Twenty years ago today, on October 25, 1986, the entire nation mourned. Forrest Tucker, the greatest actor who ever lived, passed away from cancer at the young age of 67.
Tuck's full obituary from the Los Angeles Times can be viewed here. Of interest: Milton Berle is quoted, but the article makes no mention of their legendary "contest" to determine, once and for all, Hollywood's most, uh, gifted performer.
Taking Fort Courage to Reno in April 1967 |
HELLFIRE (1949) with Jim "Jock Ewing"Davis |
Lawrence Murphy in CHISUM |
THE ABOMINABLE SNOWMAN (1957) in which he and Peter Cushing lead an expedition searching for the legendary title creature;
THE CRAWLING EYE (1958), perhaps Tuck's most fondly remembered sci-fi flick;
AUNTIE MAME (1958), as Beauregard Burnside, the role that finally made everyone notice his comedic talents; and the fun, melodramatic drive-in sleeper THE McCULLOCHS (1975), Max Baer Jr.'s follow-up to MACON COUNTY LINE in which Tuck shows his dramatic chops as the two-fisted patriarch of a wealthy Texas family. This film is also noted for a ten minute brawl between Tuck and Baer that inspires dozens of wagers, much collateral damage, and a little old lady urging Tuck to "kick him in the balls, Mac".
Always underrated during his career, Forrest Tucker wasn't a "one hit wonder" who picked up an Oscar that had people scratching their heads (a la Broderick Crawford) nor did he receive one of those late-in-life Oscar nominations that was largely a lifetime achievement award (a la Jack Palance, James Coburn). He was, however, one of the original recipients of the Golden Boot award in 1983 for his contributions to the western genre.
Starring in CALIFORNIA PASSAGE (1950) |
Tuck, with Eva Bartok in BREAK IN THE CIRCLE (1957) |
R. I. P, Forrest Meredith Tucker. More reviews forthcoming!
with Allison Hayes (yowza!) in COUNTERPLOT (1959) |
You neglected his sublime, yet assertive performance in COLUMBO: BLUEPRINT FOR MURDER
ReplyDelete(I've also added you to my blogroll, BTW)
Thanks for the add, Gordon, and welcome!
ReplyDeleteAlso available, on COLUMBO: THE COMPLETE FIRST SEASON at that! That's an interesting episode also for the great behind the scenes stories...it was Falk's debut as director (also, I believe his only directing credit for the 1970's run) thanks to his power play with the studio. Levinson and Link had some great info on this in their book STAY TUNED.
It's a shame Tucker was never a COLUMBO murderer, but you're right, he had that Texas millionaire thing down perfectly.
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ReplyDeleteThanks for your post on this fine, underrated actor. I liked Tucker not only in 'F Troop' (always very funny!) but in his Westerns, such as 'Rage at Dawn' with the great Randolph Scott.
ReplyDeleteI just saw Mr. Tucker this week on a MeTV rerun of Bonanza from its penultimate 13th season. His episode is called "Warbonnet", and he played a bar owner who'd made up stories about several things, including how he got an authentic Indian warbonnet in his bar. He's now in a predicament, as the owner of that warbonnet, now an old man with a nearly-grown grandson, has arrived in his town, having saved Little Joe's life. The old man wants his warbonnet back, and he's willing to lose his life for the honor behind it. Is the bar owner willing to do the same? Have you seen this story & reviewed it yet?
ReplyDeleteHi, Jon! I did a mini-review of Warbonnet on the Centennial post last year:
ReplyDeletehttps://hornsection.blogspot.com/2019/02/100-years-of-tuck-his-television-best.html
Solid episode. I only wish he had appeared on BONANZA more often, and I really wish he would have appeared on Dortort's sequel series, THE HIGH CHAPARRAL.
Sequel series; meant to say next series, obviously. At least CHAPARRAL star Linda Cristal appeared with him in Warbonnet.
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