JAMES CAGNEY
(17th July 1899 - 30th March 1986)
James Cagney was born in the Yorkville section of Manhatten,
N.Y.. His father
was a bartender and amateur boxer. The latter, something the young Cagney
developed a life long passion for. As a youth, he had a fine reputation
as a
fighter. He entered show buisness just after World War 1. A fellow employee
at
Wanamakers told him a troupe of vaudevillians where auditioning singers
and
dancers, and paying $35 a week. Cagney auditioned, and although he could
neither
sing or dance, he got the job!
Cagney stayed in vaudeville until 1929, when he moved
to Broadway to star with
Joan Blondell in 'Penny Arcade'. This got him and Blondell an offer to
go to
Hollywood for screen tests, winning him the role in the 1930 film 'Sinners
Holiday'.
Although a very accomplished and versatile actor, Cagney is usually remembered
as
the tough guy and gangster. A role he portrayed phenomenally in such movies
as
'Angels With Dirty Faces', 'Public Enemy', 'White Heat' and 'The Roaring
Twenties'.
In 1942 he had the chance to change personae. He made the movie 'Yankee
Doodle
Dandy', in which he starred as George M Cohan. This enabled him to show
off his
dancing skills and won him an academy award. He and his brother Bill, formed
their
own production company once 'Yankee Doodle' was completed. Cagney made
four
films under it's umbrella between 1943 - 1946 when he returned to Warner
Bros.
1961 sawCagney retire from the movies. He moved to his
800 acre ranch in
Dutchess County, N.Y. with his wife, Frances ('Bill') Willard Cagney. They
had
married in 1921, and remained together until his death. Cagney enjoyed
his retirement,
he was able to relax, read, play tennis, swim, paint, and write poetry.
A far cry from
his gangster image. He did come out of retirement for enough time in 1980,
to make
'Ragtime' with his old friend Pat O'Brian.
The lure of Cagney's portrayals, is that his own personae
seeps through to the
character. However superficially, violent, brutal or downright nasty, it
had an
underlying sensitive and sympathetic side. He was the boy gone bad, who,
with the
right breaks, could havemade good; they rarely came. An excellent example
is 'Angels
With Dirty Faces'. Cagney,the 'brave' gangster and murderer, is hero worshipped
by
the 'Dead End Kids.' At the endof the film and about to be executed, he
remains
defiant. Making him a bigger hero with the youths. His life long friend,
now a priest,
implores him, 'for the sake of the boys', to feign cowardice. Thus he would
lose face
with them, hopefully, preventing them from following his example. Still
defiant, he
goes forhis final walk along the corridor to the electric chair. We cut
to the shadow
of him being strapped into the chair. He is struggling, screaming and crying,
'I don't
want to die! I don't want to die!' Finally going to his death a coward.
We never do find
out if it was for real or for the boys.
Cagney was a master of improvisation too. How can anyone
who's seen it, forget the grapefruit in Mea Clarke's face (Public Enemy).
It was scripted as 'Slaps her with an omelette'! Or the emotionally charged
scene in 'White Heat', where he crawls into his
mother's lap. Both scenes are examples of Cagney's spontaneity.
I had the privilege of meeting Cagney in 1976. He was
with his long time friend Micky
Roony. Seeing those two, elderly, diminutive gentlemen clowning around
together, was
a wonderful site to behold!!
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