Gene Lockhart(1891-1957)
- Actor
- Writer
- Soundtrack
Gene Lockhart was born on July 18, 1891, in London, Ontario, Canada,
the son of John Coates Lockhart and Ellen Mary (Delany) Lockhart. His
father had studied singing and young Gene displayed an early interest
in drama and music. Shortly after the 7-year-old danced a Highland
fling in a concert given by the 48th Highlanders' Regimental Band, his
father joined the band as a Scottish tenor. The Lockhart family
accompanied the band to England. While his father toured, Gene studied
at the Brompton Oratory School in London. When they returned to Canada,
Gene began singing in concert, often on the same program with Beatrice Lillie.
His mother encouraged his career, urging him to try for a part on
Broadway. Lockhart went to America. At 25, he got a part in a New York
play in September, 1917, as Gustave in Klaw and Erlanger's musical "The
Riviera Girl." Between acting engagements, he wrote for the stage. His
first production was "The Pierrot Players" for which he wrote both book
and lyrics and played. It toured Canada in 1919 and introduced "The
World Is Waiting for the Sunrise" (words by Lockhart, music by
Ernest Seitz), which became a very popular ballad.. "Heigh-Ho" (1920)
followed, a musical fantasy with score by Deems Taylor and book and lyrics
by Lockhart. It had a short run (again, with him in the cast).
Lockhart's first real break as a dramatic actor came in the supporting
role of Bud, a mountaineer moonshiner, in Lula Vollmer's Sun Up (1939). This was
an American folk play, first presented by The Players, a theatrical
club, in a Greenwich Village little theater in 1923. After great
notices it moved to a larger house for a two-year run. During this
engagement, in 1924 at the age of 33, Lockhart married Kathleen Lockhart (aka
Kathleen Arthur), an English actress and musician. Gene meanwhile also
appeared in a series of performances presented by The Players in New
York theaters: as Gregoire in "The Little Father of the Wilderness"; as
Waitwell in "The Way of the World," as Gumption Cute in "Uncle Tom's
Cabin", and as Faust in "Mephisto." The Lockharts' daughter, June Lockhart,
was born in 1925. She would eventually appear regularly in the
television series Lassie (1954) and Lost in Space (1965). In 1933, Gene and Kathleen were
featured in "Sunday Night at Nine," a radio program presented at New
York's Barbizon-Plaza Hotel. Meanwhile, Lockhart was keeping busy
writing articles for theatrical magazines and a weekly column for a
Canadian publication, coaching members of New York's Junior League in
dramatics, lecturing on dramatic technique at the Julliard School of
Music, and directing a revival of "The Warrior's Husband"--a formidable
schedule. It amused him as he said that, "in spite of [the amount of
work in a typical day] I don't get thin." Lockhart had by this time
taken on the appearance that audiences would see again and again in
films--short and plump with a chubby, jowly face and twinkling blue
eyes. In 1933, he played Uncle Sid in the Theatre Guild's production of
Eugene O'Neill's comedy "Ah, Wilderness!" co-starring George M. Cohan. This was the
role that was to bring Lockhart stardom and lead to a contract with RKO
Pictures and his first film, By Your Leave (1934). O'Neill wrote to Lockhart: "Every
time your Sid has come in for dinner I've wanted to burst into song,
and every time you've come down from that nap I've felt the cold gray
ghost of an old heebie-jeebie." The acclaim for his acting in "Ah,
Wilderness!" allowed Lockhart to proceed to Hollywood and remain there
almost without interruption. However, he was back on Broadway in
December, 1949, when he took over the part of Willy Loman in the New
York production of "Death of a Salesman." Lockhart appeared in over 125
films. Though he often played upright doctors, judges and businessmen,
and was in real life described as an amiable and gentle soul, Lockhart
is perhaps best remembered on film as a villain who usually ends up
cowering in a corner whimpering pitifully before getting his just
desserts, a scene he played to the hilt in such movies as Algiers (1938) (for
which he was nominated for an Oscar), Blackmail (1939), Geronimo (1939), Northern Pursuit (1943), and
Hangmen Also Die! (1943). Late on Saturday, March 30, 1957, Lockhart suffered a heart
attack while sleeping in his apartment at 10439 Ashton Avenue in West
Los Angeles. He was taken to St. John's Hospital and died on Sunday
afternoon, March 31. He is buried in Holy Cross Cemetery.