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Infos supplémentaires

Acteur dans 67 films

Né(e) le 14 novembre 1904

Lieu de naissance
Mountain View, Arkansas

Mort le 02 janvier 1963 (à 58 ans)

Dick Powell

Acteur dans

2013

  • Classic Movie Bloopers: Uncensored

1985

  • That's Dancing!

1983

  • Hollywood Out-takes and Rare Footage

1976

  • It's Showtime

1975

  • Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?

1963

  • Hollywood Without Make-Up

1954

  • Susan Slept Here

1952

  • Les ensorcelés

1951

  • You Never Can Tell
  • The Tall Target
  • Cry Danger

1950

  • Right Cross
  • The Reformer and the Redhead

1949

  • Mrs. Mike

1948

  • Rogues' Regiment
  • La Cité de la peur
  • Pitfall
  • To the Ends of the Earth

1947

  • L'heure du Crime

1945

  • Pris au piège

1944

  • Adieu ma belle
  • Meet the People
  • C'est arrivé demain

1943

  • True to Life
  • Riding High
  • Happy Go Lucky

1942

  • Star Spangled Rhythm

1941

  • Deux nigauds marins

1940

  • Le gros lot
  • I Want a Divorce

1939

  • Naughty But Nice
  • Hollywood Hobbies

1938

  • Going Places
  • Hard to Get
  • Cowboy from Brooklyn
  • Breakdowns of 1938

1937

  • Hollywood Hotel
  • Varsity Show
  • The Singing Marine
  • On The Avenue

1936

  • Les chercheuses d'or 1937
  • Stage Struck
  • Screen Snapshots (Series 16, No. 1)
  • Hearts Divided
  • Colleen

1935

  • Thanks a Million
  • Shipmates Forever
  • Le Songe d'une nuit d'été
  • Page Miss Glory
  • Broadway Gondolier
  • Gold Diggers of 1935

1934

  • Flirtation Walk
  • Rayon d'amour
  • Dames
  • Twenty Million Sweethearts
  • Wonder Bar

1933

  • Convention City
  • College Coach
  • Prologues
  • Chercheuses d'or
  • 42ème rue
  • The King's Vacation
  • The Road Is Open Again
  • Just Around the Corner

1932

  • Too Busy to Work
  • Big City Blues
  • Blessed Event
  • A participé à

    • La Barbe à papa
    • Flammes sur l'Asie
    • Torpilles sous l'Atlantique
Richard Ewing "Dick" Powell (November 14, 1904 – January 2, 1963) was an American singer, actor, producer, director and studio boss. Born in Mountain View, the seat of Stone County in northern Arkansas, Powell attended the former Little Rock College in the state capital, before he started his entertainment career as a singer with the Charlie Davis Orchestra, based in the midwest. He recorded a number of records with Davis and on his own, for the Vocalion label in the late 1920s. Powell moved to Pittsburgh, where he found great local success as the Master of Ceremonies at the Enright Theater and the Stanley Theater. In April 1930, Warner Bros. bought up Brunswick Records which at that time owned Vocalion. Warner Bros. was sufficiently impressed by Powell's singing and stage presence to offer him a film contract in 1932. He made his film debut as a singing bandleader in Blessed Event. He went on to star as a boyish crooner in movie musicals such as 42nd Street, Footlight Parade, Gold Diggers of 1933, Dames, Flirtation Walk, and On the Avenue, often appearing opposite Ruby Keeler and Joan Blondell. Powell desperately wanted to expand his range but Warner Bros. wouldn't allow him to do so, although they did (mis)cast him in A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935) as Lysander. This was to be Powell's only Shakespearean role and one he did not want to play, feeling that he was completely wrong for the part. Finally, reaching his forties and knowing that his young romantic leading man days were behind him he lobbied to play the lead in Double Indemnity. He lost out to Fred MacMurray, another Hollywood nice guy. MacMurray’s success, however, fueled Powell’s resolve to pursue projects with greater range and in 1944, he was cast in the first of a series of films noir, as private detective Philip Marlowe in Murder, My Sweet, directed by Edward Dmytryk. The film was a big hit and Powell had successfully reinvented himself as a dramatic actor. The following year Dmytryk and Powell re-teamed to make Cornered, a gripping, post-WWII thriller that helped define the film noir style. He became a popular "tough guy" lead appearing in movies such as Johnny O'Clock and Cry Danger. But 1948 saw him step out of the brutish type when he starred in Pitfall, a film noir that sees a bored insurance company worker fall for an innocent but dangerous femme fatale, played by Lizabeth Scott. Even when he appeared in lighter fare such as The Reformer and the Redhead and Susan Slept Here (1954) he never sang in his later roles. The latter, his final onscreen appearance in a feature film, did include a dance number with costar Debbie Reynolds. From 1949-1953, Powell played the lead role in the National Broadcasting Company radio theater production Richard Diamond, Private Detective. His character in the 30-minute weekly was a likable private detective with a quick wit. When Richard Diamond came to television in 1957, the lead role was portrayed by David Janssen. In the 1950s Powell produced and directed several B-movies and was one of the founders of Four Star Television, along with Charles Boyer, David Niven and Ida Lupino. He appeared in and supervised several shows for that company. Powell played the role of Willie Dante in Four Star Playhouse in episodes entitled "Dante's Inferno" (1952), "The Squeeze" (1953), "The Hard Way" (1953), and "The House Always Wins" (1955). In 1961 Howard Duff, husband of Ida Lupino, assumed the Dante role in a short-lived NBC adventure series Dante, set at a San Francisco nightclub called "Dante's Inferno". Powell guest starred in numerous Four Star programs including a 1958 appearance on the Duff-Lupino sitcom Mr. Adams and Eve. He appeared in 1961 on James Whitmore's legal drama The Law and Mr. Jones on ABC. In the episode "Everybody Versus Timmy Drayton" Powell played a colonel having problems with his son. He hosted and occasionally starred in his Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater on CBS from 1956-1961. Powell's film The Enemy Below (1957) based on the novel by Denys Rayner won an Academy Award for special effects. Powell also directed The Conqueror (1956) starring John Wayne as Genghis Khan. The exterior scenes were filmed in St. George, Utah, downwind of US above-ground atomic tests. The cast and crew totaled 220 and of that number, 91 had developed some form of cancer by 1981 and 46 had died of cancer by then, including Wayne. This cancer rate is about three times higher than one would expect in a group of this size and many have argued that radioactive fallout was the cause.[1] Powell himself died seven years after The Conqueror was made on January 2, 1963 from lymphoma at the age of fifty-eight. His body was cremated and his remains were interred in the Columbarium of Honor at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.





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