recently divorced but he had filed no official adoption papers 18 Working relationship with peers Edit Brother Noah Beery Sr in 1925 Beery was considered misanthropic and difficult to work with by many of his colleagues Robert Young described Beery as a shitty person On set he often never bothered to learn his lines and instead choose to take from other actors characters and then resent it when his theft was pointed out When prompting for another actor s close up Beery would read the wrong lines making it harder for his co stars to meet their marks Beery was loathed by everybody and happily oblivious 19 Mickey Rooney was one of Beery s few co stars to consistently speak highly of him in subsequent decades In his memoir Rooney described Beery as a lovable shambling kind of guy who never seemed to know that his shirttail belonged inside his pants but always knew when a little kid actor needed a smile and a wink or a word of encouragement He did concede that not everyone loved Beery as much as I did Rooney noted that Howard Strickling MGM s head of publicity once went to Louis B Mayer to complain that Beery was stealing props from the studio s sets And that wasn t all Rooney continued He went on for some minutes about the trouble that Beery was always causing him Mayer sighed and said Yes Howard Beery s a son of a bitch But he s our son of a bitch Strickling got the point A family has to be tolerant of its black sheep particularly if they brought a lot of money into the family fold which Beery certainly did 20 Child actors in particular recalled unpleasant encounters with Beery Jackie Cooper who made several films with him early in his career called him a big disappointment Cooper accused Beery of upstaging and other attempts to undermine his performances out of what Cooper presumed was jealousy He recalled impulsively throwing his arms around Beery after one especially heartfelt scene only to be gruffly pushed away 21 Child actress Margaret O Brien claimed that she had to be protected by crew members from Beery s insistence on constantly pinching her 22 On another occasion after having invited 12 year old actor Darryl Hickman to lunch Beery responded to Darryl s thanks with okay kid you owe me 75 cents Beery also refused to leave tips at the MGM commissary because he explained tips are for special service and since he was a movie star he already got special service and therefore leaving a tip would be a waste of money citation needed Beery only met his match with co star Marie Dressler Having come up the hard and long way to her stardom Dressler refused to take nonsense from this baboon She responded to one of Beery s insults by saying she would serve his head on a platter to MGM chief Louis B Mayer Although everyone expected Beery to explode instead he cowered and acted like a little boy being very careful that Mommy didn t catch him with his hand in the cookie jar citation needed Future author Ray Bradbury recalled meeting Beery as a young boy on a Hollywood street and that his autograph request resulted in Beery cursing and spitting on him citation needed Hobbies Edit Beery owned and flew his own planes 23 one a Howard DGA 11 On April 15 1933 he was commissioned a lieutenant commander in the United States Navy Reserve at NRAB Long Beach 24 One of his proudest achievements was catching the largest giant black sea bass in the world 515 pounds 234 kg off Santa Catalina Island in 1916 a record that stood for 35 years 25 Activism against National Park Lands Edit A noteworthy episode in Beery s life is chronicled in the fifth episode of Ken Burns documentary The National Parks America s Best Idea In 1943 President Franklin D Roosevelt signed an executive order creating Jackson Hole National Monument to protect the land adjoining the Grand Tetons in Wyoming Local ranchers outraged at the loss of grazing lands compared FDR s action to Hitler s taking of Austria Led by an aging Beery they protested by herding 500 cattle across the monument lands without a permit 26 Paternity suit Edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Wallace Beery news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message On February 13 1948 Gloria Schumm or Gloria Smith Beery nee Florence W Smith 1916 1989 filed a paternity suit against Beery Beery through his lawyer Norman Ronald Tyre 1910 2002 initially offered 6 000 as a settlement but denied being the father Gloria had given birth on February 7 1948 to Johan Richard Wallace Schumm Gloria in 1944 divorced Stuttgart born Hollywood actor Hans Schumm ne Johann Josef Eugen Schumm 1896 1990 but remarried him August 21 1947 after realizing that she was pregnant Prior to remarrying Schumm Gloria on August 4 1947 met with Beery at his home where he gave her the name and address of a physician to submit an examination 27 At or around that time she also asked Beery to marry her to legitimatize the expected child her words which Beery refused According to newspapers Gloria claimed to have been intimate with Wallace Beery on or about May 1 1947 at his home in Beverly Hills in the court proceedings however she claimed to have been intimate with Beery on May 17 1947 Beery conceded that he had known Gloria for about 15 years and that under the pseudonym Gloria Whitney she had played bit roles in six films in which he starred She again separated from Hans Schumm on April 15 1948 Politics Edit Beery supported Thomas Dewey in the 1944 United States presidential election 28 Death estate and continuing paternity suit Edit Grave at Forest Lawn Glendale Beery died of a heart attack on April 15 1949 14 months 1 week and 1 day after Johan Schumm s birth while the suit was pending Beery had been reading a newspaper at his Beverly Hills home when he collapsed 29 His body was interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale California The inscription on his grave reads No man is indispensable but some are irreplaceable Beery died intestate In the paternity suit Gloria Schumm s attorneys demanded 104 135 against Beery s 2 220 000 estate In February 1952 Judge Newcomb Condee approved a 26 750 settlement from the estate Gloria Schumm accepted the settlement and Beery s paternity of Johan Schumm was not acknowledged citation needed When Mickey Rooney s father died less than a year later Rooney arranged to have him buried next to his old friend I thought it was fitting that these two comedians should rest in peace side by side he wrote 30 Enduring case law Edit The paternity suit and subsequent suits including appeals extended through about 1952 and were internationally publicized particularly in gossip columns and tabloids The litigation has endured as case law with among other things treatises addressing the rights of illegitimate offspring against legitimate heirs in races for inheritance 31 32 33 34 35 The upshot was that Schumm s paternity suit against Beery s estate put would be half siblings and other would be family legatees including a would be uncle Noah Beery Sr in the position as de facto defendants Phyllis Ann Riley was not named in Beery s will Part of plaintiff s claim initially hinged on whether an oral agreement was binding Gloria had claimed that Beery while alive agreed to provide for the child However on November 17 1949 Judge William B McKesson 1895 1967 threw out Gloria s claim The judge reasoned that any oral agreement between the two specifically any that was intended to provide for maintenance and care of a minor was not binding because the amount allegedly agreed upon was in excess of 500 which must be made in writing 36 Another matter in the case hinged on a peppercorn rule That is for any agreement oral or written between Wallace and Gloria to be binding consideration must exist The court initially found that Beery agreed to an oral contract where Gloria would i include the name Wallace in the child s name if a male or Wally if a female and ii refrain from filing a paternity suit that both agreed would damage Beery s social and professional standing as a prominent motion picture star Generally under California state law at the time a father who neither marries the mother nor acknowledges paternity does not have a right to name the child That right belongs to the mother In exchange for Gloria s promise to name the child Wallace or Wally the promise representing a form of consideration Wallace Beery agreed to arrange for the payment of 100 per week to the child as a third party beneficiary under the contract plus a lump sum of 25 000 to the child when he or she attained age 21 in addition to the customary obligation to pay for the maintenance support and education according to the station in life and standard of living of Wallace Beery 34 Legacy EditFor his contributions to the film industry Wallace Beery posthumously received a motion picture star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960 His star is located at 7001 Hollywood Boulevard 2 Beery is mentioned in the film Barton Fink in which the lead character has been hired to write a wrestling screenplay to star Beery 37 In the 1971 comedy The Projectionist actor and comedian Chuck McCann impersonates Beery quoting a line from Min and Bill In the US clothing industry a quarter button men s shirt is called a Wallace Beery style after the undershirts and long underwear Beery s miner and outlaw characters wore beneath their outer shirt Selected filmography EditHis Athletic Wife 1913 Short as Mr Strong film debut A series of at least 29 Sweedie comedy films starting with Sweedie the Swatter released 13 July 1914 In and Out 1914 Short as Hans The Ups and Downs 1914 Short Cheering a Husband 1914 Short Madame Double X 1914 Short as Madame Double X Two Hearts That Beat as Ten 1915 Short with Ben Turpin as Fred Ain t It the Truth 1915 Short as Harold Wallington The Slim Princess 1915 with Francis X Bushman as Popova The Broken Pledge 1915 Short with Gloria Swanson as Percy The Fable of the Roistering Blades 1915 Short as Milt A Dash of Courage 1916 Short with Gloria Swanson as The Police Chief The Janitor s Vacation 1916 Patria 1917 Serial as Pancho Villa Teddy at the Throttle 1917 Short as Henry Black Gloria s Rascally Guardian The Little American 1917 with Mary Pickford as German Soldier uncredited Maggie s First False Step 1917 Short as The Villain Johanna Enlists 1918 as Col Fanner The Unpardonable Sin 1919 as Col Klemm The Love Burglar 1919 with Wallace Reid and Anna Q Nilsson as Coast to Coast Taylor The Life Line 1919 with Jack Holt as Bos Soldiers of Fortune 1919 as Mendoza Victory 1919 with Jack Holt and Lon Chaney Sr as August Schomberg Behind the Door 1919 with Hobart Bosworth and Jane Novak as Lt Brandt The Lone Wolf s Daughter 1919 as Minor Role uncredited The Virgin of Stamboul 1920 directed by Tod Browning as Sheik Achmet Hamid The Mollycoddle 1920 with Douglas Fairbanks as Henry von Holkar The Round Up 1920 with Roscoe Fatty Arbuckle as Buck McKee The Last of the Mohicans 1920 as Magua 813 1920 as Maj Parbury Ribeira The Rookie s Return 1920 as Francois Dupont Patsy 1921 as Gustave Ludermann The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse 1921 with Rudolph Valentino as Lieut Col von Richthosen A Tale of Two Worlds 1921 Goldwyn extant Library of Congress as Ling Jo The Golden Snare 1921 as Bram Johnson The Policeman and the Baby 1921 Short with William Desmond and Elinor Fair as The Crook The Last Trail 1921 as William Kirk Sleeping Acres 1921 Short The Rosary 1922 as Kenwood Wright Wild Honey 1922 with Priscilla Dean and Noah Beery Sr as Buck Roper The Sagebrush Trail 1922 as Jose Fagaro The Man from Hell s River 1922 with Rin Tin Tin as Gaspard The Wolf I Am the Law 1922 with Noah Beery Sr as Fu Chang Hurricane s Gal 1922 as Chris Borg Trouble 1922 as Ed Lee the Plumber Robin Hood 1922 with Douglas Fairbanks as Richard the Lion Hearted A Blind Bargain 1922 with Lon Chaney Sr as Beast Man uncredited Only a Shop Girl 1922 as Jim Brennan The Flame of Life 1923 as Don Lowrie Stormswept 1923 with Noah Beery Sr as William McCabe Bavu 1923 as Felix Bavu Three Ages 1923 with Buster Keaton as The Villain Ashes of Vengeance 1923 with Norma Talmadge as Duc de Tours Drifting 1923 with Priscilla Dean and Anna May Wong as Jules Repin The Spanish Dancer 1923 with Pola Negri as King Philip IV The Eternal Struggle 1923 as Barode Dukane Richard the Lion Hearted 1923 sequel to 1922 s Robin Hood as King Richard the Lion Hearted The Drums of Jeopardy 1923 as Gregor Karlov White Tiger 1923 directed by Tod Browning as Count Donelli Hawkes Unseen Hands 1924 as Jean Scholast The Sea Hawk 1924 as Captain Jasper Leigh The Signal Tower 1924 as Joe Standish Another Man s Wife 1924 as Captain Wolf The Red Lily 1924 as Bo Bo Dynamite Smith 1924 as Slugger Rourke Madonna of the Streets 1924 as Bill Smythe So Big 1924 as Klaus Poole Let Women Alone 1925 as Cap Bullwinkle Adventure 1925 as Morgan The Night Club 1925 with Raymond Griffith and Vera Reynolds as Jose The Lost World 1925 Arthur Conan Doyle dinosaur epic in which Beery portrayed Professor Challenger with Lewis Stone as Sir John Roxton and Doyle himself in a frontispiece The Devil s Cargo 1925 as Ben The Great Divide 1925 as Dutch Coming Through 1925 as Joe Lawler In the Name of Love 1925 as Glavis Rugged Water 1925 as Capt Bartlett The Wanderer 1925 with Greta Nissen and Tyrone Power Sr as Pharis Pony Express 1925 with Betty Compson and George Bancroft as Rhode Island Red Behind the Front 1926 with Raymond Hatton as Riff Swanson Volcano 1926 as Quembo We re in the Navy Now 1926 as Knockout Hansen Old Ironsides 1926 with Charles Farrell and George Bancroft as Bos n Casey at the Bat 1927 with Ford Sterling and ZaSu Pitts as Home Run Casey Fireman Save My Child 1927 with Raymond Hatton as Elmer Now We re in the Air 1927 with Louise Brooks only twenty minutes survive as Wally Two Flaming Youths 1927 as Beery of Beery and Hatton uncredited Wife Savers 1928 lost film with Raymond Hatton and ZaSu Pitts as Louis Hosenozzle Partners in Crime 1928 as Detective Mike Doolan The Big Killing 1928 as Powderhorn Pete Beggars of Life 1928 with Louise Brooks and Richard Arlen as Oklahoma Red Chinatown Nights 1929 with Warner Oland and Jack Oakie as Chuck Riley Stairs of Sand 1929 as Lacey River of Romance 1929 as General Orlando Jackson The Big House 1930 with Chester Morris Lewis Stone and Robert Montgomery as Machine Gun Butch Schmidt Billy the Kid 1930 widescreen with Johnny Mack Brown billed as John Mack Brown as Pat Garrett Way for a Sailor 1930 with John Gilbert as Tripod A Lady s Morals 1930 as P T Barnum Min and Bill 1930 with Marie Dressler as Bill The Stolen Jools 1931 20 minute ensemble short with Edward G Robinson and Buster Keaton as Police Sergeant The Secret Six 1931 with Jean Harlow and Clark Gable as Slaughterhouse Scorpio The Champ 1931 with Jackie Cooper as Andy Champ Purcell Oscar winning performance Hell Divers 1932 early military planes with Clark Gable as C P O H W Windy Riker Grand Hotel 1932 with Greta Garbo John Barrymore Lionel Barrymore and Joan Crawford as General Director Preysing Flesh 1932 directed by an uncredited John Ford as Polakai Tugboat Annie 1933 with Marie Dressler Robert Young and Maureen O Sullivan as Terry Brennan Dinner at Eight 1933 with Marie Dressler Lionel Barrymore and Jean Harlow as Dan Packard The Bowery 1933 with George Raft Jackie Cooper Fay Wray and Pert Kelton as Chuck Connors Viva Villa 1934 shot on location in Mexico with Leo Carrillo Stu Erwin and Fay Wray as Pancho Villa Treasure Island 1934 with Jackie Cooper Lionel Barrymore and Lewis Stone as Long John Silver The Mighty Barnum 1934 with Adolphe Menjou as P T Barnum West Point of the Air 1935 with Robert Young Maureen O Sullivan Rosalind Russell and Robert Taylor as Big Mike Stone China Seas 1935 with Clark Gable Jean Harlow Lewis Stone and Robert Benchley as Jamesy McArdle O Shaughnessy s Boy 1935 with Jackie Cooper as Captain Michael Windy O Shaughnessy Ah Wilderness 1935 with Lionel Barrymore Aline MacMahon and Mickey Rooney as Sid Miller A Message to Garcia 1936 with Barbara Stanwyck and Alan Hale Sr as Sergeant Dory Old Hutch 1936 as Hutch Hutchins The Good Old Soak 1937 with Betty Furness and Ted Healy as Clem Hawley Slave Ship 1937 with Warner Baxter first billed and Mickey Rooney as Jack Thompson The Bad Man of Brimstone 1937 with Noah Beery Sr as Trigger Bill Port of Seven Seas 1938 written by Preston Sturges and directed by James Whale with Maureen O Sullivan as Cesar Stablemates 1938 with Mickey Rooney as Doc Thomas Tom Terry Stand Up and Fight 1939 with Robert Taylor and Charles Bickford as Capt Boss Starkey Sergeant Madden 1939 directed by Josef von Sternberg with Laraine Day as Sgt Shaun Madden Thunder Afloat 1939 with Chester Morris as John Thorson The Man from Dakota 1940 with Dolores del Rio as Sgt Bar Barstow 20 Mule Team 1940 with Anne Baxter and Noah Beery Jr as Skinner Bill Bragg an Alias of Ambrose Murphy Wyoming 1940 with Ann Rutherford as Reb Harkness The Bad Man 1941 with Lionel Barrymore Laraine Day and Ronald Reagan as Pancho Lopez Barnacle Bill 1941 with Marjorie Main as Bill Johansen The Bugle Sounds 1942 with Marjorie Main Lewis Stone and George Bancroft as Sgt Patrick Aloysius Hap Doan Jackass Mail 1942 with Marjorie Main as Marmaduke Just Baggot Salute to the Marines 1943 in color with Noah Beery Sr as Sgt Maj William Bailey Rationing 1944 with Marjorie Main as Ben Barton Barbary Coast Gent 1944 with Chill Wills and Noah Beery Sr as Honest Plush Brannon This Man s Navy 1945 with Noah Beery Sr as Ned Trumpet Bad Bascomb 1946 with Margaret O Brien and Marjorie Main as Zeb Bascomb The Mighty McGurk 1947 with Dean Stockwell and Edward Arnold as Roy Slag McGurk Alias a Gentleman 1948 with Gladys George and Sheldon Leonard as Jim Breedin A Date with Judy 1948 with Jane Powell Elizabeth Taylor and Carmen Miranda as Melvin Colner Foster Big Jack 1949 with Richard Conte Marjorie Main and Edward Arnold as Big Jack Horner final film role Box office ranking Edit See also Top Ten Money Making Stars Poll 1932 7th 1933 5th 1934 4th 1935 8th 1936 15th 8th UK 1937 15th 1938 12th 1939 15th 1940 8th 1941 19th 1942 18th 1943 18th 1944 11th 1946 11th Behind the Door 1919 with Hobart Bosworth The Mollycoddle 1920 with Douglas Fairbanks The Mollycoddle 1920 with Douglas Fairbanks Wallace Beery in 1921 The Policeman and the Baby 1921 The Golden Snare 1921 The Golden Snare 1921 with Lewis Stone The Last Trail 1921 The Last Trail 1921 with Eva Novak A Blind Bargain 1922 with Lon Chaney Stormswept 1923 with Noah Beery Stormswept 1923 with Noah Beery Stormswept 1923 with Noah Beery Sr Bavu 1923 Beery as Bavu 1923 Richard the Lion Hearted 1923 Dynamite Smith 1924 with Bessie Love Dynamite Smith 1924 The Devil s Cargo 1925 Adventure 1925 with Pauline Starke Volcano 1926 with Bebe Danielsand Ricardo Cortez Casey at the Bat 1927 Now We re in the Air 1927 with Louise Brooks Now We re in the Air 1927 with Louise Brooks Now We re in the Air 1927 with Raymond Hatton Now We re in the Air 1927 with Raymond Hatton Beggars of Life 1928 with Louise Brooks Stairs of Sand 1929 with Jean Arthur Min and Bill 1930 with Marie Dressler The Secret Six 1931 with Jean Harlow and Clark Gable Hell Divers 1931 with Clark Gable Hell Divers 1931 Hell Divers 1931 Lionel Barrymore presents 1931 Oscar Grand Hotel 1932 Grand Hotel 1932 with Joan Crawford Tugboat Annie 1933 with Marie Dressler Dinner at Eight 1933 with Jean Harlow The Bowery 1933 with George Raft Viva Villa 1934 with Fay Wray Treasure Island 1934 with Jackie Cooper Treasure Island 1934 with Jackie Cooper China Seas 1935 China Seas 1935 with Clark Gable China Seas 1935 Ah Wilderness 1935 The Good Old Soak 1937 with Ted Healy The Bad Man of Brimstone 1937 Stand Up and Fight 1939 with Robert Taylor The Man from Dakota 1940 The Man from Dakota 1940 20 Mule Team 1940 with Noah Beery Jr Wyoming 1940 with Marjorie Main Barnacle Bill 1941 Awards and nominations EditAcademy Awards Year Award Film Result1930 Best Actor The Big House Nominated1932 The Champ WonVenice Film Festival Year Award Film Result1934 Volpi Cup for Best Actor Viva Villa WonSee also EditList of actors with Academy Award nominationsReferences Edit Obituary Variety April 20 1949 a b Walk of Fame Stars Wallace Beery a b Dictionary of Missouri Biography Lawrence O Christensen University of Missouri Press 1999 The Yankee Tourist Broadway Musical Original IBDB www ibdb com Archived from the original on January 31 2021 a b Sonneborn Liz May 14 2014 A to Z of American Women in the Performing Arts Infobase Publishing published 2002 ISBN 9781438107905 OCLC 297504194 Library of Congress American Silent Feature Film Survival Database Richard the Lion Hearted Scott Eyman Lion of Hollywood The Life and Legend of Louis B Mayer Robson 2005 p 191 ISBN 9781861058928 History of the Academy Awards The Fifth Academy Awards 1931 32 About com archive Retrieved April 2 2015 DOUGLAS W CHURCHILL December 30 1934 THE YEAR IN HOLLYWOOD 1984 May Be Remembered as the Beginning of the Sweetness and Light Era The New York Times p X5 a b The Fixers Eddie Mannix Howard Strickling and the MGM Publicity Machine by E J Fleming ne Edward J Fleming IV born 1954 McFarland amp Company 2005 p 176 OCLC 215262172 a b A nyuk on the wild side Did the Three Stooges Cover Up the Murder of Their Founder by Jim Mueller Chicago Tribune April 4 2002 retrieved September 3 2017 The Eddie Mannix Ledger Los Angeles Margaret Herrick Library Center for Motion Picture Study a b Shearer Stephen Michael 2013 Gloria Swanson The Ultimate Star Thomas Dunne Books ISBN 9781250013668 Swanson Gloria 1980 Swanson on Swanson Random House pp 69 75 ISBN 0 394 50662 6 Katchmer George A May 8 2002 A Biographical Dictionary of Silent Film Western Actors and Actresses McFarland ISBN 9781476609058 Milestones Time December 4 1939 A Certain Cinema Acertaincinema com Beery Will Add To Adopted Family Palm Beach Post Hollywood UP December 8 1939 p 22 Retrieved March 31 2020 via Newspapers com Eyman S 2005 Lion of Hollywood The Life and Legend of Louis B Mayer New York Simon and Schuster pp 222 223 ISBN 0 7432 0481 6 Rooney M Life is Too Short Villard Books 1991 p 77 ISBN 0679401954 Bergan R May 5 2011 Jackie Cooper Obituary The Guardian archive Retrieved August 20 2012 Private Screenings Child Stars date March 2009 Wallace Beery www wbr dmairfield wbr com Heiser Wayne H U S Naval and Marine Corps Reserve Aviation V I 1916 1942 p 78 Quite a Record The News Leader December 18 1977 p 13 Retrieved March 31 2020 via Newspapers com Episode Five 1933 1945 Great Nature Links Beery to Physician Long Beach Independent Los Angeles April 29 1948 p 12 Retrieved March 31 2020 via Newspapers com Critchlow Donald T October 21 2013 When Hollywood Was Right How Movie Stars Studio Moguls and Big Business Remade American Politics ISBN 9781107650282 From the Archives Wally Beery Veteran Film Actor Dies Los Angeles Times April 17 1949 Rooney M Life is Too Short Villard Books 1991 p 239 ISBN 0679401954 Johan Richard Wallace Schumm a Minor etc Appellant v Phil Berg Beery s agent and Noah Beery Jr Beery s nephew as Executors of the Estate of Wallace Beery Jr opinion of Justice Jesse W Carter citation 37 Cal 2d 174 1951 Supreme Court California Resources Stanford Law School Robert Crown Law Library Philip Jay Berg 1902 1983 was married to actress Leila Hyams 2 Photographs of Mrs Gloria Schumm and son Johann Schumm age 4 April 17 1952 OCLC 822257200 857831052 663235176 Ardor in the Court Sex and the Law by Jeffrey Miller born 1950 ECW Press 2002 OCLC 972272320 a b Charitable Naming Rights Transactions Gifts or Contracts by William Drennan Michigan State Law Review Michigan State University College of Law 2016 pps 1324 1326 Schumm v Berg ISSN 1087 5468 K A Common Law Approach to Contracts 2nd ed by Tracey E George Russell Korobkin Wolters Kluwer 2017 p 32 ISBN 978 1 4548 6819 4 OCLC 951854766 Court Rejects Claim Beery Millions Los Angeles Times November 18 1949 p I17 Retrieved March 31 2020 via Newspapers com Rafferty Terrence July 27 2003 FILM He s Nobody Important Really Just a Movie Writer The New York Times Further reading EditWise James Stars in Blue Movie Actors in America s Sea Services Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1997 ISBN 1557509379 OCLC 36824724External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wallace Beery Wallace Beery at IMDb AllMovie com biography Wallace Beery at the Internet Broadway Database Wallace Beery and Gloria Swanson s Marriage Photographs of Wallace Beery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wallace Beery amp oldid 1129720034, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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