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James Stewart was arguably the most loved actor ever to have appeared on screen. Certainly, he was the last of the great men who captured audience hearts in the throes of the Depression and became, in the words of Andrew Sarris, "the most complete actor-personality in the American cinema."

Stewart's origins read like cliches; he was born in 1908 in Indiana, Pennsylvania, the son of the local hardware store owner (his Oscar has permanently resided in the store, which has been in the family for generations)....

Filmography

Directed by John Ford - ( / 2006 / In-Production / )
John Carpenter's Escape From L.A. - ( Special Thanks / 1996 / Released / )
An American Tail: Fievel Goes West - ( of Wylie Burp / 1991 / Released / )
Going Hollywood: The War Years - ( Himself / 1988 / Released / )
The Big Sleep - ( General Guy DeBrisai Sternwood / 1978 / Released / )
The Magic of Lassie - ( Clovis Mitchell / 1978 / Released / )
The Magic of Lassie - ( Song Performer / 1978 / Released / )
Airport 77 - ( Stevens / 1977 / Released / )
The Shootist - ( Dr Hostetler / 1976 / Released / )
That's Entertainment! - ( Narrator(- Narration) / 1974 / Released / CIC Productions )
Directed By John Ford - ( Himself / 1971 / Released / California Arts Commission Productions )
Fools' Parade - ( Mattie Appleyard / 1971 / Released / )
The Cheyenne Social Club - ( John O'Hanlon / 1970 / Released / )
Bandolero! - ( Mace Bishop / 1968 / Released / 20th Century Fox Studios )
Firecreek - ( Johnny Cobb / 1968 / Released / )
The Rare Breed - ( Burnett / 1966 / Released / )
Dear Brigitte - ( Prof Robert Leaf / 1965 / Released / Fox Films, Ltd. )
Shenandoah - ( Charlie Anderson / 1965 / Released / Universal )
The Flight of the Phoenix - ( Frank Towns / 1965 / Released / Fox Films, Ltd. )
Cheyenne Autumn - ( Wyatt Earp / 1964 / Released / )
Take Her, She's Mine - ( Frank Michaelson / 1963 / Released / Fox Films, Ltd. )
How the West Was Won - ( Linus Rawlings / 1962 / Released / Cinerama Inc )
Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation - ( Mr Hobbs / 1962 / Released / Fox Films, Ltd. )
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance - ( Ransom Stoddard / 1962 / Released / )
Two Rode Together - ( Guthrie McCabe / 1961 / Released / Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group )
X - 15 - ( Narrator / 1961 / Released / United Artists Pictures Inc. )
The Mountain Road - ( Major Baldwin / 1960 / Released / Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group )
Anatomy of a Murder - ( Paul Biegler / 1959 / Released / )
The F.B.I. Story - ( Chip Hardesty / 1959 / Released / Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution )
Bell, Book and Candle - ( Shepherd Henderson / 1958 / Released / )
Vertigo - ( John "Scottie" Ferguson / 1958 / Released / )
Vertigo - ( Special Thanks / 1958 / Released / )
Night Passage - ( Grant McLaine / 1957 / Released / )
The Spirit of St. Louis - ( Charles A Lindbergh / 1957 / Released / )
The Man Who Knew Too Much - ( Dr Ben McKenna / 1956 / Released / )
Strategic Air Command - ( Lieutenant Colonel Robert Holland / 1955 / Released / Paramount Pictures )
The Far Country - ( Jeff Webster / 1955 / Released / )
The Man From Laramie - ( Will Lockhart / 1955 / Released / )
Rear Window - ( L B Jeffries--Jeff / 1954 / Released / )
The Glenn Miller Story - ( Glenn Miller / 1954 / Released / )
The Greatest Show on Earth - ( Buttons the Clown / 1953 / Released / )
The Naked Spur - ( Howard Kemp / 1953 / Released / )
Broken Arrow - ( Tom Jeffords / 1950 / Released / )
Harvey - ( Elwood P Dowd / 1950 / Released / )
The Jackpot - ( / 1950 / Released / )
Rope - ( / 1948 / Released / )
It's a Wonderful Life - ( George Bailey / 1946 / Released / )
The Philadelphia Story - ( Macaulay Connor / 1940 / Released / )
The Shop Around the Corner - ( / 1940 / Released / MGM/UA Entertainment Company )
Destry Rides Again - ( Tom Destry / 1939 / Released / Universal )
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington - ( / 1939 / Released / )
Of Human Hearts - ( / 1938 / Released / MGM/UA Entertainment Company )
Vivacious Lady - ( / 1938 / Released / RKO Pictures Distribution )
You Can't Take It With You - ( Tony Kirby / 1938 / Released / )
After the Thin Man - ( David Graham / 1936 / Released / )
Next Time We Love - ( / 1936 / Released / Universal )
Born to Dance - ( / / Released / )
The Gorgeous Hussy - ( / / Released / )
TV Credits
Directed by John Ford ( 2006 / Released ): Actor
Marlene Dietrich: Shadow and Light ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
Jimmy Stewart: Hometown Hero ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
Legend to Legend Night ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
What Is This Thing Called Love? ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
Fonda on Fonda ( 1992 / Released ): Actor
Glenn Miller: America's Musical Hero ( 1992 / Released ): Actor
Bob Hope's Yellow Ribbon Party ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
Debbie Reynolds' Movie Memories ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
Night of 100 Stars III ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
A Conversation With Dinah ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Champlin on Film ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Disney-MGM Studios Theme Park Grand Opening ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Jimmy Doolittle: An American Hero ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
The 61st Annual Academy Awards Presentation ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
The 75th Anniversary of Beverly Hills ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Christmas in Washington ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
The 14th Annual People's Choice Awards ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
All-Star Party For Joan Collins ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
Grace Kelly -- The American Princess ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
Happy Birthday, Hollywood! ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
James Stewart: A Wonderful Life ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
The 13th Annual People's Choice Awards ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
All Star Party For Clint Eastwood ( 1986 / Released ): Actor
George Burns' 90th Birthday Special ( 1986 / Released ): Actor
North and South: Book II ( 1986 / Released ): Actor
The Barbara Walters Special (03/24/86) ( 1986 / Released ): Actor
The 50th Presidential Inaugural Gala ( 1985 / Released ): Actor
The Night of 100 Stars II ( 1985 / Released ): Actor
All-Star Party For Lucille Ball ( 1984 / Released ): Actor
Right of Way ( 1983 / Released ): Actor
Hawkins ( 1973 / Released ): Actor
Hawkins on Murder ( 1973 / Released ): Actor
Harvey ( 1972 / Released ): Actor
The Jimmy Stewart Show ( 1971 / Released ): Actor
Luxury Liner ( 1963 / Released ): Actor
The Dick Powell Show ( 1961 / Released ): Actor
Hedda Hopper's Hollywood ( 1960 / Released ): Actor
A Beverly Hills Christmas ( Released ): Actor
Mr. Krueger's Christmas ( Released ): Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

James Stewart was arguably the most loved actor ever to have appeared on screen. Certainly, he was the last of the great men who captured audience hearts in the throes of the Depression and became, in the words of Andrew Sarris, "the most complete actor-personality in the American cinema."

Stewart's origins read like cliches; he was born in 1908 in Indiana, Pennsylvania, the son of the local hardware store owner (his Oscar has permanently resided in the store, which has been in the family for generations). While studying architecture at Princeton (his father's alma mater), he met Joshua Logan, who convinced him to begin acting. Billy O'Grady, MGM's chief talent scout, saw his performance in a line of female impersonators and remembered him as "the only one who didn't ham it up." Bitten at last by the drama bug, Stewart moved with Logan to summer stock work with the University Players in Falmouth, MA, joining future co-stars Henry Fonda and Margaret Sullavan.

That summer a production had a pre-Broadway tryout at Falmouth and Stewart, as a chauffeur, had two lines: "Mrs. Mainwaring's car is waiting" and, after being delayed, "Mrs. Mainwaring's going to be sore as hell." It tore down the house and was noticed and written up by a visiting New York critic. Stewart and Fonda moved to New York, where Hedda Hopper recommended Jimmy for a screen test, resulting in a long-term MGM contract.

From the first, Stewart's performances stood out: raw, edgy, full of nervous, boyish energy. Tall, skinny and not conventionally handsome, he nonetheless possessed an engaging, approachable charisma and a naturalistic warmth. While his rivals played with masculine understatement, Stewart mirrored the vital excesses of those most American of rising actresses--Crawford, Davis, Rogers, Hepburn.

Audiences first took note of him as Eleanor Powell's leading man in 1936's "Born to Dance". Everyone at Metro at least had to "try" musicals; Stewart, singing--sort of--introduced Cole Porter's "Easy to Love". He was hopeless, but the public found him adorable.

Most of Stewart's big breaks came away from MGM: George Stevens's "Vivacious Lady", at RKO with Ginger Rogers, and Frank Capra's "You Can't Take it With You", at Columbia (both 1938); David O. Selznick's "Made For Each Other" (1939), opposite Carole Lombard; Capra's "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" (his greatest pre-WWII performance), with Jean Arthur, at Columbia; and "Destry Rides Again", taming Marlene Dietrich and the west at Universal (both 1939). MGM rallied with two winners, both co-starring Sullavan: Ernst Lubitsch's entrancing "The Shop Around the Corner" and Frank Borzage's haunting "The Mortal Storm" (both 1940). George Cukor's "The Philadelphia Story" followed. Stewart surprised the industry and himself, winning a Best Actor Oscar, despite being second lead to Cary Grant.

At age 33, Stewart enlisted as private and rose to colonel in the Air Force, leading one thousand plane strikes against Germany; Stewart won the Air Medal and the Distinguished Flying Cross. In his later years he gradually rose in rank in the reserves until he retired a brigadier general.

After the war, Stewart contributed what is undoubtedly his best-known performance, in Capra's "It's a Wonderful Life" (1946), a film and a performance full of postwar angst and visions of youthful dreams dashed yet also showing the compensations bound up with overlooked achievements. He would later deliver a speech before Congress protesting the film's colorization.

Postwar audiences no longer wanted sentiment. Stewart vigorously changed his image, turning hard-bitten for "Call Northside 777" and working for Hitchcock in "Rope" (both 1948). He returned to Broadway to replace Frank Fay in the whimsical "Harvey" and, before filming the 1950 movie version, made the first two westerns of many that would follow, both of which were hugely popular. Stewart also turned in a heart-tugging performance as a clown in Cecil B. DeMille's "The Greatest Show on Earth" (1951).

In 1952, Stewart's agent Leland Hayward successfully negotiated an agreement with Universal for Stewart to work on a percentage basis--a first for the sound era. Every star in the business stampeded to do the same, something which Stewart felt signified the last hurrah for the studio system. He still looks back on his "factory years", though, with clear nostalgia and gratitude.

The next phase of Stewart's career saw some of his most complex roles, for directors such as Hitchcock, Otto Preminger (1959's "Anatomy of a Murder" earned him a best actor award from the New York Critics--his second--and the Venice Film Festival), John Ford, Robert Aldrich and, most prolifically, Anthony Mann. His famous gawky, stammering mannerisms took on an extra interest for being filtered through toughness, cynicism and world-weariness. Though there have been occasional flops, he has undoubtedly proved his ability to transcend bad material, and to add an intriguing tang of both homespun idealism and even nasty bitterness to seemingly routine genre situations.

Stewart married his wife Gloria in 1949 and had four children. In 1970, he revived "Harvey" on Broadway with Helen Hayes and did occasional TV work, notably "The Jimmy Stewart Show" (NBC, 1971-72) and 1983's powerful TV-movie "Right of Way" (HBO), with Bette Davis.


Profession(s):
Actor, author, bomber pilot, colonel, brigadier general
Sometimes Credited As:
James M Stewart
Jimmy Stewart
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Family
daughter:Judy Stewart (born in 1951; twin of Kelly)
daughter:Kelly Stewart (born in 1951; twin of Judy; holds a PhD and teaches zoology at the University of California)
father:Alexander Maitland Stewart
step-son:Ronald McLean (killed in Vietnam in June 1969)
wife:Gloria Stewart (married on August 9, 1949; had been previously married (with two sons from that marriage); died in February 1994 from cancer at the age of 75)
Companion(s)
Norma Shearer , Companion , ```..had relationship after death of her husband Irving Thalberg
Olivia de Havilland , Companion , ```..dated in the early 1940s


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Education
Mercersburg Academy Mercersburg, Pennsylvania
Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey BS architecture 1932
Awards (Back to top)
Berlin Film Festival Golden Bear for Lifetime Achievement 1984
George Eastman Award 1984
Honorary Oscar 1984
Kennedy Center Honors Lifetime Achievement Award 1983
American Film Institute Life Achievement Award 1980
Golden Globe Award Best Actor in a Television Series (Drama) "Hawkins" 1973
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Performance "Harvey" 1970
Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award 1968
Cecil B DeMille Award 1965
Berlin Film Festival Best Actor Award "Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation" 1962
New York Film Critics Circle Award Best Actor "Anatomy of a Murder" 1959
Venice Film Festival Best Actor Award "Anatomy of a Murder" 1959
National Board of Review Award Best Acting "The Shop Around the Corner" 1940
Oscar Best Actor "The Philadelphia Story" 1940
New York Film Critics Circle Award Best Actor "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" 1939

Milestones (Back to top)
1986 Had last TV acting role in the ABC miniseries "North and South: Book II"
1983 Teamed with Bette Davis in the HBO original "Right to Die"
1978 Final feature acting role, the grandfather in "The Magic of Lassie"
1975 London stage debut, "Harvey"
1970 Returned to Broadway in revival of "Harvey"
1968 Retired from military reserve service with the rank of brigadier general
1964 Last film with Ford, "Cheyenne Autumn"
1962 Had co-starring role in "How the West Was Won"
1962 Starred with John Wayne in "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance"
1961 First worked with director John Ford in "Two Rode Together"
1959 Garnered fifth and final Best Actor Academy Award nomination for work as a lawyer in "Anatomy of a Murder"
1958 Last film with Alfred Hitchcock, "Vertigo"
1957 Portrayed Charles Lindberg in "The Spirit of St. Louis", helmed by Billy Wilder
1956 Co-starred with Doris Day in Hitchcock's remake of "The Man Who Knew Too Much"
1954 Reunited with Hitchcock for "Rear Window"
1954 Had title role in the biopic "The Glenn Miller Story", directed by Anthony Mann
1952 Cast as Buttons the Clown in Cecil B, DeMille's "The Greatest Show on Earth"
1950 Made first of eight films with director Anthony Mann, "Winchester '73"
1950 Starred in film version of hit Broadway play "Harvey"; received Oscar nomination as Best Actor
1948 First of four films with director Alfred Hitchcock, "Rope"
1946 First film after WWII service, "It's a Wonderful Life", his last film with Capra; received third Academy Award nomination as Best Actor
1942 - 1945 Was a bomber pilot during WWII; achieved rank of full colonel
1941 Last film before war service, "Ziegfeld Girl"
1941 Became first Hollywood screen actor drafted into US Army (March 22)
1940 Turned in Academy Award-winning turn as a reporter covering a society wedding in "The Philadelphia Story"
1939 First Western, "Destry Rides Again"
1939 Garnered first Oscar nomination for "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington"
1938 Made first of three films with director Frank Capra, "You Can't Take It With You"
1936 First lead in an 'A' budget motion picture, "Born to Dance", a musical starring Eleanor Powell
1935 Film acting debut, "The Murder Man"
1934 Moved to Hollywood; film debut (walk-on part) in "Art Trouble"
1932 Professional stage acting debut in "Goodbye Again" with University Players in Cape Cod; also in play when it moved to Broadway
1932 Moved to NYC with roommate Henry Fonda; Broadway acting debut in "Carrie Nation"
Stage acting debut in Boy Scout play
Joined director Joshua Logan's University Players in Falmouth, Massachusetts, acting with future film co-stars Margaret Sullavan and Henry Fonda
Replaced Frank Fay in Broadway run of "Harvey" in the late 1940s
Appeared in many Westerns during the 1950s and 1960s, beginning with such films as "Broken Arrow" (1950)
Starred in NBC series, "The Jimmy Stewart Show"
Returned to series TV as a detective in the CBS drama "Hawkins"