James Dean
James Dean
Actor James Dean (1931-1955) had a short-lived but intense acting career that began in 1952 and ended tragically in his death in September 1955. After his death he became a cult figure, and fans have marveled for decades at his ability to duplicate their adolescent agony on screen.
Born on February 8, 1931, in Marion, Indiana, James Byron Dean was the only child of Winton and Mildred (Wilson) Dean. Winton, a farmer-turned-dental-technician, moved his family to Santa Monica, California. when Dean was six years old. Receiving a lot of attention from both parents, he was particularly close to his mother. James Byron, as she called him, entered first grade in 1937 at the Brentwood Public School. He took violin lessons, playing well for a young child although his school friends taunted him about this activity.
In July 1940 his mother died of cancer. His father sent him, then nine, back to Indiana to live with Marcus and Ortense Winslow, his sister and brother-in-law. In Fair-mount Dean grew up in the rural Quaker home, helping with farm chores and enjoying a reasonably carefree existence. Underneath, however, he harbored great pain. "My mother died on me when I was nine years old. What does she expect me to do? Do it all alone?" Dean was later to say.
Still, he got along well, riding his motorcycle with friends and playing guard on the high school basketball team. He excelled at debate and drama, coached and trained by teacher Adeline Nall. He won several state titles for his abilities, and on April 14, 1949, the Fairmount News read, "James Dean First Place Winner in Dramatic Speaking."
After graduating in 1949 he left for Los Angeles, where he lived briefly with his father and stepmother and entered Santa Monica City College, majoring in pre-law. But it was drama in which he shone: he received Cs and Ds in law classes, As and Bs in acting. He transferred the following year to the University of California, Los Angeles, pledging Sigma Nu fraternity. Befriended by actor James Whitmore, Dean obtained a small part in a television drama, Hill Number One.
Soon Dean quit school, living precariously as a parking lot attendant and chasing auditions wherever they were available. In 1951, after landing only bit parts and a small role in Fixed Bayonets, a war picture, he left Hollywood for New York. There, in 1953, he landed a spot in the Actors Studio run by Lee Strasberg.
He obtained a small part in See the Jaguar which opened at the Cort Theatre on Broadway on December 3, 1952. After this his career took off. He did television plays and several more Broadway productions and developed a reputation as "difficult." Despite this he won the Daniel
Blum Theatre World Award for "best newcomer" of the year for his role in The Immoralist.
In March 1954 Elia Kazan, who knew Dean from Actors Studio days, offered him a Warner Brothers contract. The film was East of Eden. The film's New York preview was March 10, 1955, but Dean declined to attend. "I can't handle it," he said, and flew back to Los Angeles.
Dean finished filming Rebel Without a Cause (with Sal Mineo and Natalie Wood) in June 1955 and began work on Giant. He co-starred in this with Elizabeth Taylor and Rock Hudson. Completing Giant in September of that year, Dean was to start rehearsing for The Corn Is Green, a play for the National Broadcasting Company. But Dean had a few days free time in which he decided to do some car racing.
Intrigued with fast automobiles, Dean had bought a $6,900 Porsche Spyder which he planned to race at Salinas, California, in September. On September 30th, he and his mechanic, Rolf Wuetherich, were involved in a head-on collision at Paso Robles, California. The Porsche was crumpled, Rolf suffered a smashed jaw and leg fracture. James Dean, dead at the age of 24, was buried in Fairmount, Indiana, on October 8, 1955. Three thousand people attended his funeral.
Less than a month later, Rebel Without a Cause opened in New York City, and the Dean legend began. Warner Brothers received landslides of mail—fans were obsessed with the curt, swaggering Dean. In February 1956 he was nominated for a Best Performance Oscar for his role in East of Eden. He also received numerous foreign awards, including the French Crystal Star award and the Japanese Million Pearl award. By June 1956 there were dozens of fan clubs, and rumors flourished that Dean was not dead, only severely injured.
Dean, interviewed in March 1955, commented on his craft, offering this curiously fatalistic view of life: "To me, acting is the most logical way for people's neuroses to manifest themselves. To my way of thinking, an actor's course is set even before he's out of the cradle."
Further Reading
Although countless articles appeared about James Dean during his short career and following his death, there are only a few substantial biographies. They include: William Bast's James Dean (1956), written by a former roommate and close personal friend; James Dean: The Mutant King (1974) by David Dalton; James Dean, A Short Life (1974) by Venable Herndon; and Dennis Stock's James Dean Revisited (1978). □
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Inquiry after hospital mortuary licences suspended; Post-mortem examinations at UHW halted.
Newspaper article from: Western Mail (Cardiff, Wales); 8/19/2009; 700+ words
; ...to the suspension of post-mortem examinations at the...stop performing post-mortem examinations from August...out up to 600 post-mortem examinations every year...risk post-mortem examinations. Dr Sandy Mather...relating to ...
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Organ scandal leads to fall in post-mortem examinations
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 2/17/2005; ; 446 words
; A CRISIS of confidence in post-mortem examinations in the wake of the scandal over...relatives refusing requests for post-mortem tests was putting the future of...34 per cent decrease in post-mortem examinations between 2002 and...
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Deaths anguish may last 10 years ; London-based post-mortem examinations on dead babies in South Devon and the rest of the region could continue for the next 10 years, a coroner's officer has warned.
Newspaper article from: Herald Express (Torquay UK); 1/18/2008; 409 words
; London-based post-mortem examinations on dead babies in South Devon...deaths. He added: "These posts are unevenly distributed throughout...paediatric pathologists undertaking post-mortem examination work in the South West." Mr...
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HOSPITAL'S MORTUARY MYSTERY; All post-mortem examinations at city's UHW halted after 'serious concerns'.
Newspaper article from: South Wales Echo (Cardiff, Wales); 8/19/2009; 631 words
; ...under way today to discover why post-mortem examinations at Wales' largest hospital have...all medical and coroner post-mortem examinations after serious concerns...which carries out up to 600 post-mortem examinations a year, mainly for...
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Qld: Post mortem examinations to be performed on vagrant men
Newspaper article from: AAP General News (Australia); 5/9/2002; 245 words
; 00-00-0000 Qld: Post mortem examinations to be performed on vagrant men Post mortem examinations will be carried out today on two middle...Inspector OLIPHANT says a preliminary examination has shown no signs of violence. The names...
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Coroner who carried out post-mortem examinations on writers and actors ; Ronald n Kornblum, a former Los Angeles County coroner who performed post-mortem examinations on such celebrities as John Belushi, Natalie Wood and Truman Capote, has died at the age of 74.
Newspaper article from: Western Morning News, The Plymouth (UK); 9/30/2008; 551 words
; ...former Los Angeles County coroner who performed post-mortem examinations on such celebrities as John Belushi, Natalie Wood...upheaval". During his tenure, he handled the examinations of Belushi, Wood, William Holden and other actors...
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Qld: Post-mortem examination to be held after murder-suicide
Newspaper article from: AAP General News (Australia); 4/6/2004; 274 words
; ...General News (Australia) 04-06-2004 Qld: Post-mortem examination to be held after murder-suicide BRISBANE, April 6 AAP - Post-mortem examinations will be carried out today on the bodies of two...
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Second post-mortem examination ordered.(News)
Newspaper article from: Western Mail (Cardiff, Wales); 3/1/2003; 383 words
; A SECOND post-mortem examination is to be carried out on a mother and baby who were found...uncle, William Llewellyn, had identified the bodies. The post-mortem examinations are due to be carried out at the University Hospital of...
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Animal ban for woman after goats starved; POST-MORTEM EXAMINATION SHOWED THEY HAD NO FOOD FOR 14 DAYS.(News)
Newspaper article from: Coventry Evening Telegraph (England); 7/18/2003; 595 words
; ...of the RSPCA, was severely emaciated and was so ill it had to be carried away by inspector Gerry Pfieffer. Post-mortem examinations on the two creatures revealed they had not eaten or drunk for two weeks. Stratford, who has kept animals for...
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How Jack died is still a mystery; POLICE: Further post-mortem examinations are needed to establish cause of death.(News)
Newspaper article from: Coventry Evening Telegraph (England); 1/17/2006; 618 words
; ...Leam in Leamington on January 3, almost a month after he went missing during a night out with friends. The post-mortem examination results proved inconclusive and led to further tests being carried out; however, the first of those has also...
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post-mortem examination
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
post-mortem examination or autopsy...circumstances post-mortem examination may be performed only...before death. These examinations are more frequently being...learned from a post-mortem examination. Legionnaire...
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Post Mortem
Encyclopedia entry from: West's Encyclopedia of American Law
POST MORTEM [ Latin, After death. ] Pertaining to matters occurring after death. A term generally applied to an autopsy or examination of a corpse in order to ascertain the cause of death or to the inquisition for that purpose by the coroner .
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post-mortem
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
post-mortem ( autopsy ) Dissection of a body to determine the cause of death. It is performed to confirm a diagnosis or to establish the cause of an unexpected death. Morbid anatomy (the examination of the dead) is a branch of pathology .
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Prions
Book article from: World of Forensic Science
...dubbed prion, is an example of forensic science . Post-mortem examinations of tissue samples are geared toward unearthing...encephalopathy. This appearance is a hallmark of forensic examinations. The weight of evidence now supports the contention...
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dissection
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to the Body
...Paris, and Montpelier. There is evidence that human post-mortem examinations were conducted in Bologna towards the end of the thirteenth...first comprehensive human dissection to be done in post-Alexandrian times was performed in Bologna, in...
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