To get the boring background stuff out of the way is what second paragraphs are all about, no? Dan Duryea was born in White Plains, N.Y. in 1907, attended Cornell (where he succeeded sex deviant Franchot Tone as the president of the Drama Society). Upon graduation he entered the advertising biz, retiring after a brief heart attack. His acting career got off to an excellent start when he landed the starring role in Dead End on Broadway, followed by another stint on the Great White Way in Little Foxes as the snivelling weakling Leo, a role he reprised in the William Wyler film, his Hollywood debut. For his next two movies he played Gary Cooper's nemesis, first in Howard Hawks' Ball Of Fire (1941) (written by Billy Wilder) where his character bore the brilliant moniker Duke Pastrami, and then landing the role as cynical reporter Hank Hannerman in baseball tearjerker Pride Of The Yankees (1942). He would go on to work steadily until his death in 1968 with 110 screen credits.
Like Widmark, he was a highly respected professional whose off screen life couldn't have been more different from his onscreen persona. He was well liked, married to the same woman for 31 years (his son Peter worked as TV actor from 1964-1976), he rarely seen in the gossip columns.
Most of Duryea's roles fall in to two categories, either as the heavy/pimp/criminal/con man in film noir's including Fritz Lang's Ministry Of Fear (1944), and Woman In The Window (1944) Anthony Mann's The Great Flamarian (1945) (opposite Eric Von Strohiem!), Main Street After Dark (1945), Lady On A Train(1945), Black Angel (1946), Larceny (1948), Manhandled (1948), Criss Cross (1948), Too Late For Tears (1949), Johnny Stool Pigeon (1949), One Way Street (1950), The Underworld Story (1950) Anthony Mann's vastly underrated Thunder Bay (1953), World For Ransom (1954) Storm Fear (1955), The Burgler (1957), Slaughter On 10th Avenue (1957) and his last crime picture Walk A Tightrope (1965).
Dan's sneering onscreen persona translated equally well to westerns. In Along Came Jones (1945) he was yet again Gary Cooper's nemesis, he starred in B westerns Black Bart (1948) (opposite Yvonne DeCarlo) and Al Jennings Of Oklahoma (1951), put in a memorable appearance in Anthony Mann's amazing Winchester 73 (1953), and puts in excellent performances in Rails Into Laramie, Ride Clear Of Diablo, and Silver Lode (all 1954), Foxfire (1955). He would again get top billing in The Marauders (1955), He Rides Tall (1964), Taggart (1964), and The Bounty Killer (1965), all worth looking for on the Western channel.
As his film offers became more low budget (by 1960 he'd been reduced to Platinum High School where he was billed between Mickey Rooney and Conway Twitty) and film noir pretty much died out, Duryea found plenty of work in TV. He was seen on the small screen steadily throughout the fifties and sixties, working right up to his death in '68. He portrayed a gunslinger in the very first episode of Rod Serling's Twilight Zone, was a regular on the prime time soap Peyton Place, as well as appearing in such classic shows as Bonanza, Burke's Law, Wagon Train, Naked City, Route 66, and Combat. He died of cancer at age 61 and his grave can be found at the amazing Forest Lawn Cemetery.
Wyler not Wellman. LITTLE FOXES, I mean. A real stand out in the run of pictures Wyler made with Gregg Toland, a guy who most net-com-poops associate exclusively with CITIZEN KANE even though he shot a bunch of really great pics with Wyler and Ford and the color stuff in SONG OF THE SOUTH.
ReplyDeleteDough! Yr right, luckily I can go back and change it and not look like a total bonehead. You're certainly right about Toland. thanks....
ReplyDeleteDuryea's not Joan Bennett's pimp in Woman in the Window. He's the shady bodyguard of the businessman who visits Bennett and is killed in her apartment.
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