James Garner (born Norman, Oklahoma, April 7, 1928) is an American film and television actor of partially Cherokee Indian descent. He starred in several television series that spanned a career of five decades, including his roles as Bret Maverick in the popular western-comedy series, Maverick (1957–1960), Jim Rockford in the popular crime drama, The Rockford Files (1974–1980), and Jim Egan in the popular but short-lived comedy, 8 Simple Rules (2003–2005), and made dozens of movies, including the classics The Great Escape (1963) and Paddy Chayefsky's The Americanization of Emily (1964). Toward the end of April 2006, Garner returned to his hometown for a short visit. While there the city unveiled a ten foot bronze cast statue of Garner as Bret Maverick placed downtown, named a street after him, and dubbed the downtown Main Street area the James Garner corridor. The Norman Public School System also awarded Garner with an honorary High School diploma.
After modeling Jantzen bathing suits in print ads, in 1954 Garner had a non-speaking role in the Broadway production of The Caine Mutiny Court Martial, where he watched Henry Fonda at close quarters night after night. He subsequently moved on to television commercials and eventually to television roles. His first movie appearances were in The Girl He Left Behind and Toward the Unknown in 1956.
Various actors had recurring roles as Maverick foils, including Efrem Zimbalist, Jr as "Dandy Jim Buckley" and Richard Long as "Gentleman Jack Darby," and 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.
Garner was originally sole star of Maverick (for the first seven episodes) but production demands forced the studio, Warner Bros., to create a second Maverick brother, Bart, played by Jack Kelly. This move allowed two production units to film episodes simultaneously (the series also featured extremely popular cross-over episodes with both Maverick brothers). Critics marvelled at Garner and Kelly's extraordinary chemistry in their episodes together, but Garner quit the series in the third season in a dispute with Warner Bros.
The studio attempted to replace Garner with a Maverick cousin who had lived in Britain long enough to pick up an English accent, played by an eventual movie James Bond, Roger Moore, but Moore quit the series due to a decline in script quality after only 15 episodes, insisting that if he'd gotten stories like Garner's earlier ones, he would have stayed. Warner Bros. also dressed Robert Colbert, a Garner look-alike, in Bret Maverick's outfit and called the character Brent, but Brent Maverick did not catch on with viewers and Colbert made only two episodes toward the end of the season, leaving the rest of the series' run to Kelly (alternating with reruns of episodes with Garner).
In 2004, Garner became one of the first three honorees in the World Poker Tour Walk of Fame for his portrayal of Maverick.
The hugely lavish flop Grand Prix (film) gave him a fascination with car racing, while permanently damaging his movie career. Unlike Paul Newman and Steve McQueen, he never did well in major sports car racing events.
The Americanization of Emily, an extremely literate anti-war D-Day comedy, featured an exquisitely written script by Paddy Chayefsky and always remained Garner's favorite of all his own work. The Great Escape was a towering cultural milestone, but Garner only played second lead, supporting fellow ex-TV series cowboy Steve McQueen. As of July 2006, he is one of only three surviving stars of the film, the others being Lord Richard Attenborough and David McCallum.
In 1969 Garner joined a long line of actors to play Raymond Chandler's creation, Phillip Marlowe, in Marlowe. Chandler had always written the character while visualizing Cary Grant in the role (not an unusual occurrence for a writer), but Grant never accepted the part. Dick Powell, Humphrey Bogart, Robert Mitchum, and even Elliot Gould each took a turn at it, but only Garner's version features Bruce Lee dropping by his office to smash everything into pieces with karate chops.
Bearish actor Noah Beery, Jr., nephew of screen legend Wallace Beery, played Rockford's father, and there was a surprising physical resemblance between Garner and Beery, while Gretchen Corbett played Rockford's lawyer and sometime lover until she left the series over a salary dispute with the studio. In addition, Garner also invited yet another familiar actor Joe Santos who played Rockford's friend in the LAPD, and a man with whom he'd had a love/hate relationship. Like Beery, Garner also had a close bond with Santos, over the years, and in later years, his co-star was concerned about the star's health, as well. And rounding out the cast was Stuart Margolin, a friend of Garner's, who previously co-starred with him on Nichols, played Jim's ex-cellmate and shifty friend, in a recurring role of Angel Martin. Overall, the cast and crew had a close relationship with Garner, on and off the set.
Critics delighted in pointing out that The Rockford Files took iconoclasm to new heights, with almost everyone in authority being mean-spirited, wrong-headed, and just plain stupid, out to make Rockford's life as unremittingly miserable as they possibly could. The witty dialogue crackled with intense humor; The Rockford Files was at least as much comedy as drama.
Garner pulled the plug on the show, despite consistent ratings, because it was taking too much of a physical toll on his body. Appearing in practically every frame of film, doing many of his own stunts — including one that injured his back — was wearing him out. A knee injury that he had received in the National Guard was worsening in the wake of the continuous jumping and rolling. He was also hospitalized with a bleeding ulcer in 1979, some years before the cure for ulcers was discovered. Between his knee, back, and ulcer, he was done: Garner looked frighteningly unhealthy in what turned out to be the last episode of the series, "Deadlock in Parma," with the look on his face of a dying man.
Critics agreed that The Rockford Files had featured some of the very best writing ever presented on television.
Garner had also played Bret Maverick in the TV-movie The New Maverick in 1978 and for one scene at the beginning of the short-lived series Young Maverick the following year.
Romy Walthall as Rita George Wyner as Art Lurie Corinne Bohrer as Constance Leroy Taylor Nichols as Richard Lawrence
In 1994 Garner played an Earp-like role as "Marshal Zane Cooper" in a movie version of Maverick, with Mel Gibson as Bret Maverick and Jodie Foster as a gambling lass with a fake southern accent based on a character played in the TV series by Diane Brewster.
In 1995 Garner played lead character Woodrow Call, an ex-lawman, in the TV miseries sequel to Lonesome Dove, Streets of Laredo, based on Larry McMurtry's book. Garner had been offered Robert Duvall's role in the original miniseries but had to turn it down for health reasons, and eventually wound up playing the part first portrayed by Tommy Lee Jones instead.
In addition to a major recurring role during the last part of the run of TV series Chicago Hope, he also starred in a couple of short-lived series, the animated God, the Devil and Bob and First Monday, in which he played a Supreme Court justice.
In 2000, after an operation to replace both knees, Garner appeared with Clint Eastwood (who'd played a villain in the original Maverick series) in the movie Space Cowboys, also featuring Tommy Lee Jones. During a mass appearance by the cast on television's The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Leno ran a brief clip from Garner and Eastwood's lengthy saloon fistfight during Eastwood's Maverick appearance over forty years earlier.
Upon the death of John Ritter in 2003, Garner joined the cast of 8 Simple Rules as Grandpa Egan (Cate's father). Originally intended to be a one-shot guest role, he stayed with the series until its end.
In 2004 Garner starred in the movie version of Nicholas Spark's The Notebook alongside Gena Rowlands as his wife (played in flashbacks by Rachel McAdams), directed by Nick Cassavetes, Rowlands' son.
Who is the tall dark stranger there?
Maverick is his name.
Riding the trail to who-knows-where
Luck is his companion
Gamblin' is his game.
Smooth as the handle on a gun.
Maverick is his name.
Wild as the wind in Oregon
Blowin' up a canyon/ Easier to tame.
Riverboat ring your bell.
Fare-thee-well Annabelle.
Luck is the lady that he loves the best.
Natchez to New Orleans.
Livin' on jacks and queens.
Maverick is the legend of the west.
On April 21, 2006, a ten-foot tall statue of James Garner as Bret Maverick was unveiled in Garner's hometown of Norman, Oklahoma, with Garner present at the ceremony.
Quote from James Garner: "Marriage is like the Army; everyone complains, but you'd be surprised at the large number of people who re-enlist." himself never had to re-enlist, however, since he stayed with his first wife.
Garner is a devout Democrat. For his role in the 1985 CBS miniseries "Space", the character was changed from a Republican (as in the book) to reflect Garner's personal tastes. Also, on an episode of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno airing 20 January 2005, Garner was promoting "The Notebook" when he said what a bad day it was because George W. Bush was being sworn in for a second term that day. However, Garner also pointed out that his best friend is a Republican. In a move consistent with his image as a real-man, Garner makes no apologies for his liberal philosophy, telling interviewer Charlie Rose, late in his life, "I'm a card-carrying liberal". A love of automobiles and shared screen time are apparently not the only things he has in common with Paul Newman.
1928 births | American actors | Best Actor Academy Award nominees | American film actors | Hollywood Walk of Fame | Korean War veterans | Living people | People from Oklahoma | Recipients of the Purple Heart medal | American television actors | American television producers | United States Army soldiers | Cherokee people | The Land Before Time voice actors | University of Oklahoma alumni | Film actors
Джеймс Гарнър | James Garner | James Garner | James Garner | ジェームズ・ガーナー | James Garner
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