James MacArthur(1937-2010)
- Actor
- Producer
- Soundtrack
In a career spanning more than four decades, James MacArthur developed
a body of work which is wonderfully dynamic in both scope and range.
Portraying everything from crazed killer to stalwart defender of law
and order, frustrated teenager to cynical senior supervisor, he has
appeared in numerous films, television programs, and stage productions
since his career officially began back in 1955. Although he had been
performing in parts during summer stock productions since 1949, making
his stage debut in "The Corn Is Green", his real acting career did not
begin until he starred as the complex and misunderstood teenager in
John Frankenheimer's "Deal a Blow".
Broadcast live on the Climax! (1954)
television anthology series, the program told the story of "Hal
Ditmar", a relatively ordinary youngster on the verge of manhood who
finds himself caught up in a snowballing world of trouble with his
parents, the law, and virtually everyone in authority after a minor
infraction of the rules at a movie theater. The story was so
well-crafted and MacArthur's performance so compelling that a year
later it was remade by Frankenheimer into his first theatrical release,
The Young Stranger (1957). The
movie received much critical acclaim and earned its star a BAFTA
(British Academy of Film and Television Arts) Film Award nomination as
Most Promising Newcomer (1958) and won a film festival in Switzerland.
Next up was the Disney movie of
Conrad Richter's novel,
The Light in the Forest (1958).
Set in the late 18th century in the burgeoning United States, it told
the tale of a young man who had been kidnapped by Indians as a baby and
raised as the son of a chief. A respected and accepted member of the
tribe, the boy, known as "True Son", is ripped away from the only life
he has ever known and forced to return to his biological parents due to
a treaty signed by people of whom he has no knowledge and who cannot
possibly have any interest in his individual welfare. His subsequent
struggles to find out exactly where he fits in and to gain the trust
and sanction of his new community are told in a way which is as
wrenching and relevant to today's society as it was then. The
corollaries between this story and the custody battles which seem to
occur with alarming frequency in our own time are strong and thought
provoking. It seems the question regarding when in a child's life his
biological parentage begins to be outweighed by the environment in
which he is being raised is one which has yet to be answered. The depth
with which MacArthur imbued the role makes his performance both
truthful and unforgettable. Before its release in theaters,
The Light in the Forest (1958)
was preceded by three more appearances in live teleplays, including
another outstanding performance in the
Studio One (1948) production of
"Tongues of Angels" as "Ben Adams", a young man with a devastating
stuttering problem who pretends to be a deaf/mute in order to hide his
infirmity. A string of meaty roles quickly followed, including the
Disney classic films Kidnapped (1960),
Third Man on the Mountain (1959)
and
Swiss Family Robinson (1960);
television programs such as
The Untouchables (1959),
Bus Stop (1961) and
Wagon Train (1957); and two more
live teleplays. As sociopathic killer and racketeer "Johnny Lubin" in
The Untouchables (1959)
episode "Death for Sale", MacArthur for the first time portrayed an
unsympathetic character. The heart-stopping realism of his performance
provided definitive proof of his abilities as a multifaceted and
talented actor. In what he described in one interview as his first
"mature" role, he then appeared as a doctor-in-the-making in
The Interns (1962), turning in a fine
performance as a somewhat naive young man who grows up rather quickly
when presented with several tough choices and life-defining situations.
After that came more television, the underrated yet stirring film,
Cry of Battle (1963), and
Spencer's Mountain (1963), the
highly successful precursor to the popular television series
The Waltons (1972). Once again,
in both films, MacArthur played young men whose lives are changed by
circumstances beyond their control and who must dig deep within
themselves to find the inner strength and fortitude to deal with those
events. Having by now amassed an impressive list of film and television
credits in addition to stage performances on Broadway and other venues,
MacArthur then turned to the pivotal role of "Ensign Ralston" in the
tense and nerve-wracking Cold War yarn,
The Bedford Incident (1965).
His performance as the eager to-please and earnest young officer
carried a subtlety and intensity hard to believe of someone not yet
thirty years old. The role of "William Ashton" in the light-hearted
romance,
The Truth About Spring (1965)
came next, almost immediately followed by yet another coming-of-age
performance as "Lt. Weaver" in the blockbuster WWII saga,
Battle of the Bulge (1965).
Westerns and war dramas predominated the next phase of MacArthur's
career with appearances in television programs such as
Branded (1965),
12 O'Clock High (1964),
Gunsmoke (1955),
Combat! (1962),
Hondo (1967),
Bonanza (1959), and
Death Valley Days (1952),
in addition to the films
Ride Beyond Vengeance (1966),
"Mosby's Marauders" (1966) and
Hang 'Em High (1968). It was his
appearance in this last movie that would ultimately lead him into the
role of "Dan Williams" on
Hawaii Five-O (1968). When
Leonard Freeman found himself looking
for a replacement to play the complex sidekick to
Jack Lord's powerful "Steve
McGarrett", he went looking for the young actor he remembered from just
two or three days' work on his low-budget spaghetti Western. The
juxtaposition of MacArthur's still-boyish good looks with his ability
to bring a convincing toughness and sincerity to the role made him one
of the best-remembered and well-admired actors of 1960s and 1970s
popular television. Even today, more than twenty years after the
program stopped production, it is broadcast in syndication in markets
all over the world. Its "Book 'im, Danno" catchphrase is still as much
a part of our popular culture as that famed line from another show of
the same era: "Beam me up, Scotty". Departing "Five-O" prior to its
12th and final season, MacArthur's appearances became less frequent,
yet still memorable. He was featured in such popular television shows
as The Love Boat (1977),
Vega$ (1978),
Fantasy Island (1977), and
Murder, She Wrote (1984)
and starred in two made-for-television movies:
Irwin Allen's
The Night the Bridge Fell Down (1980)
and
Alcatraz: The Whole Shocking Story (1980).
His poignant portrayal of hapless "Walt Stomer" in the latter provided
a fine example that his skills as an actor had not waned in the 25
years since that first television appearance. He concentrated on the
stage for a while then, performing in productions such as "Arsenic and
Old Lace", "A Bedfull of Foreigners" and "Love Letters", as well as the
occasional live appearance at charity and celebrity sporting events. In
1998, after nearly a decade away from television screens, he took up
the role of "Frank Del Rio" in the Family Channel movie
Storm Chasers: Revenge of the Twister (1998).
With the new century, MacArthur returned to a more active professional
schedule, continuing to make a number of personal appearances to sign
autographs and greet fans, as well as several speaking engagements such
as northeast Ohio's "One Book, Two Counties: An Evening With James
MacArthur", The Cinema Audio Society Annual Awards Banquet and
AdventureCon in Knoxville, Tennessee. In addition, he has been featured
in several television specials and interview programs, including Emme &
Friends,
Entertainment Tonight (1981),
Inside TVLand, and Christopher Closeup. The increasing popularity of
the DVD market has seen the re-release of
Swiss Family Robinson (1960)
with a new behind-the-scenes documentary narrated by MacArthur and a
lengthy on-screen interview covering many aspects of his career.
Planned for re-release in July 2003, the 1956 version of
Anastasia (1956) is expected to include
an on-screen interview with MacArthur discussing his mother,
Helen Hayes, and her work in that
movie. April 2003 marked his return to the stage as "Father Madison" in
Joe Moore's original play Dirty Laundry. On 6 November 2003, the Hawaii
International Film Festival chose James MacArthur and
Hawaii Five-O (1968) as the
recipient of their annual "Film in Hawaii" award, an honor both
well-deserved and especially significant, coming as it did from the
people and the State of Hawaii. Plans were being made to feature
MacArthur in a new television series set in the Hawaiian Islands,
though nothing more definitive had ever been arranged.