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Tough Guy: The Best of James Cagney

Posted: 07/17/2012 4:21 pm

About a month ago, I was watching an early Cagney entry called Taxi! (1932), and in one early scene, witnessed the diminutive actor of Irish/Norwegian stock speaking Yiddish... not one or two words, mind you, but paragraphs.

And I thought to myself -- yet another reason to love Jimmy Cagney.

As if we needed any more.

In fact, Cagney learned that language fluently growing up dirt-poor on New York's Lower East Side in the early days of the twentieth century. But he had much more than language skills in his favor.

Though compact, he was scrappy and a natural fighter, often protecting his brother from neighborhood bullies. He eventually learned how to box, and became skillful enough to consider doing it for a living.

He also knew how to hustle and sell. He was in constant motion. From early days, he worked several jobs to support his family. Even once he'd made it in Hollywood, he sent his mother the majority of his earnings till the day she died.

Of course Cagney never mentioned that.

He did talk about the value of hard work and enterprise, stating in his usual down-to-earth way: "Where I come from, if there's a buck to be made, you don't ask questions, you go ahead and make it."

Independent and outspoken by nature, he was a dogged, ruthless negotiator with the studios.

He was also a family man, through and through. In Hollywood, a town where marriages come and go like the seasons, Cagney remained true and devoted to his wife, Frances, known as "Billie", over a sixty-four year marriage. Together they adopted two kids, and one of them, James Cagney Jr., became an actor.

Eschewing all the publicity and pomp of Tinseltown, Cagney loved the peace and tranquility of country life, places where, as he put it, "there were more animals than people." He and Billie would eventually retire to a bucolic horse farm in New York's Dutchess County for the last quarter century of his life.

As for his distinctive acting style, he was electric. A telling quote from him: "There's not much to say about acting but this. Never settle back on your heels. Never relax. If you relax, the audience relaxes. And always mean everything you say."

Though he brought off his unique on-screen persona with incredible finesse, you always felt Cagney was indeed on the balls of his feet, ready to spring like a bantam rooster.

Many who think of him as the screen's ultimate tough guy will be surprised to learn that in his first paying gig on the stage, he cross-dressed to play a lady of the chorus. He was secure enough in his masculinity to be not the least bit embarrassed.

In the twenties, Cagney started performing as a song-and-dance man in vaudeville, and in his film career, would always relish those opportunities when he was able to lay down his Tommy gun and showcase his distinctive style of hoofing.

Yet of course, it was a gangster film that first made him famous.

Originally, Cagney was slated for the second-lead in The Public Enemy (1931), alongside co-star Edward Woods, but director William Wellman had them switch roles after watching the first set of dailies. It was the right decision, as the film was a monster hit. Virtually overnight, James Cagney was a movie star.

He'd then work pretty much continually over the next three decades, retiring gracefully after starring in Billy Wilder's 1961 Cold War comedy, One, Two, Three. (Though many adore this film, I find it dates rather badly. Still, Cagney's bravura performance alone makes it worth seeing.)

Though tempted by many good offers (including Art Carney's role in 1974's Harry and Tonto, which netted Carney an Oscar), the star would only return to the screen one last time a full two decades later, in Milos Forman's "Ragtime" (1981).

This was partly in reaction to a minor stroke Cagney had suffered several years prior, which prevented him from pursuing beloved activities like painting and riding. It was felt that being in front of the camera again would lift his spirits. By all accounts it did, and the audience's spirits rose as well to see him.

With wife Billie by his side, James Cagney died quietly at the farm he so loved in 1986, just a few months older than the century.

In honor of his birthday this week, here are my personal Cagney favorites:

The Public Enemy (1931) -- This landmark film concerns Tom Powers (Cagney), a wayward Irish youth from Chicago's gritty South Side who becomes a big-time mobster during Prohibition, while his stable older brother Mike (Donald Cook) works a low-paying but honest job. As Tom's dark star soars ever higher in the gangland hierarchy, he and childhood buddy Matt Doyle (Edward Woods) leave a trail of blood in their wake, but ultimately this life of crime exacts its toll on Tom. William A. Wellman's The Public Enemy launched the film career of a pugnacious Irish-American from Manhattan's Hell's Kitchen who started out as a dancer, only to become the toughest tough guy of them all: Jimmy Cagney, never cockier than he is here. Since organized crime was a fairly new and frightening epidemic at the time, Wellman gives "Enemy" the stark feel of a purely cautionary tale. Both the famous grapefruit scene (just wait for it) and Tom's final homecoming still pack a wallop, and a stunning young Jean Harlow injects plenty of sex appeal as Tom's gal Gwen.

Footlight Parade (1933) -- Musical producer and performer Chester Kent (Cagney) gets the idea to produce short musical prologues for the still fairly new "talking pictures", but the competition keeps stealing his ideas. Finally, with the help of loyal assistant Nan (Joan Blondell), and young leads Bea Thorn (Ruby Keeler) and the high-born but show-biz crazy Scotty Blair (Dick Powell), Kent arranges a private, three day performing marathon to outfox those pesky rival producers. The result is sustained musical comedy magic. In Parade, the proven formula of breathtaking Busby Berkeley choreography and the winning Powell-Keeler combination is further augmented by an energetic, infectious Cagney, who dominates throughout in an all-too-rare song and dance role. Memorable, pre-code numbers include the priceless "Honeymoon Hotel" and "By A Waterfall." This is one parade you'll certainly want to join.

G-Men (1935) -- When his best friend, FBI agent Eddie Buchanan (Regis Toomey), is gunned down by gangsters, James "Brick" Davis (Cagney), a street-smart lawyer whose education was bankrolled by a broadminded mobster, decides to become a "G man" himself. Viewed with skepticism by his superior, Jeff McCord (Robert Armstrong) for his underworld associations, Davis gets a chance to prove himself when he's asked to help nab the same gang that dispatched his pal. His two love interests, a bar hostess (Ann Dvorak) and a hospital nurse (Margaret Lindsay), land him in a tangle and also help amplify the theme of divided loyalties. After solidifying his reputation as Hollywood's number-one bad guy, Cagney played a straight-edge lawman in this gangland drama, a huge hit for Warner Brothers and great publicity for J. Edgar Hoover's fledgling department, which had only recently granted officers the right to bear arms (a big plot point in the film). Cagney is mesmerizing as Brick, prudent and principled but also tough as nails and willing to throw his weight around. Don't miss this underexposed classic!

Angels With Dirty Faces (1938) -- Rocky Sullivan and Jerry Connolly, two young hooligans on the make, are caught stealing, and only Jerry gets away. As the years go by, the reform school-hardened Rocky (Cagney) enters a life of crime, becoming a famous and feared gangster, while Jerry (Pat O'Brien) ultimately sees the light and enters the priesthood. While maintaining affection for each other, criminal and priest must compete for the souls of a new generation of hoodlums in the neighborhood, played by the Dead End Kids. "Angels" represents the peak of the gangster picture genre that Warners developed and refined in the thirties, when the age of Capone was still fresh in people's minds. Cagney, whose screen career had been launched seven years before in "The Public Enemy", perfects his rendition of the crook with a heart of gold, and his close real-life friend and colleague Pat O'Brien (they'd appear in nine pictures together) counters him perfectly as the mellow, morally upright Father Connolly. Meanwhile Humphrey Bogart, in full villain mode, is deliciously slimy as Rocky's "business partner". Whatever you do, don't miss that ending!

The Roaring Twenties (1939)- Eddie Bartlett (Cagney), Lloyd Hart (Jeffrey Lynn) and George Hally (Humphrey Bogart) are three doughboys who meet in a trench during the First World War. Returning to the States with the armistice, Eddie soon drifts into lucrative underworld commerce brought on by prohibition, eventually teaming with his old foxhole buddies in a vast bootlegging operation. But with greed rearing its ugly head, the whole enterprise is ill-fated. A breakthrough for director Raoul Walsh, this classic boasts electric performances from both Cagney and soon-to-be star Bogie. Consistent with most Bogart portrayals from the thirties, his George Hally is a low double-crosser who puts the screws to the honorable (in his way) Eddie. Consistent with most Cagney roles, Eddie gets his revenge. "Twenties" is a worthy swan song to the glory days of the gangster picture--and just wait for that immortal closing line of dialogue.

Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) -- A meeting with F.D.R on the eve of our country's entry into World War II prompts an aging George M. Cohan (Cagney), America's most revered showman, to look back on his colorful life, from the lean early days touring the country with his parents and sister in vaudeville (Walter Huston, Rosemary de Camp, and Jeanne Cagney -- Jimmy's real-life sibling), to later heady, happy times as our country's most prominent songwriter/performer, who stirred love of country through the first several decades of the twentieth century. Director Michael Curtiz's idealized homage to Cohan's life and legacy was perfectly timed to raise our spirits as we entered World War II. This exuberant slice of Americana is Cagney's show entirely, netting him his only Oscar (after all those gangster roles!). The actor began his career as a song-and-dance man, and here he gets to prove it, in a series of rousing, nostalgic numbers that keep the rich Cohan legacy alive. Walter Huston stands out in a sterling supporting cast playing George's loving Dad. Good enough to watch any old time, but a must for Independence Day. Go ahead -- wave that flag!

White Heat (1949)- Film follows twisted path of one Cody Jarrett (Cagney) a hardened career criminal whose profound mental illness manifests itself in blinding headaches and an intense mother fixation. His psychosis doesn't hold him back from an aggressive spree of robbing and killing, however. When Cody winds up in jail on a relatively minor charge, the authorities place undercover cop Hank Fallon (Edmond O'Brien) in his cell. Later, when the two are sprung, Hank joins the Jarrett gang, and from the inside, starts to accelerate Cody's undoing. Raoul Walsh's dynamite gangster picture is so much more than a re-tread of the early thirties gangster classics that made Cagney a star. Here we are less concerned with the cat-and-mouse aspects of the story (though they are plenty diverting) and more focused on the progressive mental disintegration of the central character. Cagney is outstanding as Jarrett, a man whose own demons may consume him before the police finish the job. Electrifying stuff, and a Cagney peak.

Love Me or Leave Me (1955) -- Aspiring singer Ruth Etting (Doris Day) works as a taxi dancer at a Chicago nightclub when she's spotted by smitten, street-wise Marty Snyder (Cagney), a thuggish laundry owner with big-time underworld connections. Through his brutish, heavy-handed interventions, Ruth becomes a star of stage and screen. She then weds Marty out of obligation, though secretly she loves her one-time accompanist Johnny Alderman (Cameron Mitchell). As the years go by, Marty's strong-arm tactics and need to control Ruth cast a dark cloud over her happiness and career. A far cry from the wholesome, gee-whiz brand of MGM musicals from the '50s, this daring biopic of the real-life Etting-"America's sweetheart of song"-is remarkably candid about the sleazy opportunists who inhabit the showbiz world. Day is smashing as Etting, a shimmering talent who sacrifices love and independence for the promise of fame. Her turbulent relationship with the limping, repugnant Marty, brilliantly portrayed by an Oscar-nominated Cagney, goes from bad to catastrophic, all hinging on her reunion with Johnny, played by the agreeably forthright Mitchell. The story is gripping, but so are Day's sexy, impeccable renditions of torch songs like "Shaking the Blues Away."

Mister Roberts (1955) -- Adapted from Josh Logan's Broadway hit, this service drama tells of Lt. Doug Roberts (Henry Fonda), an officer on a WWII cargo ship, desperate to see action, who instead has to cope with irascible, by-the-book Captain Morton (Cagney). Roberts is frustrated by life aboard the SS "Reluctant," but thankfully, Ensign Pulver (Jack Lemmon)-"in charge of laundry and morale" -- is on board to provide him and the crew with some much-needed laughs and sympathy. Returning to the big screen after an eight-year absence, Fonda successfully recreated his indelible stage role in "Mister Roberts" under the superb direction of Ford (along with Mervyn LeRoy), though Ford and Fonda literally came to blows just weeks into shooting! Young Lemmon must have been humbled by the cast line-up for this film: Fonda, Cagney, and the legendary William Powell (in his final on-screen role as a philosophical ship doctor). Yet his manic energy was ideal for Pulver, and Lemmon held his own with Hollywood's best, winning the Best Supporting Actor Oscar. Cagney is also aces as the touchiest of skippers. All aboard for Mister Roberts!

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10:41 AM on 07/24/2012
Thank you John for a great article about a great performer and a great man. I grew up in the 60's and 70's when all my friends were in love with David Cassidy and Donny Osmond. Not me, having grown up watching old movies with my Mom - I fell in love with James Cagney - in the way a young girl falls in love with her father. James Cagney seem to represent everything a man should be, someone who can take care of business with a sparkle in his eye and a tap in his step. When I got older I was lucky enough to purchase at a celebrity auction a belt buckle with the letter "J" , that once belonged to Mr. Cagney. Having that is my small way of paying tribute to the man who I was never fortunate enough to meet. Thank you again for this wonderful article. I'm so glad that in today's world, where reality shows dominate as entertainment, there are still people who remember and keep alive the greats such as James Cagney.
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Peggy Kendrick
Edited micro-bio. Happy now!?
05:14 AM on 07/21/2012
Back in the olden days, before cable, when all television was captured through an antenna on a pole in our backyard, old films were broadcast on Sunday afternoons. Following church and lunch there was not much else to do but watch films, especially in winter. How I loved them! The famous scene at the end of Angel's With Dirty Faces, James Cagney dancing across the stage doing Yankee Doodle Dandy, watching his transformation when he gets the bad news in the prison mess hall. Even when Cagney was still, which wasn't often, he was vibrating with energy. Never has there been a better marriage between actor and film.
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happycat
No bio needed. My cuteness speaks for itself.
04:55 PM on 07/19/2012
I love that movie. Maaaaa!!!
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happycat
No bio needed. My cuteness speaks for itself.
04:55 PM on 07/19/2012
I have spent the last couple of Summers in Millbrook, NY. The old timers, love to talk about their memories of Cagney, and what a wonderful down to earth guy he was. That is a true testament to one's character- to be remembered fondly by so many friends and neighbors even after passing so many years ago!
09:19 PM on 07/18/2012
Enjoyed the bio and filmography, and the link to the Taxi clip. I believe Jimmy also speaks a snippet of Yiddish in The Fighting 69th with a Jewish soldier who's trying to pass as an Irishman.
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John Farr
isolates and celebrates the best movies available
03:31 PM on 07/19/2012
I need to watch that film..."Taxi!" is great fun...

recurring Cagney line to his girl: "Aw, if I thought you meant it.." with his fist held up!
09:50 AM on 07/20/2012
I gotta watch Taxi all the way through again! What a line!

I just saw The Fighting 69th myself for the first time about 6-7 months ago, on TCM. It seems to pop up now and then.
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ae12wrangell
NEVER trust a lawyer/lawfirm whose phone is 1-800
12:35 AM on 07/18/2012
The best of James Cagney also includes, or should include

Ragtime
The Gallant Hours
13 Rue Madeleine
Mutiny on the Bounty - Cagney was an extra
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John Farr
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10:37 AM on 07/18/2012
all good titles, and are you sure cagney was an extra on "Mutiny"...know david niven was...
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ae12wrangell
NEVER trust a lawyer/lawfirm whose phone is 1-800
11:04 AM on 07/18/2012
I saw both actors. Cagney was 35 so maybe it was a brief second, if it was that long
07:53 PM on 09/07/2012
Cagney appeared in Munity in the bounty during his suspension from Warner Brothers as an extra and uncredited. You have to watch the movie to see him.
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donnyraindog
Grass shack nailed to a pinewood floor
11:57 PM on 07/17/2012
Great tribute to a real American original and if you have never seen a Cagney film can't imagine any one not loving Angels With Dirty Faces ,one of my favorite movies of all time.
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John Farr
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10:39 AM on 07/18/2012
thanks, donny. agree "angels" is a bonafide classic...also "white heat" imho.
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StevenWells
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10:02 PM on 07/17/2012
That "hustle and sell" quality infused so many Cagney performances, among which was his brief, one-scene role in "The Millionaire" (shot just before, but released just after, "The Public Enemy"), as a fast-talking salesman who ends up selling not a life insurance policy, but a life-saving idea, to a recently-retired auto manufacturing magnate (the ever-charming George Arliss, whose presence makes any picture in which he appears worthwhile viewing).

Likewise, Cagney's athleticism translated to his acting in the high-wire nature of some of his best work, for which a delicate balance of opposing qualities was often required.

For all his brutality (and, ultimately, madness), Cody Jarrett remains magnetic and compelling throughout "White Heat," Cagney's most (if you'll pardon the pun) searing characterization. In "Love Me Or Leave Me," perhaps his most poignant one, Marty Snyder's bullying of Ruth is consistently balanced by his solicitude and devotion, rendering him a figure who is pathetic, but - owing to his bravado and resilience - never pitiable. And in "Mr. Roberts," he deftly prevents Capt. Morton's hateful villainy from ever killing the comedy in his simmering outrage ("Alllllllright; whooooo did it?") or apoplectic hysterics ("NEVER MIND what I told you...IIIIIIIIIIII"m TELLING you!").

Many fine actors have succeeded him, but Cagney was of an era in which the finest actors were also unique individuals - imitable perhaps, but irreplaceable - who, although illuminating traits and emotions we all recognize, were simply not like we mere mortals.
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John Farr
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10:40 AM on 07/18/2012
steven- an eloquent and illuminating tribute...thanks for sharing it!
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StevenWells
Objects in the avatar are larger than they appear
01:02 AM on 07/19/2012
Y'know, I get so wrapped up in expressing my observations and thoughts that - it just now occurs to me - I never get 'round to articulating my appreciation of yours, which are what inspire my own in the first place.

Shameful in the face of your graciousness, and a grievous oversight I'll do my best not to repeat.

It's simply that your synapse-energizing blogs are such a looked-forward-to treat, I get carried away.
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Cleverboots
08:57 PM on 07/17/2012
Well said, John! Agreed 100%.
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John Farr
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10:41 AM on 07/18/2012
thanks so much....it's nice that he (Cagney) still has plenty of fans out there!
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Cleverboots
11:28 PM on 07/18/2012
Indeed. recently saw White Heat for the first time-WOW!
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08:04 PM on 07/17/2012
Any Warner's Cagney film from the 1930's is worth a look.

Some are "B" pictures (he made 5 pictures in 1931!) elevated to the top of the bill by Cagney's sheer will.

Sad to say that he seems to be forgotten these days.

If you are young and not familiar with Cagney start with "Angels with Dirty Faces."
Then run the table on his gangster pictures "topping" it off with "White Heat."

Then wheel back onto "Yankee Doodle Dandy" and behold the movie's Greatest Gangster become an Oscar winning song and dance man!
Niether DeNiro or Pacino could pull That off!

And while I understand the "dated" knock on "One, Two, Three" I disagree.
Billy Wilder's Cold War black comedy is second only to "Dr. Strangelove" in properly laughing off that dark time.
Cagney is amazing in the picture.

His Bottom in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" is surprising.
Who can forget Pvt. Jerry Plunkett in "The Fighting 69th?
There are many, many more.

Cagney Is one of the great Hollywood Giants of the 20th Century.

Thank God they never made that Cagney Bio Pic with Michael J. Fox!
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John Farr
isolates and celebrates the best movies available
10:43 AM on 07/18/2012
thanks, bill- know I'm in the minority on "1,2,3"....and with all due respect to his fine work in "back to the future", the thought of fox playing him is the stuff of celluloid nightmares.
07:22 PM on 07/17/2012
I grew up in NYC in the 50s, watching "Million Dollar Movie" over and over. I probably know "Yankee Doodle Dandy" by heart, and it remains one of my absolute favorite movies. I've heard it was one of Cagney's also. I also remember that his funeral was held at his original church on the Lower East Side. He was really something.... a great actor and a great guy.
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John Farr
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10:44 AM on 07/18/2012
cagney was very proud of "yankee"...and I'm sure secretly proud it was his Oscar win.
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themightyabealrd
screw the real world-I'm an artist!
06:43 PM on 07/17/2012
Cagney's appeal spans generations. Three years ago, at age nine, my grandson was at the highest point on a set of monkey bars when I called his name and said, "Say 'Made it, Ma! Top of the world!'" He looked puzzled, but a man in his mid twenties standing nearby smiled and said, "I love that movie, too!"
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John Farr
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10:45 AM on 07/18/2012
what a great story--gives you hope!
06:33 PM on 07/17/2012
A fine birthday tribute to a great American artist. Farr's list of faves mostly coincides with mine, but allow me to add a few honorable mentions:

The Strawberry Blonde (love the way Cagney plays comedy, aided and abetted by the woefully underappreciated Jack Carson),

City for Conquest (an overcooked boxing melodrama ala Warners; Cagney gives the most convincing depiction of a blind man you'll ever see in a Hollywood movie),

and The Oklahoma Kid, if only for the unlikey spectacle of seeing the two ultimate New Yorkers, Cagney and Bogart, as cowboys. This is the movie referred to by Joe Pesci in Goodfellas, in the scene where he shoots Spider in the foot.

Here's that famous scene in Taxi where Cagney speaks Yiddish; go to 2:00:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DUvEbG5KsE

And one of Cagney's finest moments comes in an otherwise mediocre movie -- The Seven Little Foys. Cagney recreates his George M. character in a table-top dance with Bob Hope:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOoNOs8Ql28
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StevenWells
Objects in the avatar are larger than they appear
01:11 AM on 07/18/2012
Three cheers for your Jack Carson shout-out. His reliability and versatility were truly underrated.
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John Farr
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10:46 AM on 07/18/2012
excellent choices all...always thought the hope/cagney pairing in that sequence was sheer movie magic.
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bluegardenia
I intend to live forever, so far so good.
05:39 PM on 07/17/2012
I am a devoted and life long Cagney fan. I began watching his films when I was about 10 yrs old...my father was also a Cagney fan..in fact Cagney was his favourite. I've seen just about every film he ever made. You have listed many of my favourites...especially Love Me or Leave Me and the music in that film was outstanding. I can remember as a young teenager seeing The Roaring Twenties for the first time and found myself crying heartbroken at the end as Cagney lays dying on the church steps with his head cradled by Panama Smith..[the great Gladys George]. One film you didn't mention was Man of A Thousand Faces...he played Lon Chaney...it was a great film also. There will never be his like again I think. Thanks for the memories!
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John Farr
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10:47 AM on 07/18/2012
Man of a Thousand Faces had a young Robert Evans in the cast...good think he quit acting for producing...
07:32 AM on 07/20/2012
My father too was a Cagney fan. I was probably about seven when he had me watch Yankee Doodle Dandy with him, and I was hooked for life. If a Cagney film was on TV, my dad and I would always watch it together. He passed away when I was 10, and those movies became a link to him, remaining so to this day, fifty years later.
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bluegardenia
I intend to live forever, so far so good.
12:54 PM on 07/20/2012
aw thanks for sharing...I lost my own father almost a year ago now but I was fortunate enough to have him for a very long time..but I know the memories these films can generate
cheers!
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
05:37 PM on 07/17/2012
Again, Mister Roberts comes from a novel by Thomas Heggen: http://s.ecrater.com/stores/9066/4aff14700dec8_9066n.jpg
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08:05 PM on 07/17/2012
But the film is adapted from the play.
It's at least once removed from the book.
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John Farr
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10:48 AM on 07/18/2012
true..fonda did the play on Broadway for an extended run.