George C. Scott

A gruff, commanding lead, George C Scott has turned in impressive performances on stage, screen and TV since the 1950s, but is best remembered for his 1970 portrayal of "Patton" (and for refusing his Best Actor Oscar).

Born in Virginia and raised in Detroit, Scott spent four years in the Marines and another four in college. He married, got a teaching job, and did not start acting until his early 30s. After a long apprenticeship in regional and summer stock productions, Scott took New York by storm in 1957 with his venomous portrayal of "Richard III" with New York Shakespeare Festival. He appeared in scores of plays over the next few years, including "The Andersonville Trial", "The Little Foxes", "Plaza Suite" and "The Merchant of Venice".

Scott made his film debut, supporting Gary Cooper, as a religious maniac in "The Hanging Tree" (1959). Raspy-voiced, with a many-times fractured nose and an explosive manner, Scott proved a riveting screen presence in some 27 films through 1980. Some, of course, have been better than others, his high points being powerful turns as the sardonic prosecuting attorney in "Anatomy of a Murder" (1959), the hard-boiled manager in "The Hustler" (1963), the comically mad general in "Dr. Strangelove" (1964), the empty-hearted surgeon in "The Hospital" (1971) and several roles in the parody "Movie Movie" (1978). A reluctant star, he caused a furor by refusing to accept his Best Actor Oscar for his performance as the crusty title character in "Patton" (1970). Scott's film career slowed down in the 1980s as his health declined, though he has continued to appear in occasional features ("Beastmaster" 1982, "Firestarter" 1984, "Malice" 1993, "Angus" 1995).

While Scott has directed two films ("Rage" 1972, and "The Savage Is Loose" 1975), he has won far greater acclaim as a stage director, directing himself in a harrowing performance as Willy Loman in "Death of a Salesman" (1975), in Larry Gelbart's farce "Sly Fox" (1976), in Noel Coward's comedy "Present Laughter" (1982) and co-starring with Charles Durning in a 1996 revival of "Inherit the Wind".

Scott's TV career began back in the 1950s with appearances on "Playhouse 90" (CBS) and the TV-movie "Winterset" (NBC, 1959). He co-starred in three short-lived series, the social worker drama "East Side/West Side" (CBS, 1963-64), the comedy "Mr. President" (Fox, 1987-88) and the detective show "Traps" (CBS, 1994). But Scott was shown to much better advantage in his more than 20 TV-movies. He portrayed Henry Wotton in "The Picture of Dorian Gray" (CBS, 1961), Mr. Rochester in "Jane Eyre" (NBC, 1971), lawyer Louis Nizer in "Fear on Trial" (CBS, 1975), Fagin in "Oliver Twist" (CBS, 1982), Scrooge in "A Christmas Carol" (CBS, 1984), the title character in "Mussolini: The Untold Story" (NBC, 1985), a boxing trainer in "Tyson" (HBO, 1995) and even reprised his most famous character in "The Last Days of Patton" (CBS, 1986).

Scott's private life has been almost as colorful as some of the characters he has played: the blunt-spoken and controversial actor was twice married to and divorced from imposing actress Colleen Dewhurst; one of their two sons is actor Campbell Scott. Married to actress Trish Van Devere since 1972, Scott also dallied with "The Bible" co-star Ava Gardner in the mid-1960s.

  • Also Credited As:
    George Campbell Scott
  • Born:
    October 18, 1927 in Wise, Virginia, USA
  • Died:
    September 22, 1999.
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Director, Bricklayer, Truck driver
Family
  • Daughter: Devon Scott. mother, Patricia Reed Scott
  • Daughter: Victoria Scott. mother, Carolyn Hughes
  • Father: George C Scott.
  • Mother: Helena Scott. died when Scott was eight years old c. 1936
  • Son: Alexander Scott. born in 1961; mother, Colleen Dewhurst
  • Son: Campbell Scott. born in 1962; mother, Colleen Dewhurst
  • Son: Matthew Scott. mother, Patricia Reed Scott
Significant Others
  • Companion: Ava Gardner. co-starred in The Bible (1966); involved for several years in mid-1960s
Education
  • University of Missouri, English and drama, 1950
Milestones
  • 1945 Served four years in the Marine Corps.
  • 1957 New York stage debut as Richard III , New York Shakespeare Festival
  • 1958 TV acting debut, I Haven t Seen Her Lately (episode of Kraft Mystery Theater )
  • 1959 Screen debut in The Hanging Tree
  • 1961 Founded the Theatre of Michigan Company (with Theodore Mann)
  • 1962 Broadway producing debut, Great Day in the Morning (starring Colleen Dewhurst)
  • 1965 London stage debut, The Three Sisters
  • 1967 Dropped out of directing Dr Cook s Garden on Broadway before first preview
  • 1970 TV directing debut (also star), The Andersonville Trial
  • 1972 Screen directorial debut, Rage
  • 1975 Broadway directorial debut, Death of a Salesman (also star)
  • 1975 Screen producing debut (also director) The Savage is Loose
  • 1990 Suffered heart attack
  • 1996 Withdrew from the Broadway production of Inherit the Wind over health problems
  • 1997 Co-starred in the small screen remake of 12 Angry Men
  • 1999 Appeared opposite Jack Lemmon in Showtime remake of Inherit the Wind
  • Moved with father to Michigan after mother s death
  • Performed in over 150 productions in summer stock and with regional theaters
  • Starred in TV series, East Side, West Side
  • Starred in TV series, Mr. President

Yahoo! Movies: In Theaters - Times & Tickets - Trailers - DVD - News & Gossip - Box Office - Browse Movies - more...
Yahoo! Entertainment: Movies - Music - TV - Games - Astrology - more...

Copyright © 2009 AEC One Stop Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Portions of this page Copyright © 2009 Baseline. All rights reserved.