Tyrone Power
Tyrone Power | |
---|---|
Born | Tyrone Edmund Power III May 5, 1914 Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S. |
Died | November 15, 1958 Madrid, Spain | (aged 44)
Burial place | Hollywood Forever Cemetery, Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Education | Purcell High School |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1932–1958 |
Spouses |
|
Children | |
Father | Tyrone Power Sr. |
Relatives | Ethel Lavenu (grandmother) Tyrone Power (great-grandfather) |
Military career | |
Allegiance | United States |
Service | United States Marine Corps |
Years of service |
|
Rank |
Tyrone Edmund Power III[2][3] (May 5, 1914 – November 15, 1958) was an American actor. From the 1930s to the 1950s, Power appeared in dozens of films, often in swashbuckler roles or romantic leads. His better-known films include Jesse James, The Mark of Zorro, Marie Antoinette, Blood and Sand, The Black Swan, Prince of Foxes, Witness for the Prosecution, The Black Rose, and Captain from Castile. Power's own favorite film among those in which he starred was Nightmare Alley.[4]
Though largely a matinee idol in the 1930s and early 1940s and known for his striking good looks, Power starred in films in a number of genres, from drama to light comedy. In the 1950s he began placing limits on the number of films he would make in order to devote more time to theater productions. He received his biggest accolades as a stage actor in John Brown's Body and Mister Roberts. Power died from a heart attack at the age of 44.[5][6]
Family background and early life
[edit]Power was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1914, the son of Helen Emma "Patia" (née Reaume) and the English-born American stage and screen actor Tyrone Power Sr., often known by his first name "Fred". Power was descended from a long Irish theatrical line going back to his great-grandfather, the Irish actor and comedian Tyrone Power (1797–1841). Tyrone Power's sister, Ann Power,[7] was born in 1915, after the family moved to California. His mother was Roman Catholic, and her ancestry included the French-Canadian Reaume family and French from Alsace-Lorraine.[8][9][10] Through his paternal great-grandmother, Anne Gilbert, Power was related to the actor Laurence Olivier; through his paternal grandmother, stage actress Ethel Lavenu, he was related by marriage to author Evelyn Waugh; and through his father's first cousin, Norah Emily Gorman Power, he was related to the theatrical director Sir (William) Tyrone Guthrie, the first director of the Stratford Festival in Canada and the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[11]
Power went to Cincinnati-area Catholic schools and graduated from Purcell High School in 1931. Upon his graduation, he opted to join his father to learn what he could about acting from one of the stage's most respected actors.[citation needed]
Early career
[edit]1930s
[edit]Power joined his father for the summer of 1931, after being separated from him for some years due to his parents' divorce. His father suffered a heart attack in December 1931, dying in his son's arms, while preparing to perform in The Miracle Man. Tyrone Power Jr., as he was then known, decided to continue pursuing an acting career. He tried to find work as an actor, and, while many contacts knew his father well, they offered praise for his father but no work for his son. He appeared in a bit part in 1932 in Tom Brown of Culver, a movie starring actor Tom Brown. Power's experience in that movie did not open any other doors, however, and, except for what amounted to little more than a job as an extra in Flirtation Walk, he found himself frozen out of the movies but making some appearances in community theater. Discouraged, he took the advice of a friend, Arthur Caesar, to go to New York to gain experience as a stage actor. Among the Broadway plays in which he was cast are Flowers of the Forest, Saint Joan, and Romeo and Juliet.[citation needed]
Power went to Hollywood in 1936. The director Henry King was impressed with his looks and poise, and he insisted that Power be tested for the lead role in Lloyd's of London, a role thought already to belong to Don Ameche. Despite his own reservations, Darryl F. Zanuck decided to give Power the role, once King and Fox film editor Barbara McLean convinced him that Power had a greater screen presence than Ameche. Power was billed fourth in the movie but he had by far the most screen time of any member of the cast. He walked into the premiere of the movie an unknown and he walked out a star, which he remained the rest of his career.[citation needed]
Power racked up hit after hit from 1936 until 1943, when his career was interrupted by military service. In these years he starred in romantic comedies such as Thin Ice and Day-Time Wife, in dramas such as Suez, Blood and Sand, Son of Fury: The Story of Benjamin Blake, The Rains Came and In Old Chicago; in musicals Alexander's Ragtime Band, Second Fiddle, and Rose of Washington Square; in the westerns Jesse James (1939) and Brigham Young; in the war films A Yank in the R.A.F. and This Above All; and the swashbucklers The Mark of Zorro and The Black Swan. Jesse James was a very big hit at the box office, but it did receive some criticism for fictionalizing and glamorizing the famous outlaw. The movie was shot in and around Pineville, Missouri, and was Power's first location shoot and his first Technicolor movie. (Before his career was over, he had filmed a total of 16 movies in color, including the movie he was filming when he died.) He was loaned out once, to MGM for Marie Antoinette (1938). Darryl F. Zanuck was angry that MGM used Fox's biggest star in what was, despite billing, a supporting role, and he vowed to never again loan him out, though Power's services were requested for the roles of Ashley Wilkes in Gone with the Wind, Joe Bonaparte in Golden Boy,[12] and Parris in Kings Row; roles in several films produced by Harry Cohn;[13] and the role of Monroe Stahr in a planned production by Norma Shearer of The Last Tycoon.[14]
Power was named the second biggest box-office draw in 1939, surpassed only by Mickey Rooney.[15] His box office numbers are some of the best of all time.[16]
1940–1943
[edit]In 1940, the direction of Power's career took a dramatic turn when his movie The Mark of Zorro was released. Power played the role of Don Diego Vega/Zorro, a fop by day, a bandit hero by night. The role had been performed by Douglas Fairbanks in the 1920 movie of the same title. The film was a hit, and 20th Century-Fox often cast Power in other swashbucklers in the years that followed. Power was a talented swordsman in real life, and the dueling scene in The Mark of Zorro is highly regarded. The great Hollywood swordsman, Basil Rathbone, who starred with him in The Mark of Zorro, commented, "Power was the most agile man with a sword I've ever faced before a camera. Tyrone could have fenced Errol Flynn into a cocked hat."[17]
Power's career was interrupted in 1943 by military service. He reported to the United States Marine Corps for training in late 1942, but was sent back, at the request of 20th Century-Fox, to complete one more film,[citation needed] Crash Dive, a patriotic war movie released in 1943. He was credited in the movie as Tyrone Power, U.S.M.C.R., and the movie served as a recruiting film.[citation needed]
Military service
[edit]In August 1942, Power enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. He attended boot camp at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, then Officer's Candidate School at Marine Corps Base Quantico, where he was commissioned a second lieutenant on June 2, 1943. He had already logged 180 solo hours as a pilot before enlisting, so he was able to do a short, intense flight training program at Naval Air Station Corpus Christi, Texas. The pass earned him his wings and a promotion to first lieutenant. The Marine Corps considered Power over the age limit for active combat flying, so he volunteered for piloting cargo planes that he felt would get him into active combat zones.[18]
In July 1944, Power was assigned to Marine Transport Squadron (VMR)-352 as a R5C (Navy version of Army Curtiss Commando C-46) transport co-pilot at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, North Carolina. The squadron moved to Marine Corps Air Station El Centro in California in December 1944. Power was later reassigned to VMR-353, joining them on Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands in February 1945. From there, he flew missions carrying cargo in and wounded Marines out during the Battles of Iwo Jima (Feb-Mar 1945) and Okinawa (Apr-Jun 1945).[citation needed]
For his services in the Pacific War, Power was awarded the American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal with two bronze stars, and the World War II Victory Medal.[19]
Power returned to the United States in November 1945 and was released from active duty in January 1946. He was promoted to the rank of captain in the reserves on May 8, 1951.[20] He remained in the reserves the rest of his life and reached the rank of major in 1957.[21]
In the June 2001 Marine Air Transporter newsletter, Jerry Taylor, a retired Marine Corps flight instructor, recalled training Power as a Marine pilot, saying, "He was an excellent student, never forgot a procedure I showed him or anything I told him." Others who served with him have also commented on how well Power was respected by those with whom he served.[22]
Following the war, 20th Century-Fox provided Power with a surplus DC-3 that he named The Geek [23] that he frequently piloted.[24]
When Power died suddenly at age 44, he was buried with full military honors.[21]
Post-war career
[edit]Late 1940s
[edit]Other than re-releases of his films, Power was not seen on screen again after his entry into the Marines until 1946, when he co-starred with Gene Tierney, John Payne and Anne Baxter in The Razor's Edge, an adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's 1944 novel of the same title.
Next up for release was a movie that Power had to fight hard to make, the film noir Nightmare Alley (1947). Darryl F. Zanuck was reluctant for Power to make the movie because his handsome appearance and charming manner had been marketable assets for the studio for many years. Zanuck feared that the dark role might damage Power's image. Zanuck eventually agreed, giving Power A-list production values for what normally would be a B film. The movie was directed by Edmund Goulding, and though it was a failure at the box-office, it was one of Power's favorite roles for which he received some of the best reviews of his career. However, Zanuck continued to disapprove of his "darling boy" being seen in such a film with a downward spiral. So, he did not publicize it and removed it from release after only a few weeks insisting that it was a flop. The film was released on DVD in 2005 after years of legal issues.[citation needed]
Zanuck quickly released another costume-clad movie, Captain from Castile (also 1947), directed by Henry King, who directed Power in eleven movies. After making a couple of light romantic comedies reuniting him with two actresses under contract to 20th Century-Fox, That Wonderful Urge with Gene Tierney and The Luck of the Irish (both 1948) with Anne Baxter. After these films, Power once again found himself in two swashbucklers, Prince of Foxes (1949) and The Black Rose (1950).
1950s
[edit]Power was becoming increasingly dissatisfied with his costume roles, and he struggled between being a star and becoming a great actor. He was forced to take on assignments he found unappealing, such movies as American Guerrilla in the Philippines (1950) and Pony Soldier (1952). In 1950, he traveled to England to play the title role in Mister Roberts on stage at the London Coliseum, bringing in sellout crowds for twenty-three weeks.[citation needed]
Protesting being cast in one costume film after another, Power refused to star in Lydia Bailey with his role going to Dale Robertson; Power was placed under suspension.[25] Power next appeared in Diplomatic Courier (1952), a Cold War spy drama directed by Henry Hathaway which received very modest reviews.[citation needed]
Power's movies had been highly profitable for Fox in the past, and as an enticement to renew his contract a third time, Fox offered him the lead role in The Robe (1953). He turned it down (Richard Burton was cast instead) and on 1 November 1952, he left on a ten-week national tour with John Brown's Body, a three-person dramatic reading of Stephen Vincent Benét's narrative poem, adapted and directed by Charles Laughton, featuring Power, Judith Anderson and Raymond Massey. The tour culminated in a run of 65 shows between February and April 1953 at the New Century Theatre on Broadway. A second national tour with the show began in October 1953, this time for four months, and with Raymond Massey and Anne Baxter. In the same year, Power filmed King of The Khyber Rifles, a depiction of India in 1857, with Terry Moore and Michael Rennie.[citation needed]
Fox now gave Power permission to seek his own roles outside the studio, on the understanding that he would fulfill his fourteen-film commitment to them in between his other projects. He made The Mississippi Gambler (1953) for Universal-International, negotiating a deal entitling him to a percentage of the profits. He earned a million dollars from the movie. Also in 1953, actress and producer Katharine Cornell cast Power as her love interest in the play The Dark is Light Enough, a verse drama by British dramatist Christopher Fry set in Austria in 1848. Between November 1954 and April 1955, Power toured the United States and Canada in the role, ending with 12 weeks at the ANTA Theater, New York, and two weeks at the Colonial Theater, Boston. His performance in Julian Claman's A Quiet Place, staged at the National Theater, Washington, at the end of 1955 was warmly received by the critics.[citation needed]
Untamed (1955) was Tyrone Power's last movie made under his contract with 20th Century-Fox. The same year saw the release of The Long Gray Line, a John Ford film for Columbia Pictures. In 1956, the year Columbia released The Eddy Duchin Story, another great success for the star, he returned to England to play the rake Dick Dudgeon in a revival of Shaw's The Devil's Disciple for one week at the Opera House in Manchester, and nineteen weeks at the Winter Garden, London.[citation needed]
Darryl F. Zanuck persuaded him to play the lead role in The Sun Also Rises (1957),[citation needed] adapted from the Hemingway novel, with Ava Gardner and Errol Flynn. This was his final film with Fox. Released that same year were Seven Waves Away (US: Abandon Ship!), shot in Great Britain, and John Ford's Rising of the Moon (narrator only), which was filmed in Ireland, both for Copa Productions.
For Power's last completed film role he was cast against type as the accused murderer Leonard Vole in the first film version of Agatha Christie's Witness for the Prosecution (1957), directed by Billy Wilder. The film was a critically well-received box-office success. Writing for the National Post in 2002, Robert Fulford commented on Power's "superb performance" as "the seedy, stop-at-nothing exploiter of women".[26] Power returned to the stage in March 1958, to play the lead in Arnold Moss's adaptation of Shaw's 1921 play, Back to Methuselah.
Personal life
[edit]Power was one of Hollywood's most eligible bachelors until he married French actress Annabella (born Suzanne Georgette Charpentier) on July 14, 1939. Power and Annabella met on the 20th Century-Fox lot around the time they starred together in the movie Suez. Previously, he had involvements with Sonja Henie,[27] Claire Trevor,[28] Joan Woodbury,[29] and Evie Abbott.[30] In an A&E biography, Annabella said that Zanuck "could not stop Tyrone's love for me, or my love for Tyrone." To move her out of Tyrone’s life, Zanuck offered Annabella films in Europe. She refused to leave. At this point, he blacklisted her.[31]
J. Watson Webb, close friend and an editor at 20th Century-Fox, maintained in the A&E Biography that one of the reasons the marriage fell apart was Annabella's inability to give Power a son, yet, Webb said, there was no bitterness between the couple. In a March 1947 issue of Photoplay, Power was interviewed and said that he wanted a home and children, especially a son to carry on his acting legacy.
Annabella shed some light on the situation in an interview published in Movieland magazine in 1948. She said, "Our troubles began because the war started earlier for me, a French-born woman, than it did for Americans." She explained that the war clouds over Europe made her unhappy and irritable, and to get her mind off her troubles, she began accepting stage work, which often took her away from home.
“It is always difficult to put one's finger exactly on the place and time where a marriage starts to break up", she said "but I think it began then. We were terribly sad about it, both of us, but we knew we were drifting apart. I didn't think then—and I don't think now—that it was his fault, or mine.” The couple tried to make their marriage work when Power returned from military service, but they were unable to do so. However, Power adopted Annabella's daughter, Anne, before he left for the service.[32]
Following his separation from Annabella, Power entered into a love affair with Lana Turner that lasted for a couple of years. In her 1982 autobiography, Turner claimed that she became pregnant with Power's child in 1948, but chose to have an abortion.[33]
In 1946, Power and friend Cesar Romero, accompanied by former test pilot, James Denton, a 20th Century Fox executive, and fellow war veteran John Jefferies as navigator, embarked on a goodwill tour throughout South America where they met, among others, Juan and Evita Perón in Argentina.[34][35][36] On September 1, 1947, Power set out on another goodwill trip around the world, piloting his own plane, "The Geek".[37] He flew with Bob Buck, another experienced pilot and war veteran. Buck stated in his autobiography[38] that Power had a photographic mind, was an excellent pilot, and genuinely liked people.” They flew with a crew to various locations in Europe and South Africa, often mobbed by fans when they hit the ground.
In 1948, when "The Geek" reached Rome, Power met and fell in love with Mexican actress Linda Christian. Turner claimed that the story of her dining out with Power's friend Frank Sinatra was leaked to Power and that Power became very upset that she was "dating" another man in his absence. Turner also claimed that it could not have been a coincidence that Linda Christian was at the same hotel as Tyrone Power and implied that Christian had obtained Power's itinerary from 20th Century-Fox.[33]
Power and Christian were married in Rome on January 27, 1949, in the Church of Santa Francesca Romana, with an estimated 8,000 to 10,000 screaming fans outside. Christian miscarried three times before giving birth to a baby girl, Romina Francesca Power, on October 2, 1951. A second daughter, Taryn Stephanie Power, was born on September 13, 1953. Around the time of Taryn's birth, the marriage was becoming rocky. In her autobiography, Christian blamed the breakup of her marriage on her husband's extramarital affairs, including a long involvement with Anita Ekberg,[39] but she acknowledged that she had an affair with Edmund Purdom, which created great tension between Christian and her husband. They divorced in 1955.[40][13]
After his divorce from Christian, Power had a long-lasting love affair with Mai Zetterling, whom he had met on the set of Abandon Ship!.[41] The two lived together, though Power vowed that he would never marry again, because he had been twice burned financially by his previous marriages. He also entered into an affair with a Vogue editor, Mary Roblee,[42] and British actress Thelma Ruby.[43]
In 1957, he met the former Deborah Jean Smith (sometimes incorrectly referred to as Deborah Ann Montgomery), who went by her former married name, Debbie Minardos.[44] They were married on May 7, 1958, and she became pregnant soon after with Tyrone Power Jr., the son he had always wanted.[45]
Death
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (January 2022) |
In September 1958, Power and his wife Deborah traveled to Madrid and Valdespartera, Spain, to film the epic Solomon and Sheba, directed by King Vidor and costarring Gina Lollobrigida. Probably affected by hereditary heart disease, and a chain smoker who smoked three to four packs a day,[46] Power had filmed about 75% of his scenes when he was stricken by a massive heart attack while filming a dueling scene with his frequent costar and friend George Sanders. A doctor diagnosed the cause of Power's death as "fulminant angina pectoris".[47] Power died while being transported to the hospital in Madrid on November 15, 1958, at the age of 44.[5][6]
Power was interred at Hollywood Forever Cemetery (then known as Hollywood Cemetery) in a military service on November 21.[48] Henry King flew over the service; almost 20 years before, Power had flown in King's plane to the set of Jesse James in Missouri, Power's first experience with flying. Aviation became an important part of Power's life, both in the U.S. Marines and as a civilian. In the foreword to Dennis Belafonte's The Films of Tyrone Power, King wrote: "Knowing his love for flying and feeling that I had started it, I flew over his funeral procession and memorial park during his burial, and felt that he was with me."[49]
Power was interred beside a small lake. His grave is marked with a gravestone in the form of a marble bench containing the masks of comedy and tragedy with the inscription "Good night, sweet prince." At Power's grave, Laurence Olivier read the poem "High Flight".[50]
Power's will, filed on December 8, 1958, contained a then-unusual provision that his eyes be donated to the Estelle Doheny Eye Foundation for corneal transplantation or retinal study.[citation needed]
Deborah Power gave birth to a son on January 22, 1959, two months after her husband's death.[citation needed] She remarried within the year to producer Arthur Loew Jr.[citation needed]
Honours
[edit]For Power's contribution to motion pictures, he was honored in 1960 with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame that can be found at 6747 Hollywood Blvd. On the 50th anniversary of his death, Power was honored by American Cinematheque with a weekend of films and remembrances by co-stars and family as well as a memorabilia display at the Egyptian Theatre in Los Angeles from November 14–16, 2008.[51] Also on display were the two known surviving panels from a large painted glass mural which Power and his wife had commissioned for their home, celebrating highlights of their lives and special moments in Power's career,[52] The December 2, 1952, issue of Look Magazine had also featured this mural in a four-page spread titled "The Tyrone Powers Pose For Their Portraits".[53]
Power is shown on the cover of The Beatles' album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band in the third row. In 2018, Power was ranked the 21st-most-popular male film star in history.[54]
Filmography
[edit]Stage appearances
[edit]- Low and Behold, Pasadena Playhouse and Hollywood Music Box Theatre, CA (1933)
- Three-Cornered Moon, Lobero Theatre, Santa Barbara CA (1933)
- Flowers of the Forest, Martin Beck Theatre, NY (1935–1936)
- Romeo and Juliet, Martin Beck Theatre, NY (1935)
- Saint Joan, Martin Beck Theatre, NY (1936)
- Liliom, the Country Playhouse, Westport CT (1941)[55][1]
- Mister Roberts, London Coliseum, England (1950)[2][3]
- John Brown's Body, Lobero Theatre, Santa Barbara CA (1952) [56]
- John Brown's Body, Broadway Century Theatre, NY (1952–1953)[57][58]
- The Dark is Light Enough (1955)[59][60]
- A Quiet Place, The Playwrights Co. (1955–1956)[60]
- The Devil's Disciple, Winter Garden Theatre, London, England (1956)[60]
- Back to Methuselah, Ambassador Theatre, NY (1958)[60]
Radio appearances
[edit]Year | Program | Episode | Co-Star |
---|---|---|---|
1940 | Lux Radio Theatre | "The Rage of Manhattan" | w/ Annabella |
1941 | Lux Radio Theatre | "Blood and Sand" | w/ Annabella |
1942 | Lux Radio Theatre | "This Above All" | w/ Barbara Stanwyck |
1949 | Lux Radio Theatre | "The Bishop's Wife" | w/ David Niven |
1952 | Lux Radio Theatre | "I'll Never Forget You" | w/ Debra Paget |
1954 | Lux Radio Theatre | "The Mississippi Gambler" | w/ Linda Christian |
1954 | Suspense | "The Guilty Always Run" | w/ Cathy Lewis |
References
[edit]- ^ "Power, Tyrone, Capt". www.marines.togetherweserved.com. Retrieved May 18, 2018.
- ^ Belafonte, Dennis; Marill, Alvin H. (1979). The Films of Tyrone Power. Citadel Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0806504773 – via Google Books.
- ^ Zollo, Paul (2011) [2002]. "Part Three: A Tour of Hollywood". Hollywood Remembered: An Oral History of Its Golden Age (Paperback ed.). p. 332. ISBN 978-1589796034.
- ^ Frank Northen Magill, editor, [American Film Guide]; Magill's American Film Guide. Power was known for his many collaborations with Rouben Mamoulian. 4. NI - ST (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1983). ISBN 9780893562540.
- ^ a b Nevin, Louis P. (November 15, 1958). "Tyrone Power dies in Spain while making new movie". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. p. 1.
- ^ a b "Plane to return body of Tyrone Power". Pittsburgh Press. combined wire services. November 16, 1958. p. 1, section 1.
- ^ "Biography-Ann Power Hardenbergh". Biography-Ann Power Hardenbergh.
- ^ Clooney, Nick (August 5, 1996). "Remembering the Local Stars III". The Cincinnati Post. Archived from the original on May 26, 2013. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
- ^ Goss, Charles Frederic (1912). Cincinnati, the Queen City, 1788–1912 – S.J. Clarke Publishing Company, Clarke, S. J., Publishing Company – Google Books. Retrieved April 21, 2012.
- ^ Andreas, Alfred Theodore (1886). History of Chicago – Alfred Theodore Andreas – Google Books. Retrieved April 21, 2012.
- ^ Kidd, Charles (1987). Debrett Goes to Hollywood. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-00588-1.
- ^ Spergel, Mark J. (1993) Reinventing Reality--The Art and Life of Rouben Mamoulian. The Scarecrow Press, Inc.
- ^ a b Christian, Linda (1963). Linda, My Own Story. Dell.
- ^ Lambert, Gavin (1990) Norma Shearer: A Biography. Knopf.
- ^ International Motion Picture Almanac, 1933-present (Annual). Quigley.
- ^ Cogerson, Bruce (2018). Top 50 Movie Stars: Statistically Speaking. Independently Published
- ^ Rathbone, Basil (1962). In and Out of Character (Ebook ed.). Lanham, MD: Limelight Publishers.
- ^ p. 34 Myers, Robert H. Tyrone Power, Marine Leatherneck Magazine December 1943
- ^ United States Marine Corps Combat Correspondents Fdn, http://www.usmccca.org/archives/category/news, News Section, "Help Put Tyrone Power on a Stamp," March 19, 2012
- ^ M. L. Shettle Jr. (2001). "Tyrone Power: Actor, Marine Corps Aviator". Californians and the Military. California State Military Museum. Retrieved June 20, 2007.
- ^ a b Los Angeles Times, March 30, 2003 p. 193
- ^ "Memories of World War II" (PDF). Marine Air Transporter. Marine Corps Air Transport Association. June 2001. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 30, 2007. Retrieved June 20, 2007.
- ^ p. 292 Buck, Bob North Star over My Shoulder: A Flying Life Simon & Schuster January 3, 2005
- ^ "Article - Ty's Terrific Trip".
- ^ p. 70 Capua, Michelangelo Jean Negulesco: The Life and Films McFarland; Illustrated edition September 1, 2017
- ^ "Witness for the Prosecution Commentary". National Post. Robert Fulford. March 29, 2002. Retrieved January 27, 2007.
- ^ Queen of Ice, Queen of Shadows: The Unsuspected Life of Sonja Henie, Strait, William, Scarborough House, 1990, 08-12885-18X, London England, 368 pp
- ^ At the Center of the Frame: Leading Ladies of the Twenties and Thirties, Drew, William, Vestal Press, 1999, 1-879511-44-4, Lanham Maryland, pp. 319-349
- ^ Films of the Golden Ageissue 112, Orison, Katherine, "Tyrone Power: Joan Woodbury's Boy Next Door," Spring 2023, Davenport, IA, pp. 18-26
- ^ 20th Century Fox: Darryl F. Zanuck and the Creation of the Modern Film Studio, Eyman, Scott, Running Press, 2021, 978-0-7624-7093-8,p. 115, p.149
- ^ Leading Ladies, pp. 113-143
- ^ Samuels, Charles, “Annabella Talks About Ty,” Movieland, March 1948
- ^ a b Lana: The Lady, the Legend, the Truth, Turner, Lana, Dutton, 1982, ASIN B00OX8PEGA, 250 pp
- ^ Gallagher, Bill (April 1947). "Tyrone Power's Untold Story". Screen Stars. Retrieved October 24, 2020.
- ^ Wilson, Robert E. (October 1946). "San Salvador" (PDF). American Foreign Service Journal. Washington, D.C.: American Foreign Service Association. pp. 57–58. Retrieved October 25, 2020.
- ^ Hurlburt, Roger (June 2, 1991). "A Hollywood Holdover Recalls Its Golden Age". The Sun Sentinel. Retrieved October 24, 2020.
- ^ Nightmare Alley (film)
- ^ Buck, Bob (2005). North Star over My Shoulder: A Flying Life. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. pp. 295–368. ISBN 0743262301.
- ^ Searching for My Father, Power, Romina, Prime Concepts,2014, 978-0-9960475-0-0,Chap. 34
- ^ "Biography for Tyrone Power". cmgworldwide.com. Archived from the original on October 20, 2006. Retrieved January 27, 2007.
- ^ Zetterling, Mai (1986) All Those Tomorrows. Grove.
- ^ Tyrone Power: The Last Star, Guiles, Fred, Turner Publishing, 978-1684424696, Nashville, TN 424 pp
- ^ Ruby-Frye, Thelma, and Frye, Peter (1997),Double or Nothing: Two Lives in the Theatre: The Autobiography of Thelma Ruby and Peter Fryeand . Janus
- ^ "Tyrone Power and Deborah". Java's Journey. March 5, 2014.
- ^ "Biography, ..."though he loved his daughters very much, he was hoping for a boy to carry on his name... "".
- ^ Evans, Arthur G. (2020). World War II veterans in Hollywood. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. p. 133. ISBN 9781476677774.
- ^ Canales, Luiz (2006). Imperial Gina. Branden Publishing Co. ISBN 0-312-00588-1.
- ^ "Tyrone buried in Hollywood". Milwaukee Sentinel. Associated Press. November 22, 1958. p. 3, part 1.
- ^ Belafonte. The Films of Tyrone Power. p. 9.
- ^ "Quotations". Qunl.com. Archived from the original on July 15, 2011. Retrieved April 21, 2012.
- ^ King, Susan (November 14, 2008). "The Magnetic Tyrone Power". LA Times. Archived from the original on October 17, 2015. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
- ^ "Tyrone Power Annual Memorial Service – 2008". tyrone-power.com. Retrieved January 22, 2019.
- ^ "Article – Portraits – 1". tyrone-power.com. Retrieved January 22, 2019.
- ^ Cogerson, Bruce (2018) Top 50 Movie Stars: Statistically Speaking. Independently Published.
- ^ "Tyrone Power:King of 20th Century Fox/Career/Theatre".
- ^ "Stage - John Brown's Body". www.tyrone-power.com. Retrieved June 7, 2023.
- ^ Guiles, Fred Lawrence (1979). Fred Lawrence Guiles, Tyrone Power: The Last Idol (1979). US: Doubleday and Company. ISBN 978-0385143837.
- ^ Steinberg, Jay (September 28, 2012). "Tyrone Power: A Lot More Than Just a Pretty Face!". Tyrone Power Stage and Theater. Archived from the original on February 15, 2016. Retrieved January 13, 2016 – via Chrome.
- ^ "Tyrone Power: King of the 20th Century Fox/Career/Theatre/Theatre Arts, February 23, 1955 1955". The Dark Is Light Enough. May 1955.
- ^ a b c d "Tyrone Power: King of 28th Century Fox/Career/Stage".
External links
[edit]- Tyrone Power at IMDb
- Tyrone Power at the TCM Movie Database
- Tyrone Power at the Internet Broadway Database
- Tyrone Power at AllMovie
- Tyrone Power at Rotten Tomatoes
- Tyrone Power, King of 20th Century-Fox
- Tyrone Power's newsreel appearances at the Associated Press Archive
- Tyrone Power at Virtual History
- 1914 births
- 1958 deaths
- Military personnel from Ohio
- 20th-century American male actors
- 20th Century Studios contract players
- American male film actors
- American male radio actors
- United States Marine Corps personnel of World War II
- American people of English descent
- American people of French-Canadian descent
- American people of German descent
- American people of Irish descent
- Burials at Hollywood Forever Cemetery
- Male actors from Cincinnati
- Power family
- United States Marine Corps officers
- United States Marine Corps reservists
- United States Marine Corps pilots of World War II
- Filmed deaths of entertainers