Walter Abel


A prolific staple of Hollywood cinema for over a generation, Walter Abel may not have duplicated some of his early New York stage successes in leading roles once he relocated to the film world out West, but his was a versatile and an intelligent talent. His attractively open face, with its trademark trim mustache, lent a dapper yet sincere quality to the many harried professionals he played so well.

With his clarion voice and controlled yet energetic acting style, Abel enjoyed considerable success onstage in both leads and character roles in the 1920s. Especially notable were his simultaneous roles in two productions of Eugene O'Neill plays in 1924, "Bound East for Cardiff" and "Desire Under the Elms". He also acted in major productions of "The Enemy" (1925) and "The Seagull" (1928-29), and made his London debut in "Coquette" (1929). Abel played a small film role in Frank Borzage's version of "Liliom" (1930), but his career in movies was not launched in earnest until several years later, by which time he had also performed onstage in New York in "First Mortgage" and "At the Bottom" and on tour in plays including O'Neill's "Mourning Becomes Electra".

Abel's compact size might have seemed a limitation for leading roles in film, but he was signed at RKO in precisely that capacity. His first major effort, though, would later seem a classic case of miscasting: the role of D'Artagnan in one of the many film versions of "The Three Musketeers" (1935). Abel was more than capable of giving a role charm and brio and he tried his best, but the mix of boyish naivete and macho swaggering the role needed simply did not mesh with his looks and acting style. RKO tentatively put him in a few more leading roles in modest programmers like fading diva Ann Harding's swan song for the studio, "The Witness Chair" (1936). Abel was much better served, though, on loan-out to MGM for Fritz Lang's blistering indictment of lynch violence, "Fury" (1936); he was in splendid form as the fiery D.A. who tries an entire mob for its apparent murder of an innocent man (Spencer Tracy).

Often billed as high as second in a cast list, and rarely commanding less than fourth or fifth billing, Abel worked at almost every studio in Hollywood. He was most often cast in modern stories and was rarely the villain. Instead, he played successful but usually modest middle-class businessmen; in comedy Abel could amusingly convey frustration, while in drama he could be quietly helpful or crusading as the occasion demanded. He spent the first half of the 1940s at Paramount; while there he essayed one of his best-remembered roles as the newspaper editor in the offbeat wartime serio-comedy, "Arise My Love" (1940). Supporting Claudette Colbert and Ray Milland as they chase after news, Abel made an indelible impression repeating his key line, "I'm not happy; I'm not happy at all", succinctly summing up his always vaguely dissatisfied Everyman persona.

Abel was also highly amusing in the musical "Holiday Inn" (1942), as Bing Crosby thwarts his efforts to locate Fred Astaire's ideal dance partner based on his memory of only the back of her head. He also shone as one of Bette Davis' admirers in the period soap opera "Mr. Skeffington" (1944), finally telling the vain heroine a few truths about herself. After the war Abel returned to the stage for a time in Dalton Trumbo's "The Biggest Thief in Town" (1949) and "The Wisteria Tree" (1952), Joshua Logan's adaptation of Chekhov's "The Cherry Orchard". During the 50s, though, Abel was vice president of the Screen Actors Guild while Ronald Reagan served as president, and he returned to film roles in "So This Is Love" (1953) and "Raintree County" (1957), among others. In the 60s, Abel served as president of the American National Theater and Academy and performed onstage in "Night Life" (1962) and "The Ninety Day Mistress" (1967). Screen credits continued intermittently as well, from the fine suspenser "Mirage" (1965) right up to his last credit in "Grace Quigley" (lensed 1983; released 1985), giving Katharine Hepburn the same sort of able support he had done for so many others.

  • Born:
    June 6, 1898 in St Paul, Minnesota, USA
  • Died:
    March 26, 1987.
  • Job Titles:
    Actor
Significant Others
  • Wife: . died in 1979
Education
  • American Academy of Dramatic Arts, New York, New York, 1917
Milestones
  • 1918 Made film debut in a small role in Out of a Clear Sky
  • 1919 Stage acting debut in Forbidden
  • 1924 Simultaneously appeared in two Eugene O Neill plays in NYC, Bound East for Cardiff and Desire Under the Elms
  • 1929 London stage debut, Coquette
  • 1930 Film acting debut in Liliom
  • 1934 Signed contract with RKO
  • 1935 First major film work, and first leading role in films, as D Artagnan in an RKO adaptation of The Three Musketeers
  • 1936 Co-starred in Fury
  • 1940 Worked primarily for Paramount Pictures
  • 1940 Had one of his best screen roles in Mitchell Leisen s Arise My Love
  • 1948 Concentrated on stage and television work for a time after his work in such films as That Lady in Ermine
  • 1953 Resumed more regular work in films for the next five years beginning with Island in the Sky and So This Is Love
  • 1973 First TV-movie, The Man Without a Country (ABC)
  • 1974 Last Broadway appearance, Saturday, Sunday, Monday
  • 1975 Final New York stage acting role alongside Meryl Streep and Mandy Patinkin in a revival of Trelawny of the Wells staged at Lincoln Center
  • 1983 Final feature role, supporting Nick Nolte and Katharine Hepburn in Grace Quigley/The Ultimate Solution of Grace Quigley (released in 1985)
  • Again returned to film work briefly in the mid-60s
  • Was one of the hosts, along with Dennis O Keefe, of the NBC-TV suspense drama anthology series, Suspicion

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