James Kirkwood Movies
Durable American actor
James Kirkwood opened up his film career at the Biograph studios in 1909 and closed it out with 1962's
The Ugly American. The curly-haired, dependable-looking Kirkwood (described in an early Photoplay article as "one of those regular film 'troupers' who never fall down") occasionally interrupted his acting career for a spot of directing; in 1912 alone, he wielded the megaphone for nine pictures featuring
Mary Pickford. Lacking the drive and organizational skills to excel as a director, Kirkwood willingly switched back to acting full-time by 1918. His silent film acting credits include
D.W. Griffith's Home, Sweet Home (1914) and
That Royale Girl (1926), costarring with
W.C. Fields in the latter picture. Among Kirkwood's talking films were
Over the Hill (1931),
Charlie Chan's Chance (1933) and
Joan of Arc (1949). His talkie roles frequently found Kirkwood on the wrong side of the law, as in the
Tom Mix western
My Pal the King (1932), wherein Kirkwood trapped boy-king
Mickey Rooney in a rapidly flooding cellar.
James Kirkwood's third wife was actress
Lila Lee; their son was James Kirkwood Jr., co-author of the Broadway long-runner A Chorus Line. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide