Biography
This page uses content from the Hurd Hatfield 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.
Hurd Hatfield (December 7, 1917 – December 26, 1998) was an American actor.
Born William Rukard Hurd Hatfield in New York, New York, Hatfield was educated at Columbia University before travelling to London, England where he studied drama and began acting in theater. He returned to America for his film debut in Dragon Seed (1944).
His second film, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945), is arguably the film he is best remembered for. As Oscar Wilde's ageless hero, Hatfield received widespread acclaim for his good looks as much as for his acting ability.
His subsequent films, The Diary of a Chambermaid (1946), The Beginning or the End (1947), and The Unsuspected (1947) were successful, but Hatfield's career began to lose momentum very quickly.
His other films include Tarzan and the Slave Girl (1950), King of Kings (as Pontius Pilate) (1961), El Cid (1961), Harlow (1965), The Boston Strangler (1968), King David (1985), Crimes of the Heart (1986), and Her Alibi (1989).
He also appeared frequently on television and received an Emmy Award nomination for the made-for-television movie The Invincible Mr. Disraeli (1963). Among his many television credits are three guest appearances on Murder, She Wrote opposite his The Picture of Dorian Gray costar, Angela Lansbury, who had become a lifelong friend, and who also had a home in County Cork.
In 1966 he appeared on the television series The Wild Wild West in an episode entitled The Night of the Man-Eating House. In a twist on his Dorian role his character start as a creaky old man who, upon entering a house inhabited by the ghost of his mother, was turned back into a youthful Confederate soldier.
In his later years Hatfield was noted for his youthful appearance, and in interviews would joke about the picture he was hiding in his attic, in reference to Dorian Gray.
According to the magazine Film in Review, Hatfield was ambivalent about Dorian Gray, feeling that it had typecast him. "You know, I was never a great beauty in Gray," he is reported to have said, "and I never understood why I got the part and have spent my career regretting it" (see [1]).
Hatfield was gay and had many affairs with younger men over the course of his career. In addition to Lansbury, he was good friends with director Curtis Harrington and actress Jean Stapleton.
Hatfield lived in Rathcormac, County Cork, Republic of Ireland from the early 1970s, and he died at his home in Monkstown, County Cork, of a heart attack in his sleep, aged 81, after having had Christmas dinner with friends.
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