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Celebrities / Actors / Gig Young / Biography
Gig Young

Gig Young

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Biography

This page uses content from the Gig Young biography page on the English version of Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list of authors can be seen in the page history. Rotten Tomatoes disclaims any and all warranties as to the accuracy or reliability of the content.

Gig Young (November 4, 1913–October 19, 1978) was an American film actor.

Born Byron Elsworth Barr in St. Cloud, Minnesota, his parents John and Emma Barr raised him in Washington DC. He developed a passion for the theatre while appearing in high school plays, then after some amateur experience, he applied for and received a scholarship to the acclaimed Pasadena Community Playhouse. While acting in 'Pancho', a south-of-the-border play by Lowell Barrington, he and the leading actor in the play, George Reeves, were spotted by a Warner Brothers talent scout. Both actors were signed to supporting player contracts with the studio. Young was forced to change his given name Byron Barr to avoid confusion with another actor of the same name. The name "Gig Young" was taken from a character he played in one of his earliest films, The Gay Sisters (1942).

Signed to a contract with Warner Brothers, Young appeared in supporting roles in numerous films during the 1940s, and came to be regarded as a popular and likeable second lead, playing the brothers or friends of the principal characters. During World War II, Young took a hiatus from his movie career and served admirably in the United States Coast Guard, alongside fellow Hollywood actors Cesar Romero and Richard Cromwell.

In the early 1950s Young began to play the type of role that he would become best known for, a sardonic but engaging and affable drunk. His dramatic work as an alcoholic in Come Fill the Cup (1951), and his comedic role as a tipsy but ultimately charming cad in Teacher's Pet (1958), each earned him nominations for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.

He won the Academy Award for his role as Rocky, the dance marathon emcee and promoter in They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969).

Alcoholism plagued his later years. Cast in "Blazing Saddles" (1974) as the Waco Kid, he was replaced by director Mel Brooks with Gene Wilder on the first day of filming because he was suffering from delirium tremens on the set.

Young married his third wife, actress Elizabeth Montgomery, 20 years his junior, in 1956. They divorced in 1963 amid rumors of domestic violence.

Young's fourth wife, Elaine Young, became a prominent Beverly Hills real estate agent in the 1970s and she brokered many transactions over the ensuing years to a myriad of Hollywood luminaries. Elaine Young, who passed away in April 2006, was also noted for overcoming disfiguring plastic surgery and for her outspoken crusade for reforms against improperly trained cosmetic surgeons.

Young is considered the ultimate victim of the Oscar curse, so-called because many Academy Award winners have seen their careers decline or reach a dead-end after winning the ultimate accolade from their peers. According to his fourth wife, Elaine Williams, "What he was aching for, as he walked up to collect his Oscar, was a role in his own movie -- one that they could finally call a Gig Young movie." Young was shattered when that opportunity did not materialise. "For Gig, the Oscar was literally the kiss of death, the end of the line," according to Williams. He himself said to Louella Parsons after failing to win in 1951 that "So many people who have been nominated for an Oscar have had bad luck afterwards."

In 1978, aged 64, he married his fifth wife, a 31 year-old German art gallery employee named Kim Schmidt. Three weeks after their marriage they were both found dead at home with gunshot wounds to the head in their New York City apartment. Police theorize that Young first shot his wife and then turned the gun on himself in a suicide pact.

His will, which covered a $200,000 estate, left his Academy Award to his agent, Martin Baum, and Baum's wife. The wording of the will called it "the Oscar that I won because of Martin's help". New York City police found the statuette beside the bodies of Young and his wife.

He had one daughter Jennifer; he filed a non-paternity suit claiming he wasn't her father and left her $10 in his will.

Though the case attracted considerable media attention and speculation, Young's motivation for the murder/suicide remains unknown, as he left no suicide note, and his associates could provide no explanation for his action.

The murder/suicide occurred at ([1]) The Osborne Apartments on West 57th Street between Seventh Avenue & Broadway, a co-op building. On the day he died, Gig Young taped an episode of the Joe Franklin TV show (which never aired) and then went home and committed the murder suicide. The show exists and is in the Joe Franklin Archives([2])


Filmography

  • Dive Bomber (1941)
  • Air Force (1943)
  • Old Acquaintance (1943)
  • Practically Yours (1944)
  • Love Letters (1945)
  • Tokyo Rose (1945)
  • Escape Me Never (1947)
  • The Woman in White (1948)
  • Wake of the Red Witch (1948)
  • The Three Musketeers (1949)
  • Lust for Gold (1949)
  • Hunt the Man Down (1950)
  • Only the Valiant (1950)
  • Slaughter Trail (1951)
  • Too Young to Kiss (1951)
  • You For Me (1952)
  • Arena (1953)
  • The Girl Who Had Everything (1953)
  • Young At Heart (1954)
  • The Desperate Hours (1955)
  • Desk Set (1957)
  • The Tunnel of Love (1958)
  • Teacher's Pet (1958)
  • The Story on Page One (1959)
  • Ask Any Girl (1959)
  • That Touch of Mink (1959)
  • Kid Galahad (1962)
  • A Ticklish Affair (1963)
  • Five Miles to Midnight (1963)
  • Strange Bedfellows (1965)
  • They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969)
  • Lovers and Other Strangers (1970)
  • Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974)
  • The Hindenburg (1975)
  • Sherlock Holmes in New York (1976)
  • Game of Death (1978)



External links

  • Gig Young's Gravesite

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify the biographical information on this page under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.



 
 
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