George O'Brien(1899-1985)
- Actor
- Producer
- Additional Crew
George was the son of the San Francisco Chief of Police who became a
college athlete. He was the Heavyweight Boxing Champion of the Pacific
Fleet during World War I. In the early 1920s, George wound up in
Hollywood where he worked as a stuntman and part time actor. In 1924,
Director John Ford picked virtually
unknown George to star in his first picture,
The Iron Horse (1924). Over the
next two years, he would appear in four more Ford films and would
co-star with Janet Gaynor in
The Blue Eagle (1926) and
Sunrise (1927).
"Sunrise," a winner of two Academy Awards, was the story of a simple
farmer who lets another woman talk him into murdering his wife. George
remained popular until sound came along. By that time, his popularity
was sliding, but he did make the transition to sound. With his rugged
looks and physical size, he was soon a Western Cowboy Star. He was in
some of the best stories ever written,
Riders of the Purple Sage (1931),
and in some of the worst. But he was consistently in the Top Ten
money-making Western Stars. He would appear in a few films outside the
horse set, such as
Ever Since Eve (1934), but those
roles would be few. By the end of the 1930s, George was still a popular
'B' movie Cowboy Star, but he would not take the parts as seriously as
he did a decade before. During World War II, he hung up his spurs, and
he re-enlisted in the Navy where he fought in the Pacific and was
decorated many times. After the war, when he would not find work in
acting, John Ford, his old Director,
would give him work with the cavalry in three of his films.