Get Movie Showtimes & Tickets

Go
Go
Celebs
Photos
Fan Sites
Apply
Directory
Support
MyHollywood
Sign In
Sign Up
Forums
Hot List

Home Celebs James Cagney
Bullet Arrow Photos
Bullet Arrow News
Bullet Arrow Interviews
Bullet Arrow Premieres
Bullet Arrow Forums
Bullet Arrow Meet Fans
Bullet Arrow Fan Sites
Bullet Arrow Get a Poster at AllPosters.com
Advertisement
The American gangster film, and the output of Warner Bros. in its most influential decade, would be unimaginable without the contributions of James Cagney. One of talking pictures' first generation of actors, Cagney forever romanticized the figures of the criminal and the con artist with his jittery physical dynamism and breakneck staccato vocal patterns.

Raised in New York City's tough Yorkville neighborhood, Cagney was a veteran of settlement house revues, vaudeville and five years of Broadway when he came to Warner Bros....

Filmography

Entertaining the Troops - ( Himself / 1988 / Released / )
Going Hollywood: The War Years - ( Himself / 1988 / Released / )
Ragtime - ( Commander Rheinlander Waldo / 1981 / Released / )
It's Showtime - ( Himself / 1976 / Released / )
Arizona Bushwhackers - ( Narrator(- Narration) / 1968 / Released / )
One, Two, Three - ( MacNamara / 1961 / Released / )
The Gallant Hours - ( Admiral Bull Halsey / 1960 / Released / )
Never Steal Anything Small - ( Jake MacIllaney / 1959 / Released / Universal-International )
Never Steal Anything Small - ( Song Performer / 1959 / Released / Universal-International )
Shake Hands With the Devil - ( Sean Lenihan / 1959 / Released / United Artists Pictures Inc. )
Man of a Thousand Faces - ( Lon Chaney / 1957 / Released / )
Short Cut to Hell - ( Director / 1957 / Released / )
Short Cut to Hell - ( Prologue Narrator / 1957 / Released / )
These Wilder Years - ( Steve Bradford / 1956 / Released / MGM/UA Entertainment Company )
Tribute to a Bad Man - ( Jeremy Rodock / 1956 / Released / MGM/UA Entertainment Company )
Love Me or Leave Me - ( Martin Snyder / 1955 / Released / )
Mister Roberts - ( Captain / 1955 / Released / Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution )
Run For Cover - ( Mat Dow / 1955 / Released / Paramount Pictures )
The Seven Little Foys - ( George M Cohan / 1955 / Released / )
Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye - ( / 1950 / Released / Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution )
White Heat - ( Arthur Cody Jarrett / 1949 / Released / )
Yankee Doodle Dandy - ( George M Cohan / 1942 / Released / )
The Strawberry Blonde - ( / 1941 / Released / Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution )
City For Conquest - ( Danny Kenny / 1940 / Released / )
The Oklahoma Kid - ( / 1939 / Released / )
The Roaring Twenties - ( / 1939 / Released / )
Angels With Dirty Faces - ( "Rocky" Sullivan / 1938 / Released / )
Boy Meets Girl - ( Robert Law / 1938 / Released / )
Something to Sing About - ( / 1937 / Released / Grand National )
A Midsummer Night's Dream - ( Bottom / 1935 / Released / )
Footlight Parade - ( / 1933 / Released / )
TV Credits
Terrible Joe Moran ( 1984 / Released ): Actor
Tom Snyder's Celebrity Spotlight ( 1980 / Released ): Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

The American gangster film, and the output of Warner Bros. in its most influential decade, would be unimaginable without the contributions of James Cagney. One of talking pictures' first generation of actors, Cagney forever romanticized the figures of the criminal and the con artist with his jittery physical dynamism and breakneck staccato vocal patterns.

Raised in New York City's tough Yorkville neighborhood, Cagney was a veteran of settlement house revues, vaudeville and five years of Broadway when he came to Warner Bros. in 1930. Cagney, Bette Davis and Edward G. Robinson, all signed to long-term contracts during this period, became the core of the studio's stock company, which also included character and supporting players such as Alan Jenkins and Frank McHugh. After playing several featured roles Cagney attained instant and lasting fame with his role as vicious gunman Tom Powers in William Wellman's "The Public Enemy" (1931).

"The Public Enemy"'s story of a wisecracking hood who seemed to delight in violence indelibly stamped the gangster genre. Along with "Little Caesar" (1931) and "I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang" (1932), the picture cemented Warner Bros.' position as a major studio. Between 1930 and 1941, Cagney made 38 films at Warner Bros. While most were crime and action dramas or comedies, quickly produced on modest budgets and featuring few other box office "names," many have become genre classics. Several, including "Angels With Dirty Faces" (1938) and "The Roaring Twenties" (1939), remain seminal works in American film history. Cagney reached a creative peak with "Yankee Doodle Dandy" (1942), a biopic based on the life of composer George M. Cohan. A sentimental masterpiece, the film drew on Cagney's prodigious dancing talents, largely unexploited at Warner Bros. (except for the marvelous "Footlight Parade" 1933), and brought him the Academy Award for best actor.

A series of well-publicized salary disputes at Warner Bros. led to Cagney's forming an independent production company, Cagney Productions. Headed by James and his brother William, a former actor, the firm was based on terms developed in James's last Warner Bros. contract and gave him unprecedented leeway in choosing vehicles and participating in profits. It proved a failure, releasing only three films through United Artists, but was nevertheless a path-breaking model which many others in the industry would soon follow.

In 1949 Cagney made an explosive return to Warner Bros. in the Raoul Walsh-directed "White Heat", playing Cody Jarrett, a violent, Freudianized update of the Tom Powers character in "The Public Enemy". Like the earlier film, "White Heat" was both profitable and enormously influential.

Throughout the 1950s Cagney played sardonic and often villainous characters for several studios, in films occasionally produced by Cagney Productions. The decade also saw his only directing assignment, "Short Cut To Hell" (1957), and his last musical, the uneven but sometimes delightful "Never Steal Anything Small" (1959).

After a bravura performance in Billy Wilder's ironic farce "One, Two, Three" (1961), Cagney retired. The following years saw him receive many honors, including the 1974 Life Achievement Award of the American Film Institute--the second such award ever given. His good friend and neighbor, director Milos Forman, lured him from retirement for "Ragtime" (1981), but Cagney's own desires to perform again were hampered by increasing ill health. He made only one more appearance before his death, the made-for-TV movie "Terrible Joe Moran" (1984).


Profession(s):
Actor, producer, director, copyboy, vaudevillian, female impersonator, poolroom racker, newspaper office boy, book custodian, junior architect, gift wrapper, ticket taker, bellhop, waiter, bouncer, switchboard operator
Sometimes Credited As:
James Francis Cagney Jr
Horizontal Line
Family
brother:Edward Cagney
brother:Harry Cagney (eldest of five children)
brother:William Cagney
daughter:Cathleen Cagney (adopted)
mother:Carolyn Nelson Cagney (Irish-Norwegian)
sister:Jeanne Cagney
son:James Cagney Jr (adopted; born on November 25, 1939; died in January 1984 of a heart attack)
wife:Frances Willard Vernon (married from 1922 until his death; died on October 10, 1994 at the age of 95)

Horizontal Line
Education
Columbia University New York, New York German
Stuyvesant High School New York, New York 1917
Awards (Back to top)
Kennedy Center Honors Lifetime Achievement Award 1980
Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award 1977
American Film Institute Life Achievement Award 1974
National Board of Review Award Best Acting "Yankee Doodle Dandy" 1942
New York Film Critics Circle Award Best Actor "Yankee Doodle Dandy" 1942
Oscar Best Actor "Yankee Doodle Dandy" 1942
National Board of Review Award Best Acting "The Roaring Twenties" 1939
National Board of Review Award Best Acting "Angels with Dirty Faces" 1938
New York Film Critics Circle Award Best Actor "Angels with Dirty Faces" 1938

Milestones (Back to top)
1981 One-shot return to feature films, "Ragtime"
1961 Last film for many years, "One Two Three"; retired to a farm he owned
1957 Sole film directing credit, "Short Cut to Hell"
1943 Formed production company with brother William Cagney; first film "Johnny Come Lately"
1942 Broke with Warner Bros.
1931 Achieved stardom in "The Public Enemy"
1930 Signed by Warner Bros.; film acting debut in "Penny Arcade" adaptation "Sinner's Holiday" (reviving role from stage version)
1921 - 1925 Worked in vaudeville
1920 Broadway debut in chorus of "Pitter Patter"
Worked on Broadway in revues and such plays as "Penny Arcade"
Disputes with Warner Bros. led to his making several films away from the studio: "Great Guy" (1936), "Something to Sing About" (1937)
Served as president of Screen Actors Guild


Advertisement