James Ellison(1910-1993)
- Actor
- Editor
- Soundtrack
American light leading man, primarily of Westerns, James Ellison was
born James Ellison Smith in Guthrie Center, Iowa, in 1910. He grew up
on a ranch in Valier, Montana, where he learned the skills that would
stand him in good stead as a movie cowboy. His family moved to Los
Angeles when he was a young man, and it was there that he first became
interested in the theatre. He studied at the Pasadena Playhouse
briefly, traveled to New York (and by some accounts played some minor
roles in productions of the visiting Moscow Art Theatre, probably as a
supernumerary), then returned to California where he was spotted by a
Warner Bros. talent scout at a production of the Beverly Hills Theatre. He played a number of small parts for Warners and MGM before
landing the plum part of Hopalong Cassidy's sidekick, "Johnny Nelson", in Paramount's wildly successful series. Ellison played Nelson in eight films between the years 1935 and 1937, also playing in other films in-between. Although he was a supporting player in the Hopalong films, his name was strangely billed in the same size and format as veteran actor and matinee idol William Boyd's. Although not confirmed, the reason for this oddity is thought to be because the character Johnny Nelson was very prominent in the Hopalong Cassidy book series. There were also rumors around Hollywood that Ellison was destined to become "the next Gary Cooper" - a prediction that would fall short, as Ellison never achieved stand-alone stardom.
In 1936, just before his exit from the Hopalong Cassidy films, Ellison was plucked by
Cecil B. DeMille for the role of
Buffalo Bill Cody in De Mille's epic Western,
The Plainsman (1936), opposite
Gary Cooper. De Mille reportedly
hated Ellison's performance and wanted to ensure that Ellison never had
as good a part in quite as good a film ever again. In the late 1930s
and 1940s, Ellison did follow up with quite a number of romantic leads
in a wide variety of films, from musicals and light mysteries, with
such co-stars as Maureen O'Hara
(They Met in Argentina (1941)), Lucille Ball (Next Time I Marry (1938)), James Stewart and Ginger Rogers
(Vivacious Lady (1938)) to the
cult horror classic, I Walked with a Zombie (1943).
In 1950, Ellison returned to westerns, this time as the lead
(along with his Hopalong replacement and longtime friend
Russell Hayden) in a series of 11
westerns featuring them as two frontier lawmen, Lucky (Hayden) and
Shamrock (Ellison). Of all his roles, however, he is perhaps best remembered for being Hopalong Cassidy's first and most dominant sidekick.
In the late 1950s, Ellison retired from movies and became a successful real estate
broker. He died in 1993, as the result of a fall in which he broke his
neck, at the age of 83.
Ellison was married twice, first to Gertrude Durkin, whom he took as his wife in 1937. They had two children, Durk and Trudy. After Gertrude's death in 1970, Ellison married Lois Bretherton on June 25, 1972, and remained married to her until his death.