Wayne Morris(1914-1959)
- Actor
- Producer
- Additional Crew
American actor who had early success as a sunny juvenile, but whose
career declined following World War II, in which he was a
highly-decorated hero. A native of Los Angeles, Morris played football
at Los Angeles Junior College, then worked as a forest ranger.
Returning to school, he studied acting at Los Angeles Junior College
and at the acclaimed Pasadena Playhouse. A Warner Bros. talent scout
spotted him at the Playhouse and he signed with the studio in 1936.
Blond and open-faced, he was a perfect type for boy-next-door parts and
within a year had made a success in the title role of
Kid Galahad (1937). While filming
Flight Angels (1940), Morris became
interested in flying and became a pilot. With war in the wind, he
joined the Naval Reserve and became a Navy flier in 1942, leaving his
film career behind for the duration of the war. Assigned to the carrier
Essex in the Pacific, Morris shot down seven Japanese planes and
contributed to the sinking of five ships. He was awarded four
Distinguished Flying Crosses and two Air Medals. Following the war,
Morris returned to films, but his nearly four-year absence had cost him
his burgeoning stardom. He continued to topline movies, but the
pictures, for the most part, sank in quality. Losing his boyish looks
but not demeanor, Morris spent most of the Fifties in low-budget
Westerns. A wonderful performance as a weakling in
Stanley Kubrick's
Paths of Glory (1957) might have
given impetus to a new career as a character actor, had Morris lived.
However, he suffered a massive heart attack while visiting aboard the
aircraft carrier Bon Homme Richard in San Francisco Bay and was
pronounced dead after being transported to Oakland Naval Hospital in
Oakland, California. He was 45. His last film was not released until
two years after his death.