MORE ABOUT SPENCER TRACY

In the early 1930s, Spencer Tracy's truculent attitude and thunderingly aberrant behavior
were his only defenses against studio power brokers who cast him as stereotypical con
men, buddies and gangsters. But by the end of the decade the actor's on-screen style--
seamless naturalism and subtle inflections--had proved the ticket to stardom. A Tracy
performance was always more than just action; there was always an undercurrent of mental
activity beneath the surface. Stanley Kramer, who directed him in several films, recalls: "I was
afraid to say, 'Spencer, you're a great actor. He'd only say, 'Now what the hell kind of
thing is that to come out with?' He wanted to know it; he needed to know it. But he didn't
want you to say it--just think it. And maybe that was one of the reasons he was a great
actor. He thought and listened better than anyone in the history of motion pictures. A silent
close-up reaction of Spencer Tracy said it all." Tracy's seemingly effortless approach earned
him the respect of his peers, helping him to become one of the most distinguished and
venerated actors of his generation.Tracy's early childhood was one of intense rebelliousness--
he was expelled from a total of fifteen grade schools. By the time he reached high school,
he had had a change of attitude, achieving good grades and even aspiring to the priesthood.
But at Ripon College Tracy became involved with college theatrical productions, and before
long he found himself in New York City, enrolled in the American Academy of Dramatic Arts.

The 1920s were a decade of struggle, as he fended off poverty by taking any acting job
that came along, from traveling road companies and one-nighters to repertory work in
towns as far-flung as White Plains and Grand Rapids. He first achieved Broadway notice
in "Yellow" (1926) and critical and audience praise in "Baby Cyclone" (1927). But three
flops in a row in 1929 ("Conflict," "Nigger Rich" and "Veneer") saw his career come to a
standstill. In 1930, Tracy appeared in two low-budget short films: "Taxi Talks," as a gangster,
and "Hard Guy," as a World War I veteran. But the films were unimpressive and Tracy still
struggled until "The Last Mile." Playing killer John Mears in this Broadway crime drama,
Tracy had his first major success. One audience member impressed by Tracy's performance
was director John Ford, who persuaded Fox to sign him for Ford's upcoming film "Up the River"
(1930).

"Up the River," a comic crime film, was a hit for Fox and Tracy was put under contract.
But before long Tracy despaired of the studio's ever casting him in the right vehicles.
Although he received critical praise for "Quick Millions" (1931), "Society Girl" (1932),
and "20,000 Years in Sing Sing" (1933), most of his films were financial failures and
Fox was reluctant to promote him in quality features. A frustrated Tracy responded with
heavy drinking, fighting with producers and directors and disappearing from film sets for
days at a time. Fox did cast him in its prestige production, "The Power and the Glory
(1933), Tracy's most challenging role yet, as a ruthless business tycoon, but the film's
meager box-office convinced Fox that Tracy would never be a box-office star and he
played out his contract in second-rate productions.

Although Louis B. Mayer felt Spencer Tracy lacked box-office fire, Irving Thalberg pushed
for Tracy to come to MGM, feeling that he could make it at a studio top-heavy with female
stars. Signing with MGM in 1935, Tracy was featured the next year in two successes,
"San Francisco" and "Libeled Lady," although more as a glorified supporting player to Clark
Gable and William Powell than a force who could carry his own film. Tracy more than proved
his star power and earned industry respect with back-to-back Academy Award-winning
performances in "Captains Courageous" (1937) and "Boys Town" (1938). Having proved his
mettle in dramatic roles, Tracy solidified his reputation for versatility by co-starring in a long-
running series of romantic comedies with Katharine Hepburn, beginning with "Woman of the
Year" (1942) and continuing with such classics as "State of the Union" (1948), "Adam's Rib"
(1949), and "Pat and Mike" (1952). Tracy's unsophisticated gruffness provided a perfect
counterpoint to Hepburn's ethereal cosmopolitanism.

Tracy continued at MGM until problems developed on the set of "Tribute to a Bad Man" (1956),
where his imperious and confusing behavior caused the production to shut down. Director Robert
Wise was forced to fire Tracy from the film, effectively ending his twenty years with the studio.

In declining health, Tracy became reclusive, never venturing from his rented home. But he
developed a friendship with director Stanley Kramer, who guided him through the final decadeof his life in such crowning performances as the Clarence Darrow-inspired lawyer in "Inherit the Wind" (1960) and the trans
scendental judge in "Judgment at Nuremberg" (1961). Suffering from emphysema, Tracy made
his last screen appearance opposite Hepburn in Kramer's "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" (1967).
Struggling through the production, Tracy died two weeks after filming was completed.

Tracy's presence was a strong, quiet, reliable one. He gave the American cinema some of its
most enduring and undeterred portrayals of stolid honesty and thoughtful scrupulousness. The
inner strength and self-assurance he projected are in stark contrast to the cinema's current stars.

Family
daughter:Louise Tracy
father:John Edward Tracy
mother:Carrie Tracy
son:John Tracy

Education
Marquette Academy Milwaukee, Wisconsin 0
American Academy of Dramatic Arts New York, New York 0
Ripon College Ripon, Wisconsin 1921

Companion
Hedy Lamarr.,
Katharine Hepburn.,
Loretta Young.,
Louise Treadwell.wife,

Awards
British Film Festival Best Actor Award "Guess Who's Coming To Dinner" 1968
Cannes Film Festival Best Performance Award "Bad Day at Black Rock" 1955
Golden Globe Award Best Actor (Drama) "The Actress" 1953
National Board of Review Award Best Acting "Boys Town" 1938
Oscar Best Actor "Boys Town" 1938
Oscar Best Actor "Captains Courageous" 1937

Milestones
1967 Last film, "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" (Tracy died two weeks after production;
awarded posthumous Oscar nomination)
1945 Returned to Broadway stage in Robert Sherwood's "The Rugged Path"
1942 First screen pairing with Katharine Hepburn in "Woman of the Year"
1937 - 1938 First actor to win two Academy Awards as "Best Actor" in succession
1935 Joined MGM until contract terminated in 1956
1930 During Broadway run of "The Last Mile", made several talking short subjects for Vitaphone
and four unsuccessful screen tests for major studios
1930 Feature film acting debut in "Up the River"
1930 Signed by Fox Pictures for a five-year contract
1922 Moved to NYC
1922 Broadway debut, first as a walk-on, then a speaking part in Theatre Guild production of Karel
Capek's "R.U.R."
Before college, enlisted in Navy with boyhood friend, Pat O'Brien at age 17

http://www.hollywood.com/celebs/fulldetail/id/196686




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