James Dean
James Dean, the acting rebel without a cause, was born in Marion, Indiana
on
February 9, 1931. His parents were Winton Dean and Mildred Dean.
During his
first six years of his life he and his family lived in Marion
Indiana. Because
of a military transfer between his father and the military
he moved to
California. His father was a dentist and performed his
practices in the
military. There his mother became ill and died when he was
very young at the age
of nine. He claimed to not have known why she died but
he said it was probably
the reason he got where he was because it changed his
direction. James led a
talented life where he played the violin, tap danced,
and played in concerts. He
also loved art very much and wanted it to be a
part of his life which is why he
joined acting. He loved drama because it was
a part of art. Many including his
family criticized him for his ambitions but
that did not stop him from being the
successful. He always was doing things
that involved some kind of art, sculpting
and molting things with his hands
and that was just the beginning of it. He
always felt his life was devoted to
art and dramatics. When he was still young
he went to go live with his uncle
back in Indiana. He lost interest in the
violin and dancing but not the art
interest and ability. Outside of his
aptitude, he was also doing other things
while living on a farm. He was involved
in farming, sports, science, geology,
coaching ,and teaching music. He felt very
open to things. He also loved the
idea of being a mechanic with motorcycles. He
worked on them a lot and rode
them. He was a racer and owned a motorcycle and a
bicycle. When he was not
doing that he engaged in athletics which he thought
were the heartbeat of
every American boy. Dean also like to travel. By the time
he was in High
School he had been in every state west of Indiana. While living
in Indiana,
Dean did not like much of his farm life. One thing he did like was
the
constant opportunity of getting recreation. He was always doing
things
everywhere. When starting to get in athletics, he would play
basketball in a
barn close to his farm where older guys would play with him.
He would also play
on a trapeze there when he was young. People around him
involved his childhood
always described him as a young man who could catch on
to things quickly. His
uncle said that you would teach him to do things and
the next week he would do
it better than you. He was taught to use a revolver
once by his father and
surprised him when he was shooting better than him on
the first day. One mistake
they claimed to have made during his childhood was
teaching him to use the
trapeze where he lost his front teeth and had to wear
false ones for the rest of
his life. In High school Dean was a basketball
star. He played for a school
called Fairmont High school. He was their
leading scorer. He had brought them to
beat many teams. Dean was usually
athletic with all of the sports he was
involved in. He was popular in High
school and many like him. Though he was
popular with many, he was unlike by
the authority of his school. He in his High
School days was a bit
immature and pulled many pranks. One time, to aggravate
some of the girls in
his high school, he brought another girl to one of his
proms. Although
sometimes he struggled socially he was still successful in high
school and
was able to continue his dream of being an artist in some way. At
first he
decided to go to a school in California. It was a Junior College
called
Santa Monica Junior college. Then he started at the University of
California Los
Angeles in Los Angeles. There he did what he always wanted
to do and that was
theater arts. After struggling with money, he dropped out
and began working for
a place called Ted Auto Park. Several of other young
men worked there. Many UCLA
drop-outs. There he made small wages and
sometimes he had no place to sleep. He
worked a lot and rarely had any fun
unless he was driving his car wildly. This
was the beginning of his career
that wasn’t very pleasant. Luckily he was
eventually picked up by a man named
Rogers Brackett He gave him acting
opportunities and a place to sleep. Still
this was a small opportunity but he
was an opportunist who took on anything.
Brackett slowly got him started in
radio acting and stage drama. During this
time his family wasn’t happy with
him because they thought he was making
stupid decisions. His farther always
discouraged him from his acting
ambitions and told him that the actors involved
in movies were a bunch of
pansies. He never really listened to them and
continued his acting career.
Together Brackett and Dean were in the James
Whitmore’s acting shop. This
appeared in occasional TV commercials, and played
several roles in films and
on stage. James Whitmore the owner of the
organization gave Dean the advice
to move to New York to take up a serious
acting career. the 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 TV
dramas, and
returned to Broadway in The Immoralist (1954). This last
appearance resulted in
a screen test at Warner Bros. for the part of Cal
Trask in John Steinbeck's East
of Eden. He then returned to New York where he
appeared in four more television
dramas and completed the "Torn Sweater"
series. 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 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" 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 films,
Rebel
Without A Cause (1955). En route to compete in a race in Salinas,
James Dean was
killed in a tragic 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 3 films, they were made in just
over one year's
time. Joe Hyams, in Little Boy Lost, sums up his career: Dean
was an exciting
person in his childhood and his adulthood. He was always
active and meant a lot
to millions around the nation. Obviously its people
like this that we need to
entertain our country.