Fredric March (August 31, 1897 – April 14, 1975) was a two-time Academy Award-winning American actor.
Ernest Frederick McIntyre Bickel was born in Racine, Wisconsin. He attended the Winslow Elementary School (established in 1855) and Racine High School. He began a career as a banker, but an emergency appendectomy caused him to reevaluate his life, and in 1920 he began to be cast as an extra in movies made in New York City, using a shortened form of his mother's maiden name, Marcher. He appeared on Broadway in 1926, and won an Oscar nomination in 1930 for The Royal Family of Broadway, in which he played a role based upon John Barrymore. March won the Oscar in 1932 for Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and again in 1946 for The Best Years of Our Lives. In 1954, March hosted the 26th Annual Academy Awards.
March was one of the few actors to resist the studios, and was able to pick and choose his roles, in the process also avoiding typecasting. By this time, he was working on Broadway as often as in Hollywood, and his screen career was not as prolific as it had been. A friend of playwright Arthur Miller, he was favored by the writer to inaugurate the part of Willy Loman in the Pulitzer Prize-winning Death of a Salesman (1949). Director Elia Kazan cast Lee J. Cobb, however, as Willy Loman, and Arthur Kennedy as his son Biff Loman, two men that the director had worked with in the film Boomerang! (1947). Perhaps March's greatest late-in-life role was in Inherit the Wind (1960), opposite Spencer Tracy of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Throughout his life, he and his wife, actress Florence Eldridge, were proponents of liberal political causes. His support for the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War would cause problems. He was a steady supporter of the Democratic Party.
When March underwent surgery for prostate cancer in 1972, it seemed his career was over, yet he managed to give one last great performance in The Iceman Cometh.
Ironically, co-star Robert Ryan was entering the final stages of lung cancer, so the film was shot on a deathwatch. March was considered among his peers to be the greatest film actor of them all and to have mastered the true technique of film acting.
Fredric March died in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 77 from cancer. He had been married to the actress Florence Eldridge from 1927 until his death; they had 2 adopted children.
1897 births | 1975 deaths | Academy Awards hosts | American actors | American stage actors | American film actors | American silent film actors | Best Actor Academy Award nominees | Best Actor Oscar | Cancer deaths | Entertainers who died in their 70s | Hollywood Walk of Fame | People from Wisconsin
Frederic March | فردریک مارچ | Fredric March | Fredric March | Fredric March
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