Melvyn Douglas (bornMelvyn Edouard Hesselberg, April 5, 1901 – August 4, 1981) was an American actor, whose stage and screen careers spanned from the late 1920s until the early 1980s. He was one of 24 performers to win theTriple Crown of Acting - winning twoAcademy Awards (both in theBest Supporting Actor category), aPrimetime Emmy Award, and aTony Award.
Douglas, in hisautobiography,See You at the Movies (1987), wrote that he was unaware of his Jewish background until later in his youth: "I did not learn about the non-Christian part of my heritage until my early teens." His parents preferred to hide his Jewish heritage. His aunts, on his father's side, told him "the truth" when he was 14. He wrote that he "admired them unstintingly"; they in turn, treated him like a son.[1]
Though his father, a prominent concert pianist, taught music at a succession of colleges in the U.S. and Canada, Douglas never graduated from high school. He took the surname of his maternal grandmother and became known as Melvyn Douglas.[citation needed]
From 1952 to 1961, Douglas made no film appearances, concentrating instead on stage and television work. During November 1952 to January 1953, Douglas starred in theDuMont detective showSteve Randall (Hollywood Off Beat) which then moved toCBS. In the summer of 1953, he briefly hosted the DuMontgame showBlind Date. In the summer of 1959, Douglas hosted eleven original episodes of a CBSWesternanthologytelevision series calledFrontier Justice, a production ofDick Powell'sFour Star Television.
Douglas' final complete screen appearance was in the 1981 horror filmGhost Story. He died before completing all of his scenes for the filmThe Hot Touch (1982); the film had to be edited to compensate for Douglas' incomplete role.[citation needed]
Douglas has two stars on theHollywood Walk of Fame; one for movies located at 6423 Hollywood Boulevard and another for television at 6601 Hollywood Boulevard.[6]
Douglas, as Hesselberg,[7] was married briefly to artist Rosalind Hightower, and they had one child, (Melvyn) Gregory Hesselberg,[8] in 1926.[7] Hesselberg, an artist, is the father of actressIlleana Douglas.[8]
Gahagan Douglas (she began using her husband's name when she entered politics), as a three-termcongresswoman, wasRichard M. Nixon's unsuccessful opponent for theUnited States Senate seat fromCalifornia in1950.[1] Nixon accused Gahagan Douglas of being soft on Communism because of her opposition to theHouse Un-American Activities Committee. Nixon went so far as to infamously call her "pink right down to her underwear". It was Gahagan Douglas who popularized Nixon's epithet nickname "Tricky Dick".[11]
Douglas was a member of the executive committee of the Writers and Artists for Peace in the Middle East, a pro-Israel group, during the 1970s.[12]
The Douglases hired architectRoland Coate to design a home for them in 1938 on a 3-acre (1.2 ha) lot they owned inOutpost Estates, Los Angeles. The result was a one-story, 6,748-square-foot (626.9 m2) home.[13]
The Douglases had two children: Peter Gahagan Douglas (1933) and Mary Helen Douglas (1938).
The couple remained married until Helen Gahagan Douglas's death in 1980 from cancer. Melvyn Douglas died a year later, in 1981, aged 80, frompneumonia and cardiac complications inNew York City at Sloan Kettering Hospital.[14]
^Appleton, Marc (2018).Master Architects of Southern California 1920-1940: Roland E. Coate. Santa Barbara, California: Tailwater Press. pp. 194–197.ISBN9780999666418.
^ Richard Rosen, "Melvyn Douglas Dies at 80,"New York Daily News, August 4, 1981, p. T-4.
Douglas, Melvyn; Tom Arthur (1986).See You at the Movies: The Autobiography of Melvyn Douglas. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.ISBN0-8191-5390-7.