Lee J. Cobb: Characters of an Actor

Lee J. Cobb: Characters of an Actor

by Donald Dewey
Lee J. Cobb: Characters of an Actor

Lee J. Cobb: Characters of an Actor

by Donald Dewey

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Overview

For many of his theater contemporaries, Lee J. Cobb (1911–1976) was the greatest actor of his generation. In Hollywood he became the definitive embodiment of gangsters, psychiatrists, and roaring lunatics. From 1939 until his death, Cobb contributed riveting performances to a number of films, including Boomerang, On the Waterfront, The Brothers Karamazov, 12 Angry Men, and The Exorcist. But for all of his conspicuous achievements in motion pictures, Cobb’s name is most identified with the character Willy Loman in the original stage production of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman (1949). Directed by Elia Kazan, Cobb’s Broadway performance proved to be a benchmark for American theater.

In Lee J. Cobb: Characters of an Actor, Donald Dewey looks at the life and career of this versatile performer. From his Lower East Side roots in New York City—where he was born Leo Jacob—to multiple accolades on stage and the big and small screens, Cobb’s life proved to be a tumultuous rollercoaster of highs and lows. As a leading man of the theater, he gave a number of compelling performances in such plays as Golden Boy and King Lear. For the Hollywood studios, Cobb fit the description of the “character actor.” No one better epitomized the performer who suddenly appears on the screen and immediately grabs the audience’s attention. During his forty-five-year career, there wasn’t a significant star—from Humphrey Bogart and James Stewart to Paul Newman and Clint Eastwood—with whom he didn’t work.

Cobb was also followed by controversy: he appeared before the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 1950s and was a witness to a movie-set murder case in the 1970s. Through it all, he never lost his taste for fast cars and gin rummy. A bear of a man with a voice that equally accommodated growls and sibilant sympathies, Cobb was undeniably an actor to be reckoned with. In this fascinating book, Dewey captures all of the drama that surrounded Cobb, both on screen and off.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780810887725
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 02/18/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 348
File size: 12 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Donald Dewey has written hundreds of magazine stories and articles, many about the film industry. He is the author of more than thirty books, including Marcello Mastroianni: His Life and Art (1993), James Stewart: A Biography (1997), and Ray Arcel: A Boxing Biography (2012).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: The Actor: Characters and Actors
Chapter 2: Pressrooms and Prodigies
Chapter 3: The Actor: Stanislavsky in America
Chapter 4: Group Experiences
Chapter 5: The Actor: How Was School? Fine.
Chapter 6: Golden (and Not So Golden) Opportunities
Chapter 7: Married to More Than the Mob
Chapter 8: The Actor: All in the Family
Chapter 9: Clashes in the East
Chapter 10: Clashes in the West
Chapter 11: The Actor: The Thought That Counts
Chapter 12: Trotting With Fox
Chapter 13: Attention Being Paid
Chapter 14: The Actor: Studio of the Stars
Chapter 15: The Un-American Dream
Chapter 16: Going Door to Door
Chapter 17: On All Fronts
Chapter 18: Matters of the Heart.......and Head
Chapter 19: All the Guilty Men
Chapter 20: The Actor --- Tele-Emoting
Chapter 21: Jewish and Other Kinds of Westerns
Chapter 22: Comedy Is Hard
Chapter 23: Between the Dragon and His Wrath
Chapter 24: Bullies and Connivers
Chapter 25: The Actor: The Journeyman
Chapter 26: Finishing Touches
Chapter 27: The Actor
Filmography
Stageography
Television Appearances
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
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