Laurie kennedy actress
Artur Kennedy
| American actor Date of Birth: Country: Great Britain |
Biography of Arthur Kennedy
John Arthur Kennedy, an American actor, was born on February 17, , in Worcester, Massachusetts.
Arthur kennedy actor biography example All All. Sign In. Arthur Kennedy Actor. Play trailer Cyclone Arthur Kennedy, one of the premier character actors in American film from the late s through the early s, achieved fame in the role of Biff in Elia Kazan 's historic production of Arthur Miller 's Pultizer-Prize winning play "Death of a Salesman.After graduating from the Carnegie Mellon Institute's Drama Department, he began working with the "Group Theater" company, touring the Midwest with a repertoire of Shakespearean plays. He caught the attention of the renowned British theater actor, Maurice Evans, who included him in the cast of the Broadway production of "Richard III."
Collaborating with Evans, Kennedy continued to perform on stage in Shakespearean plays and contemporary social dramas.
In , thanks to the involvement of the famous James Cagney, he got his first role in the crime film "City for Conquest" (directed by Anatole Litvak and Jean Negulesco). Signing a contract with Warner Bros., Kennedy soon established himself as a young and promising actor, appearing in films such as "Bad Men of Missouri" (, directed by Ray Enright), "Highway West" (, directed by William McGann), "Desperate Journey" (, directed by Raoul Walsh), and "Air Force" (, directed by Howard Hawks).
However, the classical theatrical training Kennedy underwent was hardly demanded in his screen roles, and after World War II, he returned to the stage.
His greatest success on Broadway was the role of Biff in Arthur Miller's play "Death of a Salesman," for which he won the Tony Award.
Lana turner actress After graduating from the Carnegie Mellon Institute's Drama Department, he began working with the "Group Theater" company, touring the Midwest with a repertoire of Shakespearean plays. Collaborating with Evans, Kennedy continued to perform on stage in Shakespearean plays and contemporary social dramas. In , thanks to the involvement of the famous James Cagney, he got his first role in the crime film "City for Conquest" directed by Anatole Litvak and Jean Negulesco. Signing a contract with Warner Bros. However, the classical theatrical training Kennedy underwent was hardly demanded in his screen roles, and after World War II, he returned to the stage.At the same time, he continued to act in films and received Oscar nominations in the s for movies such as "Champion" (), "Bright Victory" (), "Trial" (), "Peyton Place" (, directed by Mark Robson), and "Some Came Running" (, directed by Vincente Minnelli). Although he never won an Oscar, his role as Sergeant Larry Nevins in "Bright Victory" earned him two other prestigious film awards - the Golden Globe and a special award from the New York Film Critics Circle.
Over the next two decades, Kennedy worked both in the United States and abroad, appearing in films of varying quality.
Alongside the outright failures, there were also movies in which Kennedy managed to showcase his acting talent, such as the adaptation of Sinclair Lewis' novel "Elmer Gantry" (, directed by Richard Brooks), "Barabbas" (, directed by Richard Fleischer), and the famous war-adventure film "Lawrence of Arabia" (, directed by David Lean).
In the s, Kennedy retired from the big screen and lived with his family in a small town in the eastern United States.
Only in , he appeared in the drama film "Signs of Life" directed by John David Coles, which depicted the lives of unemployed shipbuilders. This film became his last, as he passed away on January 5, , in Branford, Connecticut, shortly after its release.