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Fred MacMurray (Paperback)
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Fred MacMurray (Paperback)
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Fred MacMurray was one of the most durable stars in motion picture
history. Fred arrived in Hollywood in 1934 and within a year he was
one of the top leading men in the movie industry. He was the
leading actor or one of the leads in films through 1973 when Walt
Disney Studios released his final starring role in a motion
picture, Charley and the Angel. Thirty-nine years - five separate
decades. Few stars have equaled that distinction. Of course every
star career has its peaks and valleys. The initial peak of Fred';s
stardom was from his days as a Paramount leading man, beginning in
1935 and running roughly until the end of the Second World War.
Like many aging stars, the post-war years were a mixed bag for
Fred. Public tastes were changing and the kind of frothy, romantic
comedies which had been his forte were going out of fashion. But he
persevered and continued to do leading roles in a variety of
pictures and from time to time found a film which registered
strongly with film audiences and critics alike, such as The Egg and
I (1947), and especially The Caine Mutiny (1954). By the mid 1950s
Fred was appearing, increasingly, in that favorite genre of the
aging leading man - the western film. Eight of ten films he made
between 1955 and 1960 were westerns, not Fred's favorite genre. But
they did keep his name before the public. Then in 1959, Fred began
the second peak of his career thanks to Walt Disney, who cast Fred
in his studios first live action comedy film, The Shaggy Dog.
Incredibly this film which was made for under $1 million became the
third biggest box office hit of that year, and Fred found a new
audience. Over the next several years, Fred starred in a series of
hugely popular family films for the Walt Disney Studios. Then in
1960, Fred did something that solidified his new family friendly
image. He accepted the lead in a new television series called My
Three Sons. For the next twelve years he played Steve Douglas, a
widower with three rambunctious sons. Fred became THE
quintessential father figure for a new generation of kids. In
accepting My Three Sons Fred succeeded at something that few film
actors had achieved up to that time. He became a star in both
television and motion pictures. Look at it this way. In 1951 when
Lucille Ball began I Love Lucy she had already spent nearly two
decades as a motion picture actress, but she never had the kind of
movie fame that Fred MacMurray had achieved when he became a
television star. Loretta Young began a long running anthology
series in 1953, and had been a popular, and Academy Award winning,
movie actress prior to that, but when she began on television her
days as a film actress were over. When Fred began doing My Three
Sons in 1960, he was enjoying a rejuvenated film career thanks to
the Disney films and his superb performance in Billy Wilder's
hugely popular and Academy Award winning The Apartment. Fred was
simultaneously enjoying popularity on both the big and small
screens. Many film actors attempted this after Fred, including his
contemporaries Jimmy Stewart and Henry Fonda, but both proved
failures in their own series.
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