'Jack Pickford' (
August 18,
1896 -
January 3,
1933) was a
Canadian-born American actor.
Career rise
Born 'John Charles Smith' in
Toronto, Ontario,
Canada, he was the younger brother of actresses
Mary and
Lottie Pickford. Like them, Jack Pickford's mother
Charlotte Hennessy had him acting on stage as a very young boy. In
1910, he was only 14 years old when, with the help of his sister Mary, he was signed to perform in motion pictures with
Biograph Studios.
After Biograph opened its studios in
Hollywood, California, the Pickford clan moved west. Jack, a small, fragile boy, grew up in the adult world, one that suddenly became full of money far beyond anything imaginable for the time when Mary Pickford signed a contract in
1917 for $1 million with
First National Pictures. Jack got a lucrative contract with First National as part of the deal but that year, he gained respect for his acting abilities after starring as Pip in the adaptation of
Charles Dickens' ''
Great Expectations'' and in the same year for playing the title role in
Mark Twain's ''
Tom Sawyer''.
Lavish lifestyle
Despite his on-screen image as the winsome boy-next-door, Jack Pickford's private life was one of alcohol, drugs, and womanizing, culminating in the severe
alcoholism and
syphilis that would eventually kill him. In those days, the movie studios were able to cover up almost all of their stars' misbehavior, but within the Hollywood crowd Jack Pickford's behind-the scenes antics made him a legend in his own time.
He spent money frivolously and frequently had to suffer the humiliation of asking his mother or sister for help. As his reckless lifestyle worsened, the number of movies he made declined and therefore his own income.
In early
1918, after the
United States entered
World War I, Jack Pickford joined the
United States Navy. Using the famous Pickford name, he soon became involved in a scheme that allowed rich young men to pay bribes to avoid military service, as well as reportedly procuring young women for officers. For his involvement, Jack Pickford came close to being dishonorably discharged; it is speculated that his sister (by that time a famous and powerful actress) arranged for him to give evidence to the authorities in exchange for a medical discharge.
His first marriage, in 1916, to
Olive Thomas (née Olive Duffy, ex-Mrs. Bernhard Krugh Thomas, 1894-1920), a Pennsylvania-born model-turned-showgirl-turned-film-actress and a reputed heroin addict, was stormy from the start, but she was reportedly the love of his life. However, while filming in
Paris,
France, they went out for a night of entertainment at the famous bistros in
Montparnasse. Returning to their room in the
Hôtel Ritz at around 3:00 in the morning, his wife died after ingesting a large dose of the
mercury bichloride which had been prescribed for her husband's ongoing
venereal disease; infected in 1917, he had passed the disease on to Thomas, as well as the medicine used to treat it. The police investigation into her death centered on Pickford, but no charges were ever brought. On the return trip to America, film director
Allan Dwan had to talk the distraught Pickford out of committing
suicide.
Married two more times unsuccessfully, including a 1922-1927 marriage to celebrated Broadway dancer
Marilyn Miller, by
1932 Jack Pickford was alone again, his health deteriorating from the ravages of
syphilis and the toll taken by years of alcohol and drug abuse.
Jack’s last work in a motion picture was in Gang War (1928), an independent film made for FBO Pictures.
A few years later, Jack visited Mary at her home in California. He looked ill and emaciated, and his clothes hung on him as if he were a clothes hanger. Mary recalled in her autobiography that she felt a wave of premonition that came over her while watching her brother leave. As they started down the stairs to the automobile entrance, Jack called back to her, “Don’t come down with me, Mary dear, I can go alone.” As Mary stood at the top of the staircase, an inner voice spoke to her. “That’s the last time you’ll see Jack,” she remembered hearing.
Jack died in
American Hospital of Paris on January 3, 1932, at the age of thirty-six of what was called “progressive multiple neuritis which attacked all the nerve centers.” The room in which he died was one from which he could see the window of the hospital room where Olive Thomas had died thirteen years earlier. His sister,
Mary Pickford, arranged for his body to be returned to
Los Angeles, California, where he was interred in the private Pickford plot in the
Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in
Glendale, California.
Jack Pickford has a Star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1523 Vine Street.
Filmography
'1910:'
★ The Kid
★ The Newlyweds
★ The Smoker
★ The Modern Prodigal
★ Muggsy Becomes a Hero
★ In Life's Cycle
★ The Oath and the Man
★ Examination Day at School
★ The Iconoclast
★ Two Little Waifs
★ A Plainsong
★ A Child's Stratagem
★ The Lesson
'1911:'
★ The Poor Sick Men
★ White Roses
★ A Decree of Destiny
★ The Stuff Heroes are Made Of
'1912:'
★ The Massacre
★ Kate Katchem
★ A Dash Through the Clouds
★ The School Teacher and the Waif
★ An Indian Summer
★ What the Doctor Ordered
★ A Child's Remorse
★ The Inner Circle
★ Mr. Grouch at the Seashore
★ A Pueblo Legend
★ A Feud in the Kentucky Hills
★ The Musketeers of Pig Alley
★ Heredity
★ The Informer
★ The New York Hat
'1913:'
★ The Unwelcome Guest
'1914:'
★ The Mysterious Shot
★ Liberty Belles
★ The Gangsters of New York
★ Home Sweet Home
★ The Eagle's Mate
★ Wildflower
★ His Last Dollar
'1915:'
★ The Love Route
★ The Commanding Officer
★ Fanchon the Cricket
★ The Pretty Sister of Jose
★ A Girl of Yesterday
'1916:'
★ Seventeen
★ Poor Little Peppina
'1917:'
★ What Money Can't Buy
★
Great Expectations
★ The Dummy
★ The Varmint
★ Ghost House
★ Jack and Jill
★
Tom Sawyer
'1918:'
★ Spirit of '17
★ Huck and Tom
★ His Majesty, Bunker Bean
★ Mr. Fix-It
★ Sandy
'1919:'
★ In The Wrong
★ Bill Apperson's Boy
★ Burglar by Proxy - (Jack Pickford Productions)
'1920:'
★ The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come
'1921:'
★ The Man Who Had Everything
★ Just Out of College
'1923:'
★ Hollywood
★ Garrison's Finish
'1924:'
★ The Hill Billy
'1925:'
★ Waking Up the Town
★ My Son
★ The Goose Woman
'1926:'
★ The Bat
★
Brown of Harvard
★ Exit Smiling
'1928:'
★ Gang War
'1930:'
★ All Square (his final film)
References
★ '' by David W. Menefee. Albany: Bear Manor Media, 2007.
★ ''When the Movies Were Young.'' By Linda Arvidson. New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1969.
★ ''Paris Authorities Investigate Death of Olive Thomas.'' The New York Times, September 11, 1920.
★ ''The Talmadge Sisters.'' By Margaret L. Talmadge. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company, 1924.
★ ''Canadian Pioneers in Early Hollywood.''
External link
★