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![]() Academy Award winner. Acclaimed actress. Artist. Mother. Jane Wyman has done it all. She has amassed a superb body of work, from her Academy Award winning performance in Johnny Belinda as a tragic victim, to her triumphant swansong as powerful and successful Angela Channing on Falcon Crest, but most notably, she has become a legend, all the while maintaining an intriguing silence. On January 4, 1914, in Saint Joseph, Missouri, Sarah Jane Fulks, as Wyman was christened, was born. The daughter of Richard D. Fulks and Emma Reise, Wyman grew up with an older brother and sister. Her parents were well into their middle years and her brother and sister were significantly older than her, circumstances that have been suggested as explaining Wyman's isolation from the outside world. By all accounts, Wyman grew up in an unhappy and humourless household, and later told Guidepost Magazine in 1964, that "shyness is not a small problem; it can cripple the whole personality. It crippled mine for many years. As a child, my only solution to the problem of shyness was to hide, to make myself as small and insignificant as possible. All through grade school I was a well-mannered little shadow who never spoke above a whisper."
In a little known moment, Wyman fell in love with and married Eugene Wyman while still in her late teens. Wyman has never talked about this event but it's understood it was dissolved in less than a month when it ended in heartbreak. The exact circumstances surrounding the relationship are shrouded in mystery, confidants of Wyman who are willing to talk freely about her reportedly clam up upon mention of Eugene Wyman. Whatever the circumstances, Sarah Jane Fulks adapted the stage name 'Jane Wyman' and in 1932 Wyman landed her first role in the chorus of The Kid From Spain. Bits and chorus-girl stints in several movies followed, including Rumba, All the King's Horses, and Stolen Harmony. In 1936 Wyman scored a bit part in the William Powell-Carole Lombard screwball classic, My Man Godfrey. "I was twenty two; that was damned late to be starting at the bottom in youth-crazy Hollywood; other girls had made it at seventeen; the camera loved fresh faces - but that bit in Godfrey raised my spirits none the less." Wyman's spirits plummeted when the picture came out and her part was left on the cutting room floor, but the bit part got her a stock contract at Warner Bros in May of 1936. Small parts followed (including The King and the Chorus Girl where she was billed fifth). After another small part in The Singing Marine, Wyman got her first leading role opposite Kenny Baker in Mr. Dodd Takes the Air in 1937. Public Wedding, with William Hopper came next. Wyman completed several other movies in leading roles while on loan to Universal and Columbia, before Wyman met a young actor named Ronald Reagan, a Warner Bros. hopeful at the time. Wyman was awe-struck by Reagan, but something stood in her way. She was a married woman. She had met Myron Futterman, a wealthy, middle-aged clothing manufacturer from New Orleans, in 1936, when, rumour had it, she party-girled at the studio's behest to entertain visiting entrepreneurs from the hinterlands. Futterman shortly proved himself to be the wrong man for her. Their interests diverged crucially. A little over a year after their elopement, they separated - later to divorce.
By the early 1940s, Warner Brothers were not recognizing Wyman's talent and she was handed roles in forgettable movies. Her small part in Hollywood Canteen in 1944 saw her only scene ever with Bette Davis. After unfulfilling roles at Warners, Wyman had the opportunity to make movie-goers take note while on loan to Paramount. The Lost Weekend was surrounded with controversy along with social relevance, it's central theme of an alcoholic in a shocking downward spiral simply was not done in Hollywood at the time. Ray Milland broke his own stereotype to play serious drama, and likewise, Jane Wyman was freed from her title as 'perky entertainer'. "It changed my whole life," Wyman later said of the movie. The movie was a critical success, with Milland winning an Academy Award, and Wyman gaining much notice for her dramatic role in the movie. The following year Wyman and Reagan adopted a son, Michael.
Success in The Yearling did not translate to any great opportunities for Wyman immediately thereafter. Her roles in Magic Town with Jimmy Stewart and Cheyenne with Dennis Morgan were limited by the material. But all was not lost, around the corner was a role that offered her unparalleled creative dynamism. The role of a deaf mute in Johnny Belinda certainly cememted Wyman's status as a top Hollywood star and actress.
Co-starring with Lew Ayres and Agnes Moorehead, Wyman worked hard on her performance. She spent months studying the deaf, scrutinizing their mannerisms, their expressions, especially the look in their eyes, which she described as "searching, wandering, vacant in a way but lit up, somehow." Jack Warner held up release of the picture convinced it was too morbid. When it was finally released, months after production finished, and turned out to be a smash hit, critically and commercially, Wyman made Warner take out a trade ad, in which he profusely congratulated the cast, crew, and all connected with Johnny Belinda.
It was a period of great professional success, but was to be the end of her marriage to Reagan. Two years earlier, Wyman and Reagan were devastated when Wyman gave birth prematurely to a baby girl, who died within hours, while Reagan was in hospital after contracting neumonia. It was the beginning of the end. Wyman had become inconsolable and reclusive. She threw herself into her work and during the filming of Johnny Belinda, Wyman and Lew Ayres, despite not liking each other initially, became very close, while Reagan was embroiled in the Screen Actors Guild. Wyman announced it was over, letting it be known that Reagan was patronizing and indifferent to her career efforts. The divorce was finalised in 1949 and soon Wyman began seeing Lew Ayres again.
Within a week of her return from England, Wyman went to work on The Glass Menagerie, playing the fragile cripple, Laura, who lives in an imaginary world of small glass animals and who must cope with the overly anxious and aggressive efforts of her mother, Gertrude Lawrence, to make of her what she herself once was, a "belle of the ball" in Mississipi. A role opposite Bing Crosby in Here Comes the Groom followed. Wyman then accepted a lead role in the dramatic The Blue Veil, a 1951 hit that saw Wyman's character age from twenty to seventy, and which also awarded her another Oscar nomination. When Wyman was contracted out to Columbia to work on Let's Do It Again, she met Freddie Karger, a Columbia pianist and composer, and the couple wed in Santa Barbara in 1952. Trouble began shortly after with Wyman's salary and social status being above Karger's, which made him feel inferior. Separations and reconciliatons followed all through 1953 and 1954 in bewildering tandem, and finally Wyman threw in the towel with a divorce in 1954, where Wyman said in the suit that Karger had a fierce temper and threatened her by throwing furniture around. Devastated and embarassed at her fourth marital failure, Wyman began taking instruction in the Roman Catholic faith after being influenced by close friend Loretta Young. Seven years after Wyman's divorce to Karger, she remarried him in 1961, buoyed by his conversion to Catholicism. The marriage lasted four years but again broke up due to career incompatibilities. Wyman was never to remarry. "I guess I just don't have a talent for it," she told friends after the second Karger divorce. "Some women just aren't the marrying kind - or anyway, not the permanently marrying kind, and I'm one of them." Karger and Wyman remained friends.
In 1955 Wyman turned to television when she took over as president of the company that produced TV's Fireside Theatre, an anthology series that had already been a going concern for seven years. As chief policy implementer, she announced that that series would offer a variety of comedy and drama, and shortly thereafter, the name was changed to Jane Wyman Presents the Fireside Theatre. "I'm having the time of my life, even while working harder than ever before," she said. The show continued until 1959 when it was cancelled, and she invested further in friendships with Loretta Young and Barbara Stanwyck. Wyman continued with movies, including Holiday for Lovers and her acclaimed role in Pollyanna, alongside Hayley Mills. Television guest stints followed, interspersed with more movie roles. Good friend and long-time co-star Agnes Moorehead said of the Wyman of the mid-sixties, "In some ways I think it was the most contented period of her life. The intense careerism had mellowed and lessened; she had her good friendships, her rewarding sessions with paintbrush and canvas, her pleasure in her developing teenage children. I think she had given up her illusions about men, and the kind of life she hoped to live with one. She had come to realise, in a sense, that she was her own best company - and understood herself better than any other human being ever would." Her last movie role was in the poorly received How To Commit Marriage in 1969, alongside Bob Hope, Jackie Gleason, Tim Matheson and Tina Louise. Guest roles on TV continued throughout the seventies, on My Three Sons, The Love Boat, The Jim Nabors Hour, The Bold Ones and The Mike Douglas Show. In 1971 Wyman starred alongside Dean Stockwell in a movie of the week, The Failing of Raymond. Wyman then co-starred with Lindsay Wagner in The Incredible Journey of Dr. Meg Laurel. In what looked to be her last days of acting, Wyman made a guest appearance in Charlie's Angels. Of her appearance in the series, a reviewer noted: "That a first-class actress such as this should have to bother not only with ludicrous plot situations but with ludicrously untalented, however pretty, people around her seems a desecration in artistic terms. It is time that this fine veteran with proven abilities of purest gold were given the material eminently due her."
Wyman then fretted about her character, Angela Channing. "After I told them I was plenty old enough and had enough gray hair without putting on that dreadful wig," she told an interviewer, "I decided to do something about Angela. Not only was she too mean and vicious, but she was just plain boring. I wanted Angie to be an interesting character. She's a tough as nails businesswoman in every sense of the word - but the trouble with the pilot was that she was just too nasty. And the name of the show was so awful that we were desperate for ideas." Wyman and writer Earl Hamner, who had done the successful TV series The Waltons, kept the midnight oil burning thinking up new lines, situations, and general ideas. "Jane was tough - but she was also creative, and vastly experienced," Hamner said later. "We didn't always agree on everything, but I respected her intelligent insights, and I understood where she was coming from." Wyman had no intention of letting Angela Channing become a sort of J.R. Ewing of the wine business: "I feel I'm representing all women in business. I may come off as a hard, tough character at first, but I want Angie to show she's also capable of love."
And that is how Wyman, and Angela Channing, remained throughout Falcon Crest's nine-year run. Today Jane Wyman is enjoying her isolation, appearing in arthritis benefits occasionally, but not interested in acting again, after her final role guest-starring on Jane Seymour's Dr. Quinn: Medicine Woman, Wyman is content to keep looking to the future, an autobiography the last thing on her mind. "I'm a today lady," she has said. She's also a legend.
This feature based in part on Lawrence J. Quirk's Jane Wyman, The Actress and the Woman, published by Dembner Books, New York, USA, 1986.
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