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James
Dean was born February 8, 1931, in Marion, Indiana, to Winton and
Mildred Dean. His father, a dental technician, moved the family
to Los Angeles when Jimmy was five. He returned to the Midwest after
his mother passed away and was raised by his aunt and uncle on their
Indiana farm. After graduating from high school, he returned to
California where he attended Santa Monica Junior College and UCLA.
James Dean began acting with James Whitmore's acting workshop, appeared
in occasional television commercials, and played several roles in
films and on stage. In the winter of 1951, he took Whitmore's advice
and moved to New York to pursue a serious acting career. He appeared
in seven television shows, in addition to earning his living as
a busboy in the theater district, before he won a small part in
a Broadway play entitled See the Jaguar.
In a letter to his family in Fairmount
in 1952, he wrote:
"I have made great strides
in my craft. After months of auditioning, I am very proud to announce
that I am a member of the Actors Studio. The greatest school of
the theater. It houses great people like Marlon Brando, Julie Harris,
Arthur Kennedy, Mildred Dunnock...Very few get into it, and it is
absolutely free. It is the best thing that can happen to an actor.
I am one of the youngest to belong. If I can keep this up and nothing
interferes with my progress, one of these days I might be able to
contribute something to the world." [He worked with Arthur
Kennedy in See the Jaguar; he would later star with Julie Harris
in East of Eden and Mildred Dunnock in Padlocks, a 1954 episode
of the CBS television program Danger.]
Dean continued his study at the
Actors Studio, played short stints in television dramas, and returned
to Broadway in The Immoralist (1954). This last appearance resulted
in a screen test at Warner Brothers for the part of Cal Trask in
the screen adaptation John Steinbeck's novel East of Eden. He then
returned to New York where he appeared in four more television dramas.
After winning the role of Jim Stark in 1955's Rebel Without A Cause,
he moved to Hollywood.
In February, he visited his family
in Fairmount with photographer Dennis Stock before returning to
Los Angeles. In March, Jimmy celebrated his Eden success by purchasing
his first Porsche and entered the Palm Springs Road Races. He began
shooting Rebel Without A Cause that same month and Eden opened nationwide
in April. In May, he entered the Bakersfield Race and finished shooting
Rebel. He entered one more race, in Santa Barbara, before he joined
the cast and crew of Giant in Marfa, Texas.
James Dean had one of the most spectacularly
brief careers of any screen star. In just more than a year, and
in only three films, Dean became a widely admired screen personality,
a personification of the restless American youth of the mid-50's,
and an embodiment of the title of one of his film Rebel Without
A Cause. En route to compete in a race in Salinas, James Dean was
killed in a highway accident on September 30, 1955. James Dean was
nominated for two Academy Awards, for his performances in East of
Eden and Giant. Although he only made three films, they were made
in just over one year's time. Joe Hyams, in the James Dean biography
Little Boy Lost, sums up his career:
"..There is no simple explanation
for why he has come to mean so much to so many people today. Perhaps
it is because, in his acting, he had the intuitive talent for expressing
the hopes and fears that are a part of all young people... In some
movie magic way, he managed to dramatize brilliantly the questions
every young person in every generation must resolve."
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