Dana Andrews
Carver Dana Andrews was an American film actor and a major Hollywood star during the 1940s. He continued acting in less prestigious roles into the 1980s. He is remembered for his roles as a police detective-lieutenant in the film noir Laura and as war veteran Fred Derry in The Best Years of Our Lives, the latter being the role for which he received the most critical praise.
Early life
Andrews was born on a farmstead near Collins in southern Mississippi in Covington County, the third of 13 children of Charles Forrest Andrews, a Baptist minister, and his wife, the former Annis Speed. The family subsequently relocated to Huntsville in Walker County, Texas, the birthplace of his younger siblings, including fellow Hollywood actor Steve Forrest.Andrews attended college at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville and studied business administration in Houston. During 1931, he traveled to Los Angeles, California, to pursue opportunities as a singer. He worked various jobs, such as at a gas station in the nearby community of Van Nuys. To help Andrews study music at night, "The station owners stepped in... with a deal: $50 a week for full-time study, in exchange for a five-year share of possible later earnings."
Career
Sam Goldwyn and 20th Century Fox
In 1938, Andrews was spotted in the play Oh Evening Star and Samuel Goldwyn signed the promising actor to a contract, but felt he needed time to develop experience. Andrews continued at the Pasadena Playhouse, working in over 20 productions and proposed to second wife Mary Todd. After twelve months, Goldwyn sold part of Andrews contract to 2Oth Century Fox where he was put to work on the first of two B pictures; his first role was in Lucky Cisco Kid. He was then in Sailor's Lady, developed by Goldwyn but released by Fox.Andrews was loaned to Edward Small to appear in Kit Carson, before Goldwyn used him for the first time in a Goldwyn production: William Wyler's The Westerner, featuring Gary Cooper.
Andrews had support parts in Fox films Tobacco Road, directed by John Ford; Belle Starr, with Randolph Scott and Gene Tierney, billed third; and Swamp Water, starring Walter Brennan and directed by Jean Renoir.
His next film for Goldwyn was the Billy Wilder comedy Ball of Fire, again teaming with Cooper, where Andrews played a gangster.
Leading man
Back at Fox, Andrews was given his first lead, in the B-movie Berlin Correspondent. He was second lead to Tyrone Power in Crash Dive and then appeared in the 1943 film adaptation of The Ox-Bow Incident with Henry Fonda, in a role often cited as one of his best in which he played a lynching victim.Andrews then went back to Goldwyn for The North Star, directed by Lewis Milestone. He worked on a government propaganda film , then was used by Goldwyn again in Up in Arms, supporting Danny Kaye.
Andrews was reunited with Milestone at Fox for The Purple Heart, then was in Wing and a Prayer for Henry Hathaway.
Critical success and Noir
One of his most famous roles was as an obsessed detective in Laura with Gene Tierney at Fox, directed by Otto Preminger.He co-featured with Jeanne Crain in the movie musical State Fair, a huge hit, and was reunited with Preminger for Fallen Angel. In 1946, he co-featured with Susan Hayward in an excellent western, Canyon Passage, directed by Jacques Tourneur.
Andrews did another war movie with Milestone, A Walk in the Sun, then was loaned to Walter Wanger for a western, Canyon Passage.
Andrews's second film with William Wyler, also for Goldwyn, was his most successful: The Best Years of Our Lives, both a popular and a critical success and became the role for which Andrews is best known. Upon release, the topical WWII film about society's integrating problems of the homecoming soldier outgrossed the longstanding box office success of Gone with the Wind , in the US and Britain. In 2007, the film ranked No. 37 on AFI's Top 100 Years...100 Movies.
Andrews appeared in Boomerang!, directed by Elia Kazan; Night Song, at RKO; and Daisy Kenyon for Preminger. In 1947, he was voted the 23rd most popular actor in the U.S.
Andrews starred in the anti-communist The Iron Curtain, reuniting him with Gene Tierney, then Deep Waters. He made a comedy for Lewis Milestone at Enterprise Pictures, No Minor Vices, then traveled to England for Britannia Mews.
Andrews filmed at Universal for Sword in the Desert, then Goldwyn cast him in My Foolish Heart with Susan Hayward.
He played a brutal police officer in Where the Sidewalk Ends, also with Tierney and Preminger. Around this time, alcoholism began to damage Andrews's career, and on two occasions it nearly cost him his life as he drove a car.
Edge of Doom, another film for Goldwyn, which was a flop. He was then loaned to RKO to make Sealed Cargo, in which his brother Steve Forrest has an uncredited role. Back at Fox, he was in The Frogmen, then Goldwyn cast him in I Want You, an unsuccessful attempt to repeat the success of The Best Years of Our Lives.
From 1952 to 1954, Andrews was featured in the radio series, I Was a Communist for the FBI, about the experiences of Matt Cvetic, an FBI informant who infiltrated the Communist Party of the United States of America.
Career decline
Andrews's film career struggled in the 1950s. Assignment: Paris was not widely seen. He did Elephant Walk in Ceylon, a film better known for Vivien Leigh's nervous breakdown and replacement by Elizabeth Taylor. Duel in the Jungle was an adventure tale; Three Hours to Kill and Smoke Signal were Westerns; Strange Lady in Town was a Greer Garson vehicle; Comanche, another Western.By the middle 1950s, Andrews was acting almost exclusively in B-movies. However, his acting in two movies for Fritz Lang during 1956, While The City Sleeps and Beyond A Reasonable Doubt, and two for Jacques Tourneur, Curse of the Demon and The Fearmakers, are well regarded. Around this time he also appeared in Spring Reunion, Zero Hour!, and Enchanted Island.
In 1952, Andrews toured with his wife, Mary Todd, in The Glass Menagerie, and in 1958, he replaced Henry Fonda on Broadway in Two for the Seesaw.
Television
Andrews began appearing on television on such shows as Playhouse 90, General Electric Theatre, The Barbara Stanwyck Show, Checkmate, The DuPont Show of the Week, The Twilight Zone, The Dick Powell Theatre, Alcoa Premiere, Ben Casey, and Theatre of Stars.Andrews continued to make films like The Crowded Sky and Madison Avenue. He went to Broadway for The Captains and the Kings, which had a short run in 1962.
In 1963, he was elected president of the Screen Actors Guild.
In 1965, Andrews resumed film work with The Satan Bug and In Harm's Way, playing supporting roles in both. He also had the lead in Crack in the World, Brainstorm, and Town Tamer. However, he was cast increasingly in supporting roles: Berlin, Appointment for the Spies, The Loved One, Battle of the Bulge, and Johnny Reno.
Andrews still played leads in low-budget films like The Frozen Dead, The Cobra and Hot Rods to Hell. By this time, Andrews had evolved into a character actor, as in "The 1000 Carat Diamond", "No Diamonds for Ursula", and The Devil's Brigade.
Later, Andrews returned to the leading role of college president Tom Boswell on the NBC daytime soap opera Bright Promise from its premiere on September 29, 1969, until March 1971.
Later career
Andrews spent the 1970s in supporting Hollywood roles such as The Failing of Raymond, Innocent Bystanders, Airport 1975, A Shadow in the Streets, The First 36 Hours of Dr. Durant, Take a Hard Ride, The Last Tycoon, The Last Hurrah, and Good Guys Wear BlackHe also appeared regularly on TV in such shows as Ironside, Get Christie Love!, Ellery Queen, The American Girls, The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries, and The Love Boat.
It was at this time, the 1970s, that Andrews became involved in the real estate business, telling one newspaper reporter, for example, that he owned "a hotel that brings in $200,000 a year."
Andrews's final roles included Born Again, Ike: The War Years, The Pilot, Falcon Crest and Prince Jack.
Personal life
Andrews married Janet Murray on December 31, 1932. Murray died in 1935 as result of pneumonia. Their son, David, was a musician and composer who died from a cerebral hemorrhage. On November 17, 1939, Andrews married actress Mary Todd, by whom he had three children: Katharine, Stephen, and Susan. For two decades, the family lived in Toluca Lake, California.Andrews eventually controlled his alcoholism and worked actively with the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence. During 1972, he appeared in a television public service advertisement concerning the subject.
During the last years of his life, Andrews suffered from Alzheimer's disease. He spent his final years living at the John Douglas French Center for Alzheimer's Disease in Los Alamitos, California.
Death
On December 17, 1992, 15 days before his 84th birthday, Andrews died of congestive heart failure and pneumonia. His wife died in 2003 at the age of 86.Filmography
- Lucky Cisco Kid as Sergeant Dunn
- Sailor's Lady as Scrappy Wilson
- Kit Carson as Captain John C. Fremont
- The Westerner as Sergeant Dunn
- Tobacco Road as Captain Tim
- Belle Starr as Maj. Thomas Crail
- Swamp Water as Ben
- Ball of Fire as Joe Lilac
- Berlin Correspondent as Bill Roberts
- Crash Dive as Lt. Cmdr. Dewey Connors
- The Ox-Bow Incident as Donald Martin
- The North Star as Kolya Simonov
- December 7th as Ghost of US Sailor Killed at Pearl Harbor
- Up in Arms as Joe
- The Purple Heart as Capt. Harvey Ross
- Wing and a Prayer as Lt. Cmdr. Edward Moulton
- Laura as Det. Lt. Mark McPherson
- State Fair as Pat Gilbert
- Fallen Angel as Eric Stanton
- A Walk in the Sun as Sgt. Bill Tyne
- Canyon Passage as Logan Stuart
- The Best Years of Our Lives as Fred Derry
- Boomerang as State's Atty. Henry L. Harvey
- Night Song as Dan
- Daisy Kenyon as Dan O'Mara
- The Iron Curtain as Igor Gouzenko
- Deep Waters as Hod Stillwell
- No Minor Vices as Perry Ashwell
- The Forbidden Street as Henry Lambert / Gilbert Lauderdale
- Sword in the Desert as Mike Dillon
- My Foolish Heart as Walt Dreiser
- Where the Sidewalk Ends as Det. Mark Dixon
- Edge of Doom as Father Thomas Roth
- Sealed Cargo as Pat Bannon
- The Frogmen as Jake Flannigan
- I Want You as Martin Greer
- Assignment – Paris! as Jimmy Race
- Elephant Walk as Dick Carver
- Duel in the Jungle as Scott Walters
- Three Hours to Kill as Jim Guthrie
- Smoke Signal as Brett Halliday
- Strange Lady in Town as Dr. Rourke O'Brien
- Screen Snapshots: Hollywood Goes a Fishin as Himself
- Comanche as Jim Read
- While the City Sleeps as Edward Mobley
- Beyond a Reasonable Doubt as Tom Garrett
- Spring Reunion as Fred Davis
- Night of the Demon as John Holden
- Zero Hour! as Lt. Ted Stryker
- The Fearmakers as Alan Eaton
- Enchanted Island as Abner "Ab" Bedford
- The Crowded Sky as Dick Barnett.
- Madison Avenue as Clint Lorimer
- The Satan Bug as Gen. Williams
- In Harm's Way as Admiral Broderick
- Crack in the World as Dr. Stephen Sorenson
- Brainstorm as Cort Benson
- Town Tamer as Tom Rosser
- Berlin, Appointment for the Spies as Col. Lancaster
- The Loved One as Gen. Buck Brinkman
- Battle of the Bulge as Col. Pritchard
- Johnny Reno as Johnny Reno
- The Frozen Dead as Dr. Norberg
- Hot Rods to Hell as Tom Phillips
- Supercolpo da 7 miliardi as George Kimmins
- The Cobra as Capt. Kelly
- No Diamonds for Ursula as Il gioielliere
- The Devil's Brigade as Brig. Gen. Walter Naylor
- The Failing of Raymond as Allan McDonald
- Innocent Bystanders as Blake
- Airport 1975 as Scott Freeman
- A Shadow in the Streets as Len Raeburn
- The First 36 Hours of Dr. Durant as Dr. Hutchins
- Take a Hard Ride as Morgan
- The Last Tycoon as Red Ridingwood
- The Last Hurrah as Roger Shanley
- Good Guys Wear Black as Edgar Harolds
- Born Again as Tom Phillips
- A Tree, a Rock, a Cloud
- The Pilot as Randolph Evers
- Ike: The War Years as General George C. Marshall
- Prince Jack as The Cardinal
Partial television credits