Holden, William, 1st Lt

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
First Lieutenant
Last Primary AFSC/MOS
AAF MOS 5000-Special Services Officer
Last AFSC Group
Special Services (Officer)
Primary Unit
1942-1945, 1st Motion Picture Unit (USAAF)
Service Years
1942 - 1945
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First Lieutenant

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

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Home State
Illinois
Illinois
Year of Birth
1918
 
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This Remembrance Profile was originally created by SSgt Gerald Jones (Jerry) - Deceased
 
Contact Info
Home Town
O'Fallon, IL
Last Address
Santa Monica, CA
Date of Passing
Nov 16, 1981
 

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 Unit Assignments
1st Motion Picture Unit (USAAF)
  1942-1945, 1st Motion Picture Unit (USAAF)
 Combat and Non-Combat Operations
  1941-1945 World War II
 Colleges Attended 
Pasadena City College
  1936-1937, Pasadena City College
 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Burial:
Cremated, Ashes scattered at sea.
Specifically: Ashes scattered in the Pacific Ocean
 

Few Hollywood actors have conveyed spiritual and physical pain with the charismatic authority of William Holden. This scion of a wealthy family in the chemical business first registered in films as a clean-cut, affably handsome lead in the 1940s and he matured into more rough and tumble roles. Along the way his earnest qualities yielded to cynicism, perhaps most notably for writer-director Billy Wilder in "Sunset Boulevard" (1950) and in his Oscar-winning performance in "Stalag 17" (1953). Over the years, the rigors of life and drink re-sculpted his features into an expressive leather that gave testimony to the ravages of the moral ambiguity that had characterized many of his best roles. This quality may have been most eloquently expressed by his central performance as the desperado cowboy Pike in Sam Peckinpah's violent autumnal Western classic, "The Wild Bunch" (1969).

Holden became a star with his first substantial feature role as the boxer-violinist in "Golden Boy" (1939), a part that cast him opposite screen siren Barbara Stanwyck, who would later become his mentor and life-long booster. Holden was soon getting cast in fairly innocuous roles: the boy-next-door; the quintessential All-American in such films as "Arizona" as the amiable lover of a determined corruption buster Jean Arthur; the idealistic small town hero in "Our Town"; a hell-raising Joe College in "Those Were the Days" (all 1940). He was pitted against Glenn Ford, rivaling for the affections of Claire Trevor, in "Texas" (1941), tried to heat up an ice-cool Dorothy Lamour in the musical "The Fleet's In" (1942), and was a poor boy who gets married in "Meet The Stewarts" (1942).

Holden joined the Army Air Force, served in WWII and returned to the screen with a more complex personality. He starred in several films which, though unremarkable, were box-office favorites ("Dear Ruth" 1947 and "Rachel and the Stranger" 1948) before being cast against type to play a psycho killer in the low-budget noir "The Dark Past" (1949). 1950 proved to be Holden's watershed year: he starred in two career landmarks, "Born Yesterday" as Judy Holliday's culture tutor-cum-lover, and Billy Wilder's "Sunset Boulevard", as Norma Desmond's hack screenwriter gigolo. With the latter portrayal, Holden's screen persona began to move into the gray areas that were further explored in later roles like that of the pessimistic POW suspected of being a Nazi informer in Wilder's "Stalag 17" (1953), a role which garnered Holden a Best Actor Oscar. Wilder discovered and expertly exploited the dichotomy between the actor's wholesome All-American appearance and his potential for conveying moral darkness. Holden went on to become a leading box-office star between 1954-58 and reigned as the top-grosser in 1956. Notable roles of this period included playing an ambitious company man in "Executive Suite", a ne'er-do-well playboy in Wilder's "Sabrina" (both 1954) and the drifter who breaks Kim Novak's heart in "Picnic" (1956).

Holden remained active for nearly three more decades, showing up in a pivotal role in "The Bridge on the River Kwai" (1957). While many of his 60s credits were routine and worse (e.g. "Paris When It Sizzles" 1963), the decade also boasted some undeniable triumphs, including his portrayal of a double agent in the fine thriller "The Counterfeit Traitor" (1962) and a career highlight in Peckinpah's "The Wild Bunch" (1969). The 70s found Holden in a number of mediocre action and adventure vehicles ("Towering Inferno" 1974, "Ashanti" 1979, "The Earthling" 1980) as well as a few winners including the highly acclaimed "Network" (1976), as a conscientious TV executive, and Wilder's sadly underrated "Fedora" (1978), as a producer trying to encourage a Garbo-esque star to come out of self-imposed retirement. Fairly late in his career, Holden made his TV debut, winning an Emmy for his work in the detective miniseries about the L.A. police department "The Blue Knights" (1973). His final film performance came in Blake Edwards' caustically comic look at Hollywood, "S.O.B." (1981).

Holden died from an accidental fall in his apartment in 1981.

Source: TCM.com


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Holden
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000034/bio
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000034/
http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/person/87865%7C155797/William-Holden/
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=1890
http://williamholden.20m.com/biopage.html

   
Other Comments:

Birthname:  William Frank Beedle, Jr.

Won Best Actor for his role in "Stalag 17" (1953). When accepting his statue at the Academy Awards, he simply stated, "Thank you" and walked off the stage. Holden felt he didn't deserve it, saying he thought Burt Lancaster should have won for "From Here to Eternity".


   
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