Zachary Scott(1914-1965)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
American leading man of suave or sinister roles. A collateral relative
of George Washington and William Barclay
'Bat' Masterson, Scott was the son of a
wealthy surgeon. Intending to follow his father into medicine, Scott
studied at the University of Texas, but found he preferred the theater.
He dropped out of college and signed on as a cabin boy on a freighter
bound for England. There he found work in provincial repertory, gaining
confidence and skill. Returning to Texas, he married actress
Elaine Anderson and became
active in local theater in Austin. He and his wife were spotted in a
play there by Alfred Lunt, who recommended
them to the producers of New York's Theatre Guild. Thus, Scott made a
successful entry into the Broadway stage, appearing in several
successes. In one of them he was noticed by
Jack L. Warner, who signed him to a film
contract and introduced him to film audiences in the title role of
The Mask of Dimitrios (1944).
He was well received in the part of the mysterious and debonair
scoundrel and seemed destined for a top-level career in movies. Jean Renoir next
cast the Texan in a touching and sensitive role in his classic
The Southerner (1945). Though he
received great acclaim for his performance,
Scott was not particularly
well promoted by Warners. His profile was immediately reversed by his
well-received performance as the cad in
Mildred Pierce (1945), which seemed likely to cement him as a star. However, it also led to his typecasting as a portrayer of
amoral characters, and his subsequent films declined in prestige. In 1950, a divorce and a rafting accident, in which he was
badly injured, sent him into a depression. Subsequently, he married
actress Ruth Ford and began to concentrate
more on stage and television work. Although he continued to work in
films, including one for director
Luis Buñuel, Scott never quite reclaimed the
level of stardom that he'd achieved in the mid-1940s. In 1965, he was
stricken with a brain tumor. Despite surgery, he succumbed in October
of that year, at 51. He was buried in Austin, Texas.