Published on: Jul 20, 2014
Sad to say goodbye to a Great Star
James Garner, the US star of hit TV series The Rockford Files and Maverick and films including The Great Escape, has died aged 86, Garner had suffered ill health since a severe stroke in 2008. James appeared on Broadway, in 1954 a friend, Paul Gregory, whom Garner had met while attending Hollywood High School, persuaded Garner to take a non-speaking role in the Broadway production of The Caine Mutiny Court Martial, where he was able to study actor Henry Fonda night after night.
Garner starred in more than 50 films including The Great Escape (1963), Paddy Chayefsky’s The Americanization of Emily (1964), Grand Prix (1966), Blake Edwards’ Victor Victoria (1982), Murphy’s Romance (1985) for which he received an Academy Award nomination, and The Notebook (2004).
Highlights from James small screen career include from Cheyenne (TV Series) 195 5-1957, Maverick 1957-1962, The Rockford Files 1974 – 1980, Bret Maverick 1981 – 1982. During the late 1970s, James was also well know for a popular series of television commercials advertising with Mariette Hartley. The two actors had such on-screen chemistry that it was often (erroneously) believed that they were married in real life. Her biography contains a photo of her in a T-shirt proclaiming: “I am not Jim Rockford’s wife”Hartley guest-starred in a memorable episode of Garner’s TV series The Rockford Files during this period
James Garner (born James Scott Bumgarner; April 7, 1928 – July 19, 2014) was an American film and television actor, one of the first Hollywood actors to excel in both media. He starred in several television series spanning a career of more than five decades which included such popular roles as Bret Maverick in the 1950s western-comedy series, Maverick, and Jim Rockford in the 1970s detective drama, The Rockford Files.
Garner was closely advised by financial adviser Irving Leonard, who also advised Clint Eastwood in the late 1950s and 1960s. After several feature film roles, including Sayonara with Marlon Brando, Garner got his big break playing the role of professional gambler Bret Maverick in the comedy Western series Maverick from 1957 to 1960. Garner was earlier considered for the lead role in another Warner Brothers Western series, Cheyenne, but that role went to Clint Walker because the casting director couldn’t reach Garner in time (according to Garner’s autobiography), and Garner wound up playing an Army officer in the pilot instead.
Only Garner and series creator Roy Huggins thought Maverick could compete with The Ed Sullivan Show and The Steve Allen Show. The show almost immediately made Garner a household name. Various actors had recurring roles as Maverick foils, including Efrem Zimbalist, Jr as “Dandy Jim Buckley,” Richard Long as “Gentleman Jack Darby,” Leo Gordon as “Big Mike McComb,” and Diane Brewster as “Samantha Crawford” (Huggins’ mother’s maiden name) while the series veered effortlessly from comedy to adventure and back again. The relationship with Huggins, the creator and original producer of Maverick, would later pay dividends for Garner.
After his acrimonious departure from Warner Bros., in the 1960s he starred in such films as The Children’s Hour (1962) with Audrey Hepburn and Shirley MacLaine; Boys’ Night Out (1962) with Kim Novak and Tony Randall; The Thrill of It All (1963) with Doris Day; Move Over, Darling (a 1963 remake of My Favorite Wife also starring Doris Day in which Garner played Cary Grant’s role); The Great Escape (1963) with Steve McQueen; The Americanization of Emily (1964) with Julie Andrews; The Art of Love (1965) with Dick Van Dyke; Duel at Diablo (1966) with Sidney Poitier; and as Wyatt Earp in Hour of the Gun (1967) with Jason Robards, Jr. as Doc Holliday, along with nine other theatrical releases during the decade.
The Americanization of Emily with Julie Andrews, a literate anti-war D-Day comedy, featured a screenplay written by Paddy Chayefsky and has remained Garner’s favorite of all his work. In 1963 exhibitors voted him the 16th most popular star in the US. The cult racing film Grand Prix, directed by John Frankenheimer, left Garner with a fascination for car racing that he often explored by actually racing during the ensuing years. The expensive Cinerama epic did not fare as well as expected at the box office. In 1969, Garner joined a long list of actors to play Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe in Marlowe, a detective drama featuring an early karate scene with Bruce Lee. The same year, Garner scored a hit with the comedy Western Support Your Local Sheriff! featuring Walter Brennan and Jack Elam.
In the 1970s, Roy Huggins had an idea to remake Maverick, but this time as a modern-day private detective. Huggins teamed with co-creator Stephen J. Cannell, and the pair tapped Garner to attempt to rekindle the success of Maverick, eventually recycling many of the plots from the original series. Starting with the 1974 season, Garner appeared as private investigator Jim Rockford in The Rockford Files. He appeared for six seasons, for which he received an Emmy Award for Best Actor in 1977. Veteran character actor Noah Beery, Jr. (Wallace Beery’s nephew) played Rockford’s father, Joseph “Rocky” Rockford, while Gretchen Corbett portrayed Rockford’s lawyer and sometime lover, Beth Davenport, until she left the series over a salary dispute with the studio.
During the 1980s, Garner played dramatic roles in a number of TV movies, including Heartsounds (with Mary Tyler Moore), Promise (with Piper Laurie) and My Name Is Bill W. In 1984, he played the lead in Joseph Wambaugh’s The Glitter Dome for HBO Pictures, which was being directed by his Rockford Files co-star Stuart Margolin. The film generated a mild controversy for a bondage sequence featuring Garner and co-star Margot Kidder. He was nominated for his first Oscar award for Best Actor in a Leading Role in the movie Murphy’s Romance opposite Sally Field. Field, and director Martin Ritt, had to fight the studio, Columbia Pictures, to have Garner cast, since he was regarded as a TV actor by then (despite having co-starred in the box office hit Victor Victoria opposite Julie Andrews two years earlier). Columbia didn’t want to make the picture at all, because it had no “sex or violence” in it.
In 1991, Garner starred in Man of the People, a television series about a con man chosen to fill an empty seat on a city council, with Kate Mulgrew and Corinne Bohrer. Despite reasonably fair ratings, the show was canceled after only 10 episodes. In 1993, Garner played the lead in another well-received TV-movie, Barbarians at the Gate, and went on to reprise his role as Jim Rockford in eight The Rockford Files made-for-TV movies beginning the following year. The powerfully frenetic opening theme song from the original series was rerecorded and slowed to a mournfully funereal pace, and practically everyone in the original cast of recurring characters returned for the new episodes except Noah Beery, Jr., who had died in the interim. For the second half of the 1980s, Garner appeared in several of the North American market Mazda television commercials as an on screen spokesman.
For his contribution to the film and television industry, Garner received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (at 6927 Hollywood Boulevard). In 1990, he was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. He was also inducted into the Television Hall of Fame that same year. In February 2005, he received the Screen Actors Guild’s Lifetime Achievement Award. He was also nominated for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role that year, for The Notebook. When Morgan Freeman won that prize for his work in Million Dollar Baby, he led the audience in a sing-along of the original Maverick theme song, written by David Buttolph and Paul Francis Webster. In 2010, the Television Critics Association gave Garner its annual Career Achievement Award.
Filmography – James Garner
1956 | Toward the Unknown | Major Joe Craven | |
1956 | The Girl He Left Behind | Preston | |
1957 | Shoot-Out at Medicine Bend | Sgt. John Maitland | With Randolph Scott |
1957 | Sayonara | Capt. Mike Bailey, USMC | With Marlon Brando |
1958 | Darby’s Rangers | COL (BGen, posthumous) William Orlando Darby | With Stuart Whitman |
1959 | Up Periscope | Lt. JG. Kenneth M. Braden | With Edmond O’Brien |
1959 | Alias Jesse James | Bret Maverick | (cameo) |
1960 | Cash McCall | Cash McCall | With Natalie Wood |
1961 | The Children’s Hour | Dr. Joe Cardin | With Audrey Hepburn |
1962 | Boys’ Night Out | Fred Williams | With Kim Novak |
1963 | The Great Escape | Flight Lieutenant Bob Hendley DFC RAF, “The Scrounger” | With Steve McQueen |
1963 | The Thrill of It All | Dr. Gerald Boyer | With Doris Day |
1963 | The Wheeler Dealers | Henry Tyroon | With Lee Remick |
1963 | Move Over, Darling | Nick Arden | With Doris Day |
1964 | Action on the Beach | (short subject) | |
1964 | The Americanization of Emily | Lt. Cmdr. Charles E. “Charlie” Madison | With Julie Andrews Written by Paddy Chayevsky |
1965 | 36 Hours | Major Jefferson F. Pike | With Eva Marie Saint |
1965 | The Art of Love | Casey Barnett | With Dick Van Dyke |
1966 | Grand Prix: Challenge of the Champions | (short subject) | |
1966 | A Man Could Get Killed | William Beddoes | With Melina Mercouri |
1966 | Duel at Diablo | Jess Remsberg | With Sidney Poitier |
1966 | Mister Buddwing | Mr. Buddwing | With Jean Simmons |
1966 | Grand Prix | Pete Aron | With Eva Marie Saint |
1967 | Hour of the Gun | Wyatt Earp | With Jason Robards, Jr. |
1968 | Once Upon a Wheel | (documentary) | |
1968 | The Man Who Makes the Difference | (short subject) | |
1968 | How Sweet It Is! | Grif | With Debbie Reynolds |
1968 | The Pink Jungle | With Eva Renzi | |
1969 | The Racing Scene | (documentary) | |
1969 | Support Your Local Sheriff! | Jason McCullough | With Walter Brennan |
1969 | Marlowe | With Bruce Lee | |
1970 | A Man Called Sledge | Sledge | With Dennis Weaver |
1971 | Support Your Local Gunfighter! | Latigo Smith | With Jack Elam |
1971 | Skin Game | With Louis Gossett, Jr. | |
1971 | Nichols | Sheriff Jim Nichols | With Margot Kidder |
1972 | They Only Kill Their Masters | With Katharine Ross | |
1973 | One Little Indian | With Vera Miles | |
1974 | The Castaway Cowboy | With Vera Miles | |
1980 | HealtH | With Lauren Bacall | |
1981 | The Fan | Jake Berman | With Lauren Bacall |
1982 | Victor Victoria | King Marchand | With Julie Andrews |
1984 | Heartsounds | With Mary Tyler Moore | |
1984 | Tank | Sgt Maj Zack Carey | With Shirley Jones |
1985 | Murphy’s Romance | Murphy Jones | With Sally Field |
1985 | Promise | ||
1988 | Sunset | Wyatt Earp | With Bruce Willis |
1989 | My Name is Bill W. | (TV) | |
1990 | Decoration Day | Albert Sidney Finch | |
1992 | The Distinguished Gentleman | Jeff Johnson | |
1993 | Fire in the Sky | ||
1993 | Barbarians at the Gate | F. Ross Johnson | (TV) |
1994 | Breathing Lessons | (TV) With Joanne Woodward | |
1994 | Maverick | Zane Cooper | With Mel Gibson |
1995 | Streets of Laredo | Woodrow F. Call | (TV) With Sissy Spacek |
1996 | Wild Bill: Hollywood Maverick | (documentary) | |
1996 | My Fellow Americans | With Jack Lemmon | |
1997 | The Hidden Dimension | (documentary) (narrator) | |
1997 | Dead Silence | (TV film version of the Jeffery Deaver novel A Maiden’s Grave) | |
1998 | Twilight | With Paul Newman | |
1998 | Legalese | (TV) | |
1999 | Century of Country | Host: 13 episodes | |
1999 | One Special Night | With Julie Andrews | |
2000 | The Last Debate | With Peter Gallagher | |
2000 | Space Cowboys | With Clint Eastwood | |
2001 | Atlantis: The Lost Empire | Commander Lyle Tiberius Rourke | (voice) |
2002 | Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood | Shepard James Walker “Shep” | with Ellen Burstyn |
2003 | The Land Before Time X: The Great Longneck Migration | Pat (voice) (direct-to-DVD) | |
2004 | The Notebook | Old Noah Calhoun “Duke” | With Gena Rowlands |
2004 | 8 Simple Rules | (2002-2005) | |
2004 | Al Roach: Private Investigator | (short subject) (voice) | |
2007 | The Ultimate Gift | Red Stevens | |
2007 | Battle for Terra | (voice) | |
2010 | Superman/Shazam!: The Return of Black Adam | Shazam | (voice) |