Jean Peters

Jean Peters

Peters in 1951
Born Elizabeth Jean Peters
(1926-10-15)October 15, 1926
East Canton, Ohio, U.S.
Died October 13, 2000(2000-10-13) (aged 73)
Carlsbad, California, U.S.
Resting place Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City
Alma mater Ohio State University
Years active 1947–88
Spouse(s) Stuart W. Cramer III (1954–55)
Howard Hughes (1957–71)
Stan Hough (1971–90) (his death)

Jean Peters (October 15, 1926 – October 13, 2000) was an American actress, known as a star of 20th Century Fox in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and as the second wife of Howard Hughes. Although possibly best remembered for her siren role in Pickup on South Street (1953), Peters was known for her resistance to being turned into a sex symbol. She preferred to play unglamorous, down-to-earth women.[1]

Early life

Born Elizabeth Jean Peters in 1926 in East Canton, Ohio, she was the daughter of Elizabeth and Gerald Peters, a laundry manager. Raised on a small farm in East Canton, Peters attended East Canton High School. She was raised as a Methodist.[2] She went to college at the University of Michigan and later the Ohio State University, where she studied to become a teacher and majored in literature. While studying for a teaching degree at Ohio State, she entered the Miss Ohio State Pageant in the fall of 1945. From the twelve finalists, Peters won. Sponsored by the photographer Paul Robinson of the "House of Portraits", she was awarded the grand prize of a screen test with 20th Century-Fox.[3]

As her agent, Robinson accompanied her to Hollywood, and helped her secure a seven-year contract with Fox. She dropped out of college to become an actress, a decision she later regretted.[3] In the late 1940s, Peters returned to college, in between filming, to complete her work and obtain a diploma.[4]

It was announced that in her first film I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now (1947), she would play an "ugly duckling", supported by "artificial freckles and horn-rimmed glasses".[5] She eventually withdrew from the film. Peters was tested in 1946 for a farm girl role in Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! (1948), but the producer and director decided she was not suitable.[6]

Breakthrough

Peters was selected to replace Linda Darnell as the female lead in Captain from Castile (1947) opposite Tyrone Power, when Darnell was reassigned to save the production of Forever Amber. Although she had not yet made her screen debut, Peters was highly publicized. She received a star treatment during the filming.[7] Captain from Castile was a hit. Leonard Maltin wrote that afterward, Peters spent the new decade playing "sexy spitfires, often in period dramas and Westerns."[8] She was offered a similar role in the western Yellow Sky (1948), but she refused the part, explaining it was "too sexy".[8] As a result, the studio, frustrated by her stubbornness, put her on her first suspension.[8]

For her second film, Deep Waters (1948), which Peters filmed in late 1947, she was reunited with her director from Captain from Castile, Henry King. On this, she commented: "It's really a break for me, because he knows where he's going and what he wants, and I naturally have great confidence in him."[3] The film was not nearly as successful as Captain from Castile, but Peters was again noticed. She was named among the best five 'finds' of the year, among Barbara Bel Geddes, Valli, Richard Widmark and Wanda Hendrix.[9] She was next assigned to co-star next to Clifton Webb in Mr. Belvedere Goes to College (1949), but Shirley Temple later replaced her.[10]

In early 1949 Peters signed on to play Ray Milland's love interest in It Happens Every Spring (1949). For the role, she offered to bleach her hair, but the studio overruled this.[8] Although the film became a success, most of the publicity was for Milland's performance.

Peters next starred alongside Paul Douglas in the period film Love That Brute (1950), for which she had to wear a dress so snug she was unable to sit.[11] The film was originally titled Turned Up Toes, and Peters was cast in the film in June 1949, shortly after the release of It Happens Every Spring. To prepare for a singing and dancing scene, Peters took a few lessons with Betty Grable's dance instructor.[12]

By 1950, Peters was almost forgotten by the public, although she had been playing lead roles since 1947. In late 1950, she was cast in a secondary role as a college girl in Take Care of My Little Girl (1951), a Jeanne Crain vehicle.[13] A Long Beach newspaper reported that Peters gained her role by impressing Jean Negulesco with her sewing.[14] She once became famous for being a small country girl, but as she grew up, the studio did not find her any more suitable roles.[15]

Stardom

Jean Peters in Viva Zapata! (1952)

Due to her insistence, Peters was given the title role in Anne of the Indies (1951), which the press declared was the film that finally brought her stardom.[16] Before its release, she was cast in Viva Zapata! (1952) opposite Marlon Brando. Julie Harris had been considered for this role. Also in 1951, Peters had her first collaboration with Marilyn Monroe, when they had secondary roles in As Young as You Feel.[17]

Peters was set to play the title role in the drama film Wait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie (1952). It was the first time since the beginning of her career that Peters received this much publicity.[18] While shooting the film in Hutchinson, Kansas, Peters was honored with the title 'Miss Wheatheart of America'.[19]

In 1953 the director Samuel Fuller chose Peters over Marilyn Monroe for the part of Candy in Pickup on South Street. He said he thought Peters had the right blend of sex appeal and the tough-talking, streetwise quality he was seeking. Monroe, he said, was too innocent looking for the role. Shelley Winters and Betty Grable had previously been considered but both had turned it down. Because of the sex symbol status of her character, Peters was not thrilled with the role.[20] She preferred playing more down-to-earth, unglamorous parts as she had done with Anne of the Indies (1951), Viva Zapata! (1952) and Lure of the Wilderness (1952).[21]

For Pickup on South Street, Peters was advised to bleach her hair but she refused to do so. She wanted to avoid comparisons with Winters and Grable.[22] She did agree to adopt a "sexy shuffle" for the role.[22] She was helped by Marilyn Monroe to understand the role of a siren.[15] Peters later said that she had enjoyed making the film, but announced in an interview that she was not willing to take on other siren roles. She said: "'[Pickup on South Street]' was fine for my career, but that doesn't mean I'm going to put on a tight sweater and skirt and slither around. I'm just not the type. On Marilyn Monroe it looks good. On me it would look silly."[23] In another interview, Peters explained that playing down-to-earth and sometimes unwashed women have the most to offer in the way of drama.[21]

She said:

A clothes horse seldom has lines or situations that pierce the outer layer and get into the core of life. After all, a woman in the latest Paris creation might feel and think like a plain, simple soul but the clothes she wears would prevent her from revealing exactly what she feels and thinks. One look in the mirror and she must live up to what she sees there. The same is true on screen. If the character is chic and soignee and lines are either 'bright' or 'smart aleck' I do not think of myself as a person suited to reading such lines. Sophistication in an actress usually comes from many years of training. I came to the screen from the classroom and I'm learning as I go along. I like to play roles I understand. As I am a farm girl, born and raised near Canton, Ohio, I like the frank, honest approach. Innuendo, intrigue, the devious slant, are foreign to me and to the sort of character I best understand. I often think our glamorization of Hollywood stars – the perpetual photographing us in ermine and bouffant tulle, in French bathing suits or sleek satin – throws the public off. They don't recognize us as human beings subject to the same discomforts of climate and working conditions as they are. They expect to see that goddess leading couple of wolfhounds come striding onto the set. Because I like to get away from all that and down to the heart of things I choose such characters as Josefa, or Anne, or Louise, the girl in Lure of the Wilderness.[21]
Peters mending Joseph Cotten's hand in Niagara (1953)
Peters in the trailer for the film Broken Lance (1954)

Peters and Marilyn Monroe starred together in another 1953 film noir, Niagara, also starring Joseph Cotten. In Niagara, Peters replaced Anne Baxter, with whom she co-starred in the anthology film O. Henry's Full House (1952). Shooting of Niagara took place in the summer of 1952.[17] Peters' character was initially the leading role, but the film eventually became a vehicle for Monroe, who was by that time more successful.[24]

Peters' third film in 1953, A Blueprint for Murder, reunited her with Joseph Cotten. She was assigned to the film in December 1952 and told the press she liked playing in the film because it allowed her to sing, but there is no song by her in the picture, only the playing of a piano.[25][26] Shortly after the film's premiere in July 1953, the studio renewed Peters' contract for another two years.[27]

In 1953 she also starred in the film noir Vicki. The writer Leo Townsend bought the story of the film, a remake of I Wake Up Screaming, as a vehicle for Peters.[28] Townsend said that he gave the role to Peters in December 1952, because she was "one of the greatest sirens he's ever seen."[28]

Next, Peters was assigned to replace Crain in the film Three Coins in the Fountain (1954), which was shot on location in late 1953 in Italy.[8] Peters was unsatisfied with her role and said in a September 1953 interview: "When I heard Dorothy McGuire, Clifton Webb and Maggie McNamara were going to be in the picture, I thought I would finally have the kind of role that suited me. They sounded like smart, sophisticated company. But when I got to Italy and read the script, I discovered I was going to be an earthy kind of girl again. The script had me nearly being killed in a runaway truck."[1] However, the film became a great success and brought Peters again into the limelight.[29]

Other 1954 films co-starring Peters were the westerns Apache and Broken Lance. Although Broken Lance did not attract much attention, she was critically acclaimed for her performance in Apache. One critic praised her for "giving an excellent account for herself", declaring she was "on her way to becoming one of the finest young actresses around Hollywood today."[29]

Peters' next (and ultimately final) film was A Man Called Peter (1955), in which she played Catherine Marshall, the wife of Peter Marshall, a Presbyterian minister and Chaplain of the United States Senate. After the release of A Man Called Peter, Peters refused several roles, for which she was placed on suspension by the studio.[8]

Deciding she had had enough, Peters left Fox to focus on her private life.[8] Following her marriage to Howard Hughes, she retired from acting. In 1957, the producer Jerry Wald tried to persuade her not to leave Hollywood but had no luck.[30] She was supposedly discouraged from continuing as an actress by Hughes, and reported in late 1957 that she was planning on becoming a producer.[31]

In March 1959, it was announced that Peters was to return to the screen for a supporting role in The Best of Everything.[32] But, she did not appear in that film; and, despite her earlier announcement, never produced a film.

Later career

In 1970, rumors arose of Peters making a comeback to acting when the press reported that she was considering three film offers and a weekly TV series for the 1970–1971 season.[33] She chose the television movie Winesburg, Ohio (1973). Afterward, she said, "I am not pleased with the show or my performance in it. I found it rather dull."[34] At the beginning, she had expressed enthusiasm for the project, saying: "I'm very fond of this script. It's the right age for me. I won't have to pretend I'm a glamour girl."[35] Her co-star William Windom praised her, saying she was "warm, friendly and charming on the set."[35]

In 1976, Peters had a supporting role in the TV miniseries The Moneychangers. When asked why she took the role, she said: "I'll be darned if I know. A moment of madness, I think. I ran into my old friend Ross Hunter, who was producing The Moneychangers for NBC-TV, and he asked me if I wanted to be in it. It seemed like fun. It's a nice part – not too big – and I greatly admire Christopher Plummer, whom I play opposite."[36]

Peters appeared in the 1981 television film Peter and Paul, produced by her husband. She guest starred in Murder, She Wrote in 1988, which was her final acting performance.

Personal life

After landing a contract in Hollywood, Peters moved there, where she initially lived with her aunt, Melba Diesel.[3] From the beginning of her career, Peters openly admitted she did not like the fame, explaining she did not like crowds.[3] Co-actors at Fox recalled that she was very serious about her career. Jeanne Crain said Peters was "anything but a party girl".[37] Despite her clashes with the studio, Peters was well liked by other contract players.[8]

One biographer recalled: "In all the research and planning that went into this book, no one ever had an unkind word to say of Miss Peters, and that is unusual."[8] Peters was close friends with Marilyn Monroe, who also worked for Fox.[22] Other actors she befriended during her career were Joseph Cotten, David Niven, Ray Milland, Marie McDonald, and especially Jeanne Crain.[8]

The soldier and actor Audie Murphy claimed that he had a relationship with Peters in 1946, before she met Howard Hughes.[38] In 1954, Peters married Texas oilman Stuart Cramer.[39] At the time they married, they had known each other for only a few weeks, and they separated a few months later.[33] There was much talk of Peters possibly retiring from the screen, but the actress insisted that after her eight-week leave from Fox, she was to return to Hollywood.[40]

In 1957, after her divorce from Cramer, Peters married Howard Hughes. Soon after that, he retreated from public view and, reportedly, started becoming an eccentric recluse.[41] The couple had met in the 1940s, before Peters became a film actress.[42] During their highly publicized romance in 1947 there was talk of marriage, but Peters said that she could not combine it with her career.[3] The columnist Jack Anderson claimed that Peters was "the only woman [Hughes] ever loved."[43] He reportedly had his security officers follow her everywhere even when they were not in a relationship. The actor Max Showalter confirmed this, after becoming a close friend of Peters during shooting of Niagara (1953).[44]

During her marriage, which lasted from 1957 to 1971, Peters retired from acting and social events in Hollywood. According to a 1969 article, she went through life unrecognized, despite being protected by Hughes' security officers all day.[45] Living in anonymity was easy, according to Peters, because she "didn't act like an actress."[46] It was later reported that during the marriage, Peters was frequently involved in numerous activities, such as charitable work, arts and crafts, and university studies including psychology and anthropology at UCLA.[46]

In 1971, Peters and Hughes divorced. She agreed to a lifetime alimony payment of $70,000 annually, adjusted for inflation, and she waived all claims to Hughes' estate. In the media, she refused to speak about the marriage, claiming she preferred to focus on the present and future.[46] She said that she hoped to avoid being known as 'Mrs. Howard Hughes' for the rest of her life, although knowing that would be difficult. "I'm a realist. I know what the score is, and I know who the superstar is."[46]

Later in 1971, Peters married Stan Hough, an executive with 20th Century Fox. They were married until Hough's death in 1990.

Death

Peters died of leukemia in 2000 in Carlsbad, California, two days before her 74th birthday. She was buried at the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.[47]

Filmography

Film
Year Film Role Notes
1947 Captain from Castile Catana Perez
1948 Deep Waters Ann Freeman
1949 It Happens Every Spring Deborah Greenleaf
1950 Love That Brute Ruth Manning
1951 As Young as You Feel Alice Hodges
Take Care of My Little Girl Dallas Prewitt
Anne of the Indies Captain Anne Providence
1952 Viva Zapata! Josefa Zapata
Wait till the Sun Shines, Nellie Nellie Halper
Lure of the Wilderness Laurie Harper
O. Henry's Full House Susan Goodwin (The Last Leaf)
1953 Niagara Polly Cutler
Pickup on South Street Candy
Vicki Vicki Lynn
A Blueprint for Murder Lynne Cameron
1954 Three Coins in the Fountain Anita Hutchins
Apache Nalinle
Broken Lance Barbara
1955 A Man Called Peter Catherine Wood Marshall
Television
Year Title Role Notes
1973 Winesburg, Ohio Elizabeth Willard Television movie
1976 The Moneychangers Beatrice Heyward Miniseries
1981 Peter and Paul Priscilla Television movie
1988 Murder, She Wrote Siobhan O'Dea 1 episode

Radio appearances

Year Program Episode/source
1953 Lux Radio Theatre Wait 'Till the Sun Shines, Nellie[48]

References

  1. 1 2 Bob Thomas, "Jean Peters Hopes to Avoid Roles of Siren on Screen," Reading Eagle, September 21, 1953, p. 19
  2. http://www.fumceunice.org/About.html
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Interview with Louella Parsons, Waterloo Daily Courier, 12 October 1947, Waterloo, Iowa, p. 19
  4. Long Beach Independent, October 14, 1948, Long Beach, California, p. 26
  5. Evening Independent, July 26, 1946, Massillon, Ohio. p. 21
  6. The Oakland Tribune, November 6, 1946, Oakland, California. p. 10
  7. Evening Independent, December 5, 1946, Massillon, Ohio. p. 4
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Jean Peters: biography of a forgotten leading lady". Filmjournal.com. Retrieved 2010-02-14.
  9. St. Petersburg Times,October 25, 1948. p. 3
  10. "Notes for Mr. Belvedere Goes to College (1949)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2010-02-13.
  11. Long Beach Press-Telegram – April 9, 1950, Long Beach, California. p. 7
  12. Post-Standard, April 9, 1950, Syracuse, New York. p. 63
  13. The Salt Lake Tribune, October 11, 1950, Salt Lake City, Utah. p. 17
  14. Independent Long Beach, November 30, 1950, Long Beach, California. p. 52
  15. 1 2 Syracuse Herald-Journal – February 11, 1953, Syracuse, New York. p. 31
  16. Syracuse Herald Journal, October 25, 1951, Syracuse, New York. p. 59
  17. 1 2 "Production dates for Niagara (1953)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2010-02-14.
  18. San Antonio Light, July 21, 1951, San Antonio, Texas. p. 6
  19. The Salt Lake Tribune, July 3, 1952, Salt Lake City, Utah. p. 9
  20. Kingsport Times-News, September 30, 1952, Kingsport, Tennessee. p. 14
  21. 1 2 3 Long Beach Press-Telegram, January 10, 1952, Long Beach, California. p. 33
  22. 1 2 3 Austin Daily Herald, September 30, 1952, Austin, Minnesota. p. 3
  23. The San Mateo Times, September 21, 1953, San Mateo, California. p. 13
  24. "Notes for Niagara (1953)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2010-02-14.
  25. The Portsmouth Herald – January 23, 1953, Portsmouth, New Hampshire. p. 7
  26. Independent Press-Telegram – August 9, 1953, Long Beach, California. p. 55
  27. "Jean Peters Proves Popular With Bosses", Deseret News, July 27, 1953, p. 5
  28. 1 2 "Goldstein Will Star Jean Peters as Siren", Los Angeles Times, December 26, 1952
  29. 1 2 "Burt Lancaster, Jean Peters Offer Top Performances in 'Apache'" by Thomas Blakley, Pittsburgh Press, July 6, 1954
  30. "Boyer Will Costar in 'The Buccaneer'", Los Angeles Times, February 16, 1957
  31. Sheilah Graham, "Jean Peters New Producer", The Miami News, November 6, 1957, p. 10B
  32. "Hedda Hopper" by Hedda Hopper, The Lima News, March 30, 1959, p. 11
  33. 1 2 Harold Hefferman, "Jean Peters May Resume Once Budding Film Career," The Milwaukee Journal, January 23, 1970, p. 1
  34. The Des Moines Register – March 4, 1973, Des Moines, Iowa. p. 109
  35. 1 2 Charles Witbeck, "Winesburg, Ohio days," The Miami News, March 3, 1973
  36. "For Jean Peters", Spartanburg Herald-Journal, October 16, 1976
  37. The Des Moines Register, January 25, 1970, Des Moines, Iowa. p. 47
  38. Starr, Kevin (2003). Embattled Dreams: California in War and Peace, 1940–1950. Oxford University Press. pp. 200–201. ISBN 0-19-516897-6.
  39. McCarthy, Todd (2000). Howard Hawks: The Grey Fox of Hollywood. Grove Press. p. 659. ISBN 978-0-8021-3740-1.
  40. The Progress-Index, July 18, 1954, Petersburg, Virginia. p. 18: Jean Peters Denies Quitting Movies Because Of Marriage
  41. Bartlett, Donald L. and James B. Steele (1979) Empire: The Life, Legend, and Madness of Howard Hughes, W. W. Norton & Company, New York – p. 458'
  42. The Delta Democrat-Times, September 29, 1946, Greenville, Mississippi. p. 4
  43. Jack Anderson with Les Whitten, "Hughes and Jean Peters," The Gadsden Times, April 13, 1976, p. 4
  44. Weaver, Tom (2004). Science Fiction and Fantasy Film Flashbacks: Conversations with 24 Actors, Writers, Producers and Directors from the Golden Age. McFarland & Company. p. 9. ISBN 0-7864-2070-7.
  45. "Mrs. Hughes: A Mysterious Figure", The Milwaukee Journal, December 12, 1969, p. 10
  46. 1 2 3 4 "Jean Peters asserts Hughes secret safe", The Register-Guard, December 6, 1972, p. 5A
  47. Jean Peters at Find a Grave
  48. Kirby, Walter (May 3, 1953). "Better Radio Programs for the Week". The Decatur Daily Review. p. 52. Retrieved June 26, 2015 via Newspapers.com.

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