William S. Hart
William Surrey Hart was an American silent film actor, screenwriter, director and producer. He is remembered as a foremost western star of the silent era who "imbued all of his characters with honor and integrity." During the late 1910s and early 1920s, he was one of the most consistently popular movie stars, frequently ranking high among male actors in popularity contests held by movie fan magazines.
Biography
Hart was born in Newburgh, New York, to Nicholas Hart and Rosanna Hart. William had two brothers, who died very young, and four sisters. His father was born in England, and his mother was born in Ireland. He was a distant cousin of the western star Neal Hart.He began his acting career on stage in his 20s, and in film when he was 49, which coincided with the beginning of film's transition from curiosity to commercial art form. Hart's stage debut came in 1888 as a member of a company headed by Daniel E. Bandmann. The following year he joined Lawrence Barrett's company in New York and later spent several seasons with Mlle. Hortense Rhéa's traveling company. He toured and traveled extensively while trying to make a name for himself as an actor, and for a time directed shows at the Asheville Opera House in North Carolina, around the year 1900. He had some success as a Shakespearean actor on Broadway, working with Margaret Mather and other stars; he appeared in the original 1899 stage production of Ben-Hur. His family had moved to Asheville but, after his youngest sister Lotta died of typhoid fever in 1901, they all left together for Brooklyn until William went back on tour.
Hart went on to become one of the first great stars of the motion picture western. Fascinated by the Old West, he acquired Billy the Kid's "six shooters" and was a friend of legendary lawmen Wyatt Earp and Bat Masterson. He entered films in 1914 where, after playing supporting roles in two short films, he achieved stardom as the lead in the feature The Bargain. Hart was particularly interested in making realistic western films. His films are noted for their authentic costumes and props, as well as Hart's acting ability, honed on Shakespearean theater stages in the United States and England.
Beginning in 1915, Hart starred in his own series of two-reel western short subjects for producer Thomas Ince, which were so popular that they were supplanted by a series of feature films. Many of Hart's early films continued to play in theaters, under new titles, for another decade. In 1915 and 1916 exhibitors voted him the biggest money making star in the United States. In 1917 Hart accepted a lucrative offer from Adolph Zukor to join Famous Players-Lasky, which merged into Paramount Pictures. In the films Hart began to ride a brown and white pinto he called Fritz. Fritz was the forerunner of later famous movie horses known by their own name, e.g., horses like Tom Mix's Tony, Roy Rogers's Trigger and Clayton Moore's Silver. In 1917, to signify "his patriotism and loyalty to Uncle Sam" it was announced to "change the name of his favorite horse from Fritz to one more truly American." Hart was now making feature films exclusively, and films like Square Deal Sanderson and The Toll Gate were popular with fans. Hart married young Hollywood actress Winifred Westover. Although their marriage was short-lived, they had one child, William S. Hart, Jr..
In 1921, Roscoe Arbuckle, a silent screen comedy actor, was charged with the rape and manslaughter of an aspiring actress named Virginia Rappe. The case had many salacious aspects, particularly surrounding the bruises found on the victim's body. Many of Arbuckle's fellow actors refused to give any comments to the press. However, Hart who had never met or worked with Arbuckle, made a number of damaging public statements in which he presumed the actor's guilt. Arbuckle later wrote a premise for a film parodying Hart as a thief, bully, and wife beater, which was bought by Buster Keaton. The following year, Keaton co-wrote, directed and starred in the 1922 comedy film The Frozen North. As a result, Hart, refused to speak to Keaton for many years.
By the early 1920s, however, Hart's brand of gritty, rugged westerns with drab costumes and moralistic themes gradually fell out of fashion. The public became attracted by a new kind of movie cowboy, epitomized by Tom Mix, who wore flashier costumes and was faster with the action. Paramount dropped Hart, who then made one last bid for his kind of western. He produced Tumbleweeds with his own money, arranging to release it independently through United Artists. The film turned out well, with an epic land-rush sequence, but did only fair business at the box office. Hart was angered by United Artists' failure to promote his film properly and sued United Artists. The legal proceedings dragged on for years, and the courts finally ruled in Hart's favor, in 1940.
After Tumbleweeds, Hart retired to his Newhall, California, ranch home, "La Loma de los Vientos", which was designed by architect Arthur R. Kelly. In 1939 he appeared in his only sound film, a spoken prologue for a reissue of Tumbleweeds. The 74-year-old Hart, filmed on location at his Newhall ranch, reflects on the Old West and recalls his silent-movie days fondly. The speech turned out to be William S. Hart's farewell to the screen. Most prints and video versions of Tumbleweeds circulating today include Hart's speech. Hart died on June 23, 1946, in Newhall, California at the age of 81. He was buried in Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York.
Dedications
For his contribution to the motion picture industry, William S. Hart has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6363 Hollywood Blvd. In 1975, he was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.As part of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, California, Hart's former home and 260-acre ranch in Newhall is now William S. Hart Park. The William S. Hart High School District as well as William S. Hart Senior High School, both located in the Santa Clarita Valley in the northern part of Los Angeles County, were named in his honor. A Santa Clarita baseball field complex is named in his honor.
The "Range Rider of the Yellowstone," a statue commissioned by Hart and modeled from life, stands on the Rimrocks in front of the airport at Billings Montana. Mr. Hart donated it to the city in 1927, where it remains a memorial to his memory. .
On November 10, 1962, Hart was honored posthumously in an episode of the short-lived The Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Show, a western variety program on ABC.
Published books
After Hart retired from film making he began writing short stories and book-length manuscripts. His published books are:- Pinto Ben and Other Stories, 1919, Britton Publishing Company
- The Golden West Boys, Injun and Whitey, 1920, Grossett & Dunlap
- Injun and Whitey Strike Out for Themselves, 1921, Grossett & Dunlap
- Injun and Whitey to the Rescue, 1922, Grossett & Dunlap
- "Told Under a White Oak Tree", 1922, Houghton Mifflin Co.
- A Lighter of Flames, 1923, Thomas Y. Crowell
- The Order of Chanta Sutas, 1925, unknown publisher
- My Life East and West, 1929, Houghton Mifflin Co.
- Hoofbeats, 1933, Dial Press
- Law on Horseback and Other Stories, 1935, self-published
- And All Points West, 1940, Lacotah Press
Selected filmography
- Ben-Hur - Messala
- His Hour of Manhood - Pete Larson
- Jim Cameron's Wife - Andy Stiles
- The Bargain - Jim Stokes
- Two-Gun Hicks - Two-Gun Hicks
- In the Sage Brush Country - Jim Brandon
- The Bad Buck of Santa Ynez
- The Gringo
- The Scourge of the Desert - Bill Evers
- Mr. 'Silent' Haskins - Lon Haskins
- The Grudge - Rio Ed
- The Sheriff's Streak of Yellow - Sheriff Hale
- The Roughneck - Dave Page
- On the Night Stage - Texas
- The Taking of Luke McVane - Luke McVane
- The Man from Nowhere - Buck Varley - the Man from Nowhere
- Bad Buck' of Santa Ynez - Bad Buck Peters
- The Darkening Trail - Yukon Ed
- The Conversion of Frosty Blake - Frosty Blake
- Tools of Providence - Steve Blake
- The Ruse - 'Bat' Peters
- Cash Parrish's Pal - Cash Parrish
- Knight of the Trail - Jim Treen
- Pinto Ben - Pinto Ben - Boss Rider
- Keno Bates, Liar - Keno Bates
- The Disciple - Jim Houston
- Between Men - Bob White
- Grit
- Hell's Hinges - Blaze Tracy
- The Aryan - Steve Denton
- The Primal Lure - Angus McConnell
- The Apostle of Vengeance - David Hudson
- The Captive God - Chiapa
- The Patriot - Bob Wiley
- The Dawn Maker - Joe Elk
- The Return of Draw Egan - Draw Egan aka William Blake
- The Devil's Double - 'Bowie' Blake
- Truthful Tulliver - Truthful Tulliver
- The Gunfighter - Cliff Hudspeth
- The Desert Man - Jim Alton
- The Square Deal Man - Jack O'Diamonds
- Wolf Lowry - Tom 'Wolf' Lowery
- The Cold Deck - Jefferson 'On-the-Level' Leigh
- All Star Liberty Loan Drive Special for War Effort
- The Silent Man - 'Silent' Budd Marr
- The Narrow Trail - Ice Harding
- Wolves of the Rail - 'Buck' Andrade
- Blue Blazes' Rawden - Blue Blazes Rawden
- The Tiger Man - Hawk Parsons
- Selfish Yates - 'Selfish' Yates
- Shark Monroe - Shark Monroe
- Riddle Gawne - Jefferson 'Riddle' Gawne
- The Border Wireless - Steve Ransom
- Branding Broadway - Robert Sands
- The Lion of the Hills
- Staking His Life - Bud Randall
- Breed of Men - Careless Carmody
- The Poppy Girl's Husband - Hairpin Harry Dutton
- The Money Corral - Lem Beason
- Square Deal Sanderson - Square Deal Sanderson
- Wagon Tracks - Buckskin Hamilton
- John Petticoats - 'Hardwood' John Haynes
- The Toll Gate - Black Deering
- Sand! - Dan Kurrie
- The Cradle of Courage - 'Square' Kelly
- The Testing Block - 'Sierra' Bill
- O'Malley of the Mounted - Sergeant O'Malley
- The Whistle - Robert Evans
- Three Word Brand - Three Word Brand / Governor Marsden / Ben Trego
- White Oak - Oak Miller - A Gambling Man
- Travelin' On - J.B., The Stranger
- Hollywood - Himself
- Wild Bill Hickok - Wild Bill Hickok
- Singer Jim McKee - 'Singer' Jim McKee
- Hello, 'Frisco - Himself
- Tumbleweeds - Don Carver
- Show People - Himself
- Tumbleweeds
William S. Hart Ranch and Museum