The
Dependable Sidekick
By
Ed Garea
Like most actors who
made their living in supporting roles, George Kennedy’s oeuvre
included many films that were terrible, with absurd plotting, bad
direction, and over-emoted acting. Yet, his versatility was noted by
casting directors, and in a career that spanned five decades, Kennedy
had 191 film and television roles to his credit. Kennedy, who died
February 28 in Boise at the age of 91, played cowboys, drifters,
G.I.’s, and other assorted tough guys, including convict “Dragline”
in Cool Hand Luke, a role that earned him 1967's Best
Supporting Actor Oscar.
Except for that
performance and a handful of films, he most often played a peripheral
role – the dependable sidekick, whose function was to set up the
star.
He
was born George Harris Kennedy, Jr. on February 18, 1925, in New York
City. His father, George Harris Kennedy, was a musician and orchestra
leader who dies when Kennedy was four years old, leaving him to be
raised by his mother, Helen, who was a ballet dancer by trade. He
made his stage debut at age 2 in a touring company of
Bringing Up Father,
and by age 7 was a radio DJ in New York City.
After graduating in 1943 from Chaminade High School in Mineola, New York, Kennedy enlisted in the Army and fought as an infantryman under George Patton in Europe during World War II. He intended to make the military his career, serving for 16 years and opening the Army’s first office of technical assistance for films and television, until a back injury forced him to find another line of work.
His experience led
to his hiring as a technical adviser to The Phil Silvers
Show, and soon he was appearing on screen as MP Sergeant Kennedy
and given a couple of lines to speak in each episode. He would be
quoted later as saying that his duties on the whole provided “a
great technical ground.”
Other
guest shots on shows such as Colt
.45, Cheyenne, Peter
Gunn,
and Maverick confirmed
the acting bug, and Kennedy decided to make acting his career. He was
steadily employed as a guest star on various television series from
1959 to 1963 with only a few bit roles in movies such
as Spartacus (1960),
playing a rebel soldier who, during the scene when the Roman victors
asked the crowd for Spartacus, had the last close-up as he yelled, “I
am Spartacus.” In the 1961 Civil War drama The
Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come, he
had a meatier role as Nathan Dillon.
In 1963, Kennedy won
notice for his performance as heavy Herman Scobie in the Cary
Grant/Audrey Hepburn movie, Charade, a film often
described as the best Hitchcock movie Hitchcock never made. He also
had roles in Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte (1964), In
Harm’s Way (1965), and The Flight of the
Phoenix (1965).
He returned to
television as his main stock, winning a following for his portrayal
of “Big Frenchie” in McHale’s Navy, which he
parleyed into a role in the big screen version of the series (1964).
Many of his television appearances were in Westerns, where Kennedy
described his function: “The big guys were on TV and they needed
big lumps to eat up. All I had to do was show up on the set, and I
got beaten up.” His rugged but bland looks were right for almost
any part.
In 1967, his
fortunes changed. First he was cast as Maj. Max Armbruster in the
cult World War II movie The Dirty Dozen (1967). Then he won
the role that brought him the Oscar, that of Dragline, the convict
leader in Cool Hand Luke who at first resents the
new prisoner, Lucas “Luke” Jackson, played by Paul Newman, for
his independence, but is later won over by Luke’s integrity and
forcefulness, becoming the disciple who is ultimately responsible for
his friend’s death. His mix of brutality and compassion in his
portrayal reveled a hitherto unseen range and deftly illuminated the
character of Luke.
From then on, movies
became Kennedy’s stock in trade, usually in the supporting role.
The television roles he took were as the star: Sarge,
about a cop-turned- priest, in 1971-72, and The Blue Knight
(1975-76), playing patrolman William “Bumper” Morgan, with the
only major exception being Dallas, where he played
corrupt oil tycoon Carter McKay from 1988 to 1991.
In 1970, he played
the improbable rescuer, Joe Patroni, the maintenance chief who comes
to the rescue in the soapy, all-star, over-the-top Airport,
a melodrama about a bomber on a plane, an airport socked in by a
blizzard, and desperation everywhere. He reprised his role in the
sequels, Airport ’75, Airport ’77,
and The Concorde ... Airport ’79, the only cast
member to appear in all four. Because of this, he was sought for a
role in the spoof, Airplane, as the airport
dispatcher (a role that went to Lloyd Bridges), but according to
producer Jerry Zucker, he turned it down because he was afraid of
losing his Airport cash cow.
But the Zuckers
weren’t done with Kennedy, casting him in the hit movie The
Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988), where he
played Capt. Ed Hocken, whose role was to wince at the damage brought
on by Leslie Nielsen’s bumbling Lt. Frank Drebin. Kennedy would
repose the role in the two sequels that followed: Naked Gun 2
½: The Smell of Fear (1991) and Naked Gun 33 1/3:
The Final Insult (1994).
Other
notable movies included Thunderbolt
and Lightfoot (1974),
with Clint Eastwood, the ensemble disaster flick, Earthquake (1974),
The Eiger
Sanction (1975,
again with Eastwood), The
'Human' Factor (1975), Death
on the Nile (1978),
the box office bomb, Bolero,
with Bo Derek (1984), and The
Delta Force
(1986).
He
also co-starred in a Japanese movie, Ningen
no shomei (Proof
of the Man,
1977) as Ken Shufftan, a New York City detective who joins forces
with Tokyo detective Koichiro Munesue (Yûsaku Matsuda) in pursuing a
murderer of an American in Tokyo who has fled to the Big Apple.
Tensions later arise when Munesue realizes Shufftan is the man who
killed his father during World War II.
His last role was in
the film The Gambler (2014), where he played Ed, the
grandfather of Mark Wahlberg's character.
In 1991, Mr. Kennedy
was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, located at 6352
Hollywood Blvd. in Hollywood, California.
Off screen, Kennedy
authored three books: Murder On Location (1983) a
murder mystery set on a film shoot, Murder on High (1984),
and a memoir, Trust Me (2011).
Kennedy married four
times. Kennedy was married four times. He
married his first wife, Dorothy Gillooly in the 1940s. He
then married and divorced twice Norma Wurman (also known as Revel
Wurman), with whom he
had two children. In
1978, he married Joan McCarthy, who
died a little over a year before his own death. The
couple adopted four children, including granddaughter Taylor, whose
mother, one of their children, was found unfit due to drug-abuse
issues. In addition to grandson Cory Schenkel, Kennedy (who lived in
Eagle, Idaho, near Boise) is survived by a daughter, Shannon
Sullivan; four other grandchildren; and one great-grandson.
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