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Melvyn Douglas

Melvyn Douglas (born Melvyn Edouard Hesselberg, April 5, 1901 – August 4, 1981) was an American actor. Douglas came to prominence in 1929 as a suave leading man, perhaps best typified by his performance in the romantic comedy Ninotchka (1939) with Greta Garbo. Douglas later played mature and fatherly characters, as in his Academy Award-winning performances in Hud (1963) and Being There (1979) and his Academy Award–nominated performance in I Never Sang for My Father (1970). Douglas was one of 24 performers to win the Triple Crown of Acting. In the last few years of his life Douglas appeared in films with supernatural stories involving ghosts, including The Changeling in 1980 and Ghost Story in 1981, his last completed film role.

"Melvin Douglas" redirects here. For the American wrestler, see Melvin Douglas (wrestler).

Melvyn Douglas

Melvyn Edouard Hesselberg

(1901-04-05)April 5, 1901

August 4, 1981(1981-08-04) (aged 80)

Actor

1926–1981

Rosalind Hightower
(m. 1925; div. 1930)
(m. 1931; died 1980)

3

Illeana Douglas (granddaughter)

Early life[edit]

Douglas was born in Macon, Georgia, the son of Lena Priscilla (née Shackelford) and Edouard Gregory Hesselberg, a concert pianist and composer. His father was a Jewish emigrant from Riga, Latvia, then part of the Russian Empire. His mother, a native of Tennessee, was Protestant and a Mayflower descendant.[1][2]


Douglas, in his autobiography, See You at the Movies (1987), wrote that he was unaware of his Jewish background until later in his youth: "I did not learn about the non-Christian part of my heritage until my early teens," as his parents preferred to hide his Jewish heritage. It was his aunts, on his father's side, who told him "the truth" when he was 14. He writes that he "admired them unstintingly"; and they in turn treated him like a son.[1]


Though his father, a prominent concert pianist, taught music at a succession of colleges in the U.S. and Canada, Douglas never graduated from high school. He took the surname of his maternal grandmother and became known as Melvyn Douglas.

Personal life[edit]

Douglas was married briefly to artist Rosalind Hightower, and they had one child, (Melvyn) Gregory Hesselberg, in 1926. Hesselberg, an artist, is the father of actress Illeana Douglas.


In 1931, Douglas married actress-turned-politician Helen Gahagan. They traveled to Europe that same year, and "were horrified by French and German anti-Semitism". As a result, they became outspoken anti-fascists.


Gahagan, as a three-term Congresswoman, was later Richard Nixon's opponent for the United States Senate seat from California in 1950.[1] Nixon accused Gahagan of being soft on Communism because of her opposition to the House Un-American Activities Committee. Nixon went so far as to infamously call her "pink right down to her underwear". It was Gahagan who popularized Nixon's epithet "Tricky Dick".[6]


The couple hired architect Roland Coate to design a home for them in 1938 on a three-acre lot they owned in Outpost Estates, Los Angeles. The result was a one-story, 6,748-square-foot home.[7]


Douglas and Gahagan had two children: Peter Gahagan Douglas (1933) and Mary Helen Douglas (1938). The couple remained married until Helen Gahagan Douglas' death in 1980 from cancer. Melvyn Douglas died a year later, in 1981, aged 80, from pneumonia and cardiac complications in New York City.

A Free Soul (1928) as Ace Wilfong

Back Here (1928) as Sergeant "Terry" O'Brien

Now-a-Days (1929) as Boyd Butler

Recapture (1930) as Henry C. Martin

Tonight or Never (1931) as the Unknown Gentleman

(1934) as Sheridan Warren

No More Ladies

Mother Lode (1934) as Carey Ried (also staged)

De Luxe (1935) as Pat Dantry

Tapestry In Gray (1935) as Erik Nordgren

Two Blind Mice (1949) as Tommy Thurston

The Bird Cage (1950) as Wally Williams

The Little Blue Light (1951) as Frank

Glad Tidings (1951) as Steve Whitney

(1952) as Howard Carol

Time Out for Ginger

(1955) as Henry Drummond (replacement)

Inherit the Wind

The Waltz of the Toreadors (1958) as General St. Pé

Juno (1959) as "Captain" Jack Boyle

The Gang's All Here (1959) as Griffith P. Hastings

(1960) as William Russell

The Best Man

Spofford (1967) as Spofford

Douglas also staged Moor Born (1934), Mother Lode (1934) and Within the Gates (1934-1935) and produced Call Me Mister (1946-1948).


Sources: Internet Broadway Database[8] and Playbill[9]

Douglas, Melvyn; Tom Arthur (1986). See You at the Movies: The Autobiography of Melvyn Douglas. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.  0-8191-5390-7.

ISBN

at IMDb

Melvyn Douglas

Archived 2013-05-17 at the Wayback Machine at the New Georgia Encyclopedia

"Melvyn Douglas (1901–1981)"

at Turner Classic Movies

Melvyn Douglas

at the Internet Broadway Database

Melvyn Douglas

Archived 2013-12-10 at archive.today at the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research

Melvyn Douglas Papers

Photographs and literature on Melvyn Douglas