Sterling Hayden Movies
The archetypal B-movie actor,
Sterling Hayden was never the superstar many projected him to be; a handsome, gritty performer, at first glance he enjoyed an erratic career, yet on closer inspection his lengthy list of credits contains a number of classic films made with many of the most celebrated filmmakers in cinema history. Born March 26, 1916, in Montclair, NJ, he quit school at the age of 16 to become a mate on a schooner, beginning a lifelong love affair with the sea; indeed, it was often suggested that he was never particularly enamored of the acting life, instead preferring to sail. By age 22,
Hayden was a ship's captain, but a desire to buy his own boat prompted him to begin modeling, and in 1940 he landed a movie contract at Paramount. With no previous acting experience, he starred in 1941's
Virginia, followed a year later by
Bahama Passage. The pictures' successes made him a star, and he also grabbed headlines by marrying actress
Madeleine Carroll.
Paramount began trumpeting
Hayden as both "the Most Beautiful Man in the Movies" and "the Beautiful Blond Viking God," but his career ground to a halt when he joined the Marines to serve in World War II, resulting in a five-year absence from the screen. Upon returning from duty, he continued acting with
Blaze of Noon, but after half a decade away from the screen, his career stalled, and apart from a brief appearance later that year in
Variety Girl, no other offers came his way for some time. Finally, in 1949,
Hayden resurfaced in a
John Wayne Western,
El Paso, and a film noir,
Manhandled. The following year, he starred in
John Huston's classic noir
The Asphalt Jungle, portraying an ill-fated small-time hood -- a career-defining role. Still, he spent the majority of the early decade in a variety of other genre outings, many of them Westerns (including the 1953
Nicholas Ray cult classic
Johnny Guitar). In 1956,
Hayden teamed for the first time with director
Stanley Kubrick, headlining the oft-imitated and widely acclaimed crime story
The Killing.
Hayden's career flagged during the years to follow, however. Saddled with a series of lackluster films, he finally left acting in 1958 to return to the sea, and spent the next six years away from Hollywood. In 1963, he even published an autobiography, Wanderer, detailing his ocean adventures as well as his regret for cooperating with the House Un-American Activities Commission during the McCarthy era. Finally,
Hayden returned to film in 1964 to reunite with
Kubrick on the brilliant satire
Dr. Strangelove, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. Apart from the television feature
Carol for Another Christmas, however, he again quit acting to sail, and did not return prior to 1969's
Cipolla Colt. He enjoyed another career resurrection with
Francis Ford Coppola's 1972 classic
The Godfather, and a year later co-starred in
Robert Altman's
The Long Goodbye. In 1976,
Hayden appeared in
Bernardo Bertolucci's
Novecento, and also published the historical epic Voyage: A Novel of 1896. After working infrequently over the course of the following decade, he died in Sausalito, CA, on May 23, 1986, at the age of 70. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi