Peck was a link to the ‘golden age’
- Share via
With the passing of Gregory Peck, Hollywood’s roster of living
legends is just about exhausted.
Peck was one of the last links to the movies’ “golden age” of the
1940s and ‘50s, when its stars were larger than life, at least in the
eyes of their fans. He was also an actor of enormous talent and
range, one who was never content playing stalwart, incorruptible
heroes exclusively.
He lived long enough to see his Atticus Fitch character from
1962’s “To Kill a Mockingbird” named the top movie hero of all time
in a televised special that aired just a week before his death. He
could well have finished first in the villain category for his
depiction of evil incarnate in “The Boys From Brazil.”
That honor went to Anthony Hopkins’ Hannibal Lecter in “The
Silence of the Lambs.” Gregory Peck occupied a rare plateau among the
Hollywood greats, one on which performers existed by virtue of their
ability, not their notoriety. This level of greatness tempered by
modesty was shared by a very few actors, most of whom (James Stewart,
Henry Fonda, Jack Lemmon) have since shuffled off this mortal coil.
It didn’t hurt, of course, that Peck was the physical epitome of a
movie star when he began his career in the mid-1940s in such diverse
assignments as “Spellbound” and “Duel in the Sun.” But it was
“Gentlemen’s Agreement” in 1947 that chiseled his image into the
consciousness of movie fans and dealt a swift blow to anti-Semitism
in America.
Peck’s career flourished with such movies as “Roman Holiday,” “The
Man in the Gray Flannel Suit,” “Moby Dick,” “On the Beach,” “The Guns
of Navarone” and “Cape Fear” before “Mockingbird” came along and
thrust him onto Oscar’s stage. But perhaps his most important work
came in the 1970s in the guise of two historical figures -- Douglas
MacArthur in “MacArthur” and Josef Mengele in “The Boys From Brazil.”
In the latter movie, he co-starred with Laurence Olivier -- who
played a fiendish Nazi in “Marathon Man,” but was a Nazi hunter this
time -- squaring off with Peck’s Mengele in a memorable climactic
scene in which the latter character became dog chow for a pack of
Dobermans. It may have been a supreme fabrication, but it’s still a
throat catcher to watch.
Like most great movie actors, Peck began his career on the stage.
A native of La Jolla, he helped found the La Jolla Playhouse with
fellow rising stars Dorothy McGuire and Mel Ferrer, and continued to
support that theater even into his declining years. His last major
movie role came a dozen years ago as the president of a
takeover-targeted wire and cable company in “Other People’s Money.”
Few actors have had Gregory Peck’s effect on audiences, and fewer
yet are still around to accept our veneration. Richard Widmark and
Charlton Heston fit that description, but their number continues to
diminish.
*
They say that deaths of famous people happen in threes, so after
Gregory Peck and David Brinkley departed within hours of each other,
I was waiting for that third shoe to drop.
This week, it did. We lost one of the greatest stage actors of all
time when Hume Cronyn succumbed just a month short of his 92nd
birthday.
Cronyn left behind a distinguished stage and screen career, much
of it intertwined with his wife, Jessica Tandy, who preceded him in
death in 1994. Their shining hour together was “The Gin Game,”
performed on Broadway and televised by PBS to share with all
audiences.
In the 1970s, Cronyn played Captain Queeg in “The Caine Mutiny
Court-Martial,” which I reviewed at the Ahmanson Theater in Los
Angeles.
He might have been, at that time, a bit long in the tooth for that
role, but he was brilliant, nevertheless.
Losing Hume Cronyn and Gregory Peck in the same week leaves a
gaping hole in our stage and screen industry.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.