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John Garfield (1913-1952) was an American actor. Born Jacob Julius Garfinkle on March
4,
1913 on the Lower East side of Manhattan, he would always be called “Julie” by those
who
knew him personally. He had a difficult childhood, as his mother died when he was
seven-years-old and his father sent he and his younger brother to live with different
sets
of relatives. Garfield ended up in Brooklyn. He was a troubled youth, finally getting
kicked
out of school. He relocated to the Bronx to live with his father again and entered
for
junior high school at P.S. 45 under the care of Angelo Patri. It was Patri who encouraged
him to join debate and, seeing that he had a gift for expressing himself colorfully,
finally
theater. Patri helped Garfield get a drama scholarship to attend Roosevelt High School.
This
lasted for a semester, long enough for Garfield to perform two parts in A Midsummer’s Night Dream. After entering and quitting two other
high schools in 1929, Garfield applied to The American Laboratory Theater run by Richard
Boleslavski and Mme. Maria Ouspenskaya. When he was accepted, it was Patri who gave
Garfield
a five-dollar stipend for the next five months to follow his dream. It was an important
time
for Garfield, as he would meet Stella Adler, Lee Strasberg, as well as other members
of what
would become the Group Theater. |
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When The American Laboratory Theater closed its doors after that year, Garfield moved
to
the Civic Repertory Theater where he was an apprentice doing all manner of things
related to
the theater, ranging from cleaning to playing bit parts on stage. He also met Robbe
Seidman,
the friend of one of his fellow apprentices and who would eventually become his wife—but
not
before taking off with an old neighborhood buddy on a hitchhiking and train jumping
trip
clear to the West coast. The duo made it to California to work for a few weeks before
deciding to return home separately. It was on his return journey that Garfield fell
ill with
rheumatic fever, which would result in a permanently weakened heart. |
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Nevertheless, Garfield made it back to New York City in 1932, to Robbe, and to acting
classes at Civic Rep. There he met aspiring playwright and actor, Clifford Odets,
who told
him about the newly-formed Group Theater. Known for popularizing Method acting, Group
Theater was founded by Harold Clurman, Lee Strasberg, and Cheryl Crawford. It wasn’t
until
three years later in 1934 that Garfield would be accepted to apprentice at Group Theater,
however. In the meantime, he had his first two Broadway experiences in 1932 and 1933
in
Lost Boy and Counsellor-At-Law. This is when he would first appear under the name “Garfield”. |
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Garfield and Robbe Seidman were married on January 27, 1935 and by this time he was
very
active in Group. This was also the year in which many of its members and Robbe would
join
the Communist Party. Garfield never joined. Though he described himself as liberal
politically, his passion was for acting and he didn’t give political causes much time.
Robbe, by contrast, was more politically active and Garfield often signed whatever
petition
she endorsed. |
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Between 1934 and 1936, Garfield appeared in six Group Theater productions—Gold Eagle Guy (1934), Awake and
Sing!!! (1935), Waiting for Lefty (1935), Weep for the Virgins (1935), The Case of
Clyde Griffiths (1936), and Johnny Johnson
(1936)—before appearing again in a Broadway production Having a
Wonderful Time (1937), which would run for 132 performances. At that time,
Clifford Odets gave Garfield the script for Golden Boy,
having written the lead just for him. Harold Clurman, however, cast Garfield in a
smaller
role, something that Garfield couldn’t get over. So, when Warner Bros. approached
him for a
screen test, he agreed to try out. |
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The Warner Bros. executives saw something special in Garfield and signed him to a
two-picture deal. Garfield headed to Hollywood to play a supporting role in Four Daughters (1938), for which he was nominated for an Academy
Award. For his second picture, Blackwell’s Island (1939), he
earned top billing. Seeing that he was a star in the making, Warner Bros. signed him
to a
seven-year studio contract. Unfortunately Garfield was so good at playing the anti-hero,
rebel character that audiences adored, as he did in Four Daughters, that he was rarely
given
any chance to play anything different. Regardless, Garfield averaged three pictures
a year
during his Warner Bros. contract, including such notables as Dust Be
My Destiny (1939), Saturday’s Children (1940),
The Sea Wolf (1941), The Fallen
Sparrow (1943), Pride of the Marines (1945), and
Humoresque (1946), and a couple of MGM studio loan films,
Tortilla Flat (1942) and The Postman
Always Rings Twice (1946). It was actually John Steinbeck himself who suggested
Garfield for Tortilla Flat. |
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When his contract with Warner Bros. was up, Garfield was offered roles from nearly
every
major production company, but instead decided to start his own. He partnered with
Bob
Roberts and formed Bob Roberts Productions. The two set about looking for a script
and
decided to hire Arnold Manoff to write the true story of boxer Barney Ross, who had
an
upbringing strikingly similar to that of Garfield. Roberts and Garfield, with the
help of
independent studio Enterprise, mad e and released Body and
Soul in 1947. It was a hit and Garfield was nominated for an Academy Award for his
leading role. Garfield also had a supporting role in Gentleman’s
Agreement (1947, 20th Century Fox) that year alongside Gregory Peck. Roberts and
Garfield made one other joint production in 1948, Force of
Evil. |
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Garfield went on to make four more films before proceedings with the House Un-American
Activities Committee black-listed him in 1951, accusing him of being affiliated with
communist activities, a claim which he denied and for which no evidence was ever produced.
Much to the contrary, Garfield was a staunch supporter of American Troops during the
war,
donating money to causes for enlisted soldiers, buying and selling war bonds, participating
in USO tours abroad to entertain troops, starring in studio films in support of the
war, and
even trying to enlist twice in the military to join the fight—his heart condition
made him
ineligible, however. |
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After being black-listed in Hollywood, Garfield returned to Broadway in the starring
role
of Golden Boy in 1951, finally getting the part denied to him
in 1938. In the previous few years leading up to 1952, Garfield’s heart gave him more
trouble. The intense physical workouts he insisted on for Golden
Boy, coupled with the stress of appearing before HUAC, are believed to have been
the main cause for the heart attack he suffered in his sleep on May 21, 1952. |
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Fearing a riot, the New York City Police Department begged Garfield’s widow, Robbe,
to have
a public funeral. She finally relented, and an estimated 10,000 people came to pay
their
last respects to John Garfield. |