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Famous Like Me > Actor > P > Dick Powell

Profile of Dick Powell on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Dick Powell  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 14th November 1904
   
Place of Birth: Mountain View, Arkansas, USA
   
Profession: Actor
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
Madeleine Carroll and Powell in On the Avenue (1937)

Dick Powell (1904-1963)

The singer, actor, producer, and director Dick Powell was born as Richard Ewing Powell in Mountain View, Arkansas on November 14, 1904. He attended Little Rock College in Arkansas, before starting his entertainment career as a singer in his own band. He was signed by Warner Bros. in 1932 and made his film debut as a singing bandleader in Blessed Event. He went on to star as a boyish crooner in movie musicals such as 42nd Street, Footlight Parade, Gold Diggers of 1933, Dames, Flirtation Walk, and On the Avenue, often appearing opposite Ruby Keeler and Joan Blondell.

Powell desperately wanted to expand his range but Warner Bros. wouldn’t let him. Finally, reaching his forties and knowing that his young romantic leading man days were behind him, he lobbied to play the lead in Double Indemnity. He lost out to Fred MacMurray, another Hollywood nice guy. MacMurray’s success, however, fueled Powell’s resolve to pursue projects with greater range and in 1944 he found himself cast in the first of a series of films noir this time as Private Detective Philip Marlowe in Murder, My Sweet, directed by Edward Dmytryk. The film was a big hit. Dick Powell had successfully reinvented himself as an actor.

The following year, Dmytryk and Powell re-teamed to make Cornered, a gripping, post-WWII thriller that helped define the film noir style.

He became a popular tough-guy lead, appearing in movies such as Johnny O'Clock and The Tall Target. Even when he appeared in lighter fare such as The Reformer and the Redhead and Mrs. Mike, he never sang in his later roles.

From 1949 until 1953 Powell played the lead role in the NBC radio theater production Richard Diamond, Private Detective. His character in the 30 minute weekly was a likeable private detective with a quick wit.

In the 1950s Powell produced and directed several B-movies and was one of the founders of Four Star Television, appearing in and supervising several shows for that company.

Powell died on January 2, 1963 from stomach cancer, aged 58. He was one of many of the cast and crew of the 1956 movie, The Conqueror, who died from the same disease. The Conqueror had been filmed in Utah near an atomic test site and it's been rumored, however never proven, that the film's shooting location may have been the cause of the cancers the crew were inflicted with.

He is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.

Personal Life

Dick Powell was married three times:

  • 1) Mildred Maund (1925-1927)
  • 2) Actress Joan Blondell, September 19, 1936-1944), with whom he had two children, Ellen and Norman.
  • 3) Actress/singer June Allyson, (August 19, 1945-January 2, 1963), with whom he had two children, Pamela (adopted) and Richard Powell, Jr.

Filmography

Dick Powell and Claire Trevor in Murder, My Sweet (1944)

As Actor:

  • Blessed Event (1932)
  • Big City Blues (1932) (voice only)
  • Too Busy to Work (1932)
  • The Road Is Open Again(1933) (short subject)
  • The King's Vacation (1933)
  • 42nd Street (1933)
  • Hollywood on Parade No. 9 (1933) (short subject)
  • Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933)
  • Footlight Parade (1933)
  • College Coach (1933)
  • Convention City (1933)
  • Hollywood Newsreel (1934) (short subject)
  • And She Learned About Dames (1934) (short subject)
  • Wonder Bar (1934)
  • Twenty Million Sweethearts (1934)
  • Dames (1934)
  • Happiness Ahead (1934)
  • Flirtation Walk (1934)
  • A Dream Comes True (1935) (short subject)
  • Gold Diggers of 1935 (1935)
  • Broadway Gondolier (1935)
  • Page Miss Glory (1935)
  • A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935)
  • Shipmates Forever (1935)
  • Thanks a Million (1935)
  • Colleen (1936)
  • Hearts Divided (1936)
  • Stage Struck (1936)
  • Gold Diggers of 1937 (1936)
  • On the Avenue (1937)
  • The Singing Marine (1937)
  • Varsity Show (1937)
  • Hollywood Hotel (1937)
  • For Auld Lang Syne (1938) (short subject)
  • Cowboy from Brooklyn (1938)
  • Hard to Get (1938)
  • Going Places (1938)
  • Hollywood Hobbies (1939) (short subject)
  • Naughty But Nice (1939)
  • I Want a Divorce (1940)
  • Christmas in July (1940)
  • Model Wife (1941)
  • In the Navy (1941)
  • Star Spangled Rhythm (1942)
  • Happy Go Lucky (1943)
  • Three Cheers for the Girls (1943)
  • Riding High (1943)
  • True to Life (1943)
  • Meet the People (1944)
  • It Happened Tomorrow (1944)
  • Murder, My Sweet (1944)
  • Cornered (1945)
  • Johnny O'Clock (1947)
  • To the Ends of the Earth (1948)
  • Pitfall (1948)
  • Station West (1948)
  • Rogues' Regiment (1948)
  • Mrs. Mike (1949)
  • The Reformer and the Redhead (1950)
  • Right Cross (1950)
  • Cry Danger (1951)
  • The Tall Target (1951)
  • You Never Can Tell (1951)
  • Callaway Went Thataway (1951) (scenes deleted)
  • The Bad and the Beautiful (1952)
  • Susan Slept Here (1954)

As Director:

  • Split Second (1953)
  • The Conqueror (1956) (also producer)
  • You Can't Run Away from It (1956) (also producer)
  • The Enemy Below (1957) (also producer)
  • The Hunters (1958) (also producer)

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Dick Powell