Wallace Ford(1898-1966)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
A stocky, friendly-faced character actor, Ford was born Samuel Jones in
England, where the brutality of his childhood rivaled anything that Charles Dickens
ever dreamed up. He lived for a while in an orphanage after being
separated from his parents. While still young, he was sent to a Toronto
branch of the orphanage. There, he began a cycle that involved living
in 17 foster homes, the longest being with a farm family that treated
him like a slave. At age 11 he ran away and joined a vaudeville troupe
called the Winnipeg Kiddies, with whom he stayed until 1914. He then
joined a friend named Wallace Ford, and the two 'hoboed" their way into
the United States. After the friend was crushed to death by a railroad
car, he took the name Wallace Ford in his friend's memory and found work in
theatrical troupes and repertory companies. On Broadway he acted in
"Abraham Lincoln," "Abie's Irish Rose," and "Bad Girl." He left
Broadway in 1932 to appear with
Joan Crawford in
Possessed (1931); he also landed the
lead in MGM's notorious Freaks (1932),
although his fellow actors proved more memorable. He also co-starred as
Walter Huston's amoral brother in one of
the studio's few full-blown gangster melodramas,
The Beast of the City (1932),
starring Jean Harlow in arguably her most
hard-bitten role. In all he appeared in over 200 films, including five
directed by John Ford
(The Last Hurrah (1958),
The Whole Town's Talking (1935),
They Were Expendable (1945),
The Lost Patrol (1934), and
The Informer (1935)). He also
appeared with Henry Fonda in the TV series
"The Deputy," which ran from 1959 to 1960. Ford died of a heart attack soon
after his last memorable role as "Old Pa" in the hit
Sidney Poitier drama A Patch of Blue (1965).