Gregory Peck on screen, stage, and radio

Gregory Peck (1916–2003)[1] was an American actor who had an extensive career in film, television, radio, and on stage. Peck's breakthrough role was as a Catholic priest who attempts to start a mission in China in the 1944 film The Keys of the Kingdom, for which he received his first nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor.[2][3] In the same year, he played Count Vronsky in a radio adaptation of Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina. He followed this by starring in Alfred Hitchcock's psychological thriller Spellbound (1945) with Ingrid Bergman. In the late 1940s, Peck received three more nominations for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his roles as a caring father in The Yearling (1946), a journalist who pretends to be Jewish to write an exposé on American antisemitism in Gentleman's Agreement (1947), and a brave airman in Twelve O'Clock High (1949).[4][5][6]

A black and white photograph of Peck as Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird.
Peck as Atticus Finch in a publicity photo for To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)

Peck co-founded the theatre company La Jolla Playhouse in 1947 with Dorothy McGuire and Mel Ferrer. He starred in productions of Angel Street and The Male Animal for the company.[7] In 1951, he played Royal Navy officer Horatio Hornblower in the eponymous film, David in the biblical epic David and Bathsheba with Susan Hayward, and a soldier in the western Only the Valiant with Barbara Payton. Two years later, Peck appeared as a journalist who falls in love with a princess in the romantic comedy Roman Holiday (1953) with Audrey Hepburn. During the late 1950s, he portrayed Captain Ahab in Moby Dick (1956), war hero Joseph G. Clemons in Pork Chop Hill (1959), and writer F. Scott Fitzgerald in Beloved Infidel (1959).

He won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance as Atticus Finch, a lawyer attempting to exonerate a black man wrongly accused of rape in courtroom drama To Kill a Mockingbird (1962).[8] The role topped the AFI's 50 Greatest Screen Heroes.[9] Seven years later, he appeared in the title role of the western Mackenna's Gold, and as a spy in The Chairman. In the late 1970s, Peck played General Douglas MacArthur in the eponymous 1977 film and Nazi doctor Josef Mengele in The Boys from Brazil (1978).

Peck made his television debut in 1982 by appearing as President Abraham Lincoln in the miniseries The Blue and the Gray.[7] He followed this with the television film The Scarlet and the Black where he portrayed Catholic priest Hugh O'Flaherty who helped Jews and prisoners of war to hide in World War II-era Rome.[10] For his appearance as Father Mapple in the 1998 miniseries Moby Dick, he received the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Series, Miniseries or Television Film and a nomination for a Primetime Emmy.[11][12]

Film

In The Keys of the Kingdom (1944)
With Barbara Payton in Only the Valiant (1951)
With Audrey Hepburn in Roman Holiday (1953)
Captain Ahab in Moby Dick (1956)
YearTitleRole(s)NotesRef(s)
1944Days of GloryVladimir[13]
1944The Keys of the KingdomFather Francis ChisholmBest Actor Oscar nomination[14]
1945The Valley of DecisionPaul Scott[15]
1945SpellboundDr. Anthony Edwardes / John BallantyneBest Picture Oscar nomination[16]
1946The Yearling"Penny" BaxterBest Picture Oscar nomination

Best Actor Oscar nomination

[17][18]
1946Duel in the SunLewt McCanles[19]
1947The Macomber AffairRobert Wilson[20]
1947Gentleman's AgreementPhilip Schuyler GreenBest Picture Oscar award

Best Actor Oscar nomination

[17][21]
1947The Paradine CaseAnthony Keane[22]
1948Yellow SkyJames "Stretch" Dawson[23]
1949The Great SinnerFedja[24]
1949Twelve O'Clock HighBrigadier General Frank SavageBest Picture Oscar nomination

Best Actor Oscar nomination

[25]
1950The GunfighterJimmy Ringo[26]
1951Captain Horatio HornblowerCaptain Horatio Hornblower[27]
1951Only the ValiantCaptain Richard Lance[17]
1951David and BathshebaDavid[28]
1951Pictura: An Adventure in ArtNarratorDocumentary; anthology film, segment: "Legend of Saint Ursula"[17][29]
1952The World in His ArmsJonathan Clark[17]
1952The Snows of KilimanjaroHarry Street[27]
1953Roman HolidayJoe BradleyBest Picture Oscar nomination

Best Actress Oscar award

[30]
1953Boum sur ParisHimselfFrench film[31]
1954The Million Pound NoteHenry Adams[32]
1954Night PeopleColonel Steve Van Dyke[32]
1954The Purple PlainSquadron Leader Bill Forrester[33]
1956The Man in the Gray Flannel SuitTom Rath[17]
1956Moby DickCaptain Ahab[34]
1957Designing WomanMike Hagen[17]
1958The Hidden WorldNarratorDocumentary[35]
1958The BravadosJim Douglas[17]
1958The Big CountryJames McKayAlso producer[36]
1959Pork Chop HillLieutenant Joe ClemonsAlso executive producer[36]
1959Beloved InfidelF. Scott Fitzgerald[36]
1959On the BeachDwight Towers[37]
1961The Guns of NavaroneCaptain Keith MalloryBest Picture Oscar nomination[38]
1962Cape FearSam BowdenAlso executive producer[39]
1962How the West Was WonCleve Van ValenBest Picture Oscar nominatiopn[40]
1962To Kill a MockingbirdAtticus FinchAlso executive producer

Best Picture Oscar nominationBest Actor Oscar award

[41]
1963Captain Newman, M.D.Capt. Josiah J. NewmanAlso executive producer[17]
1964Behold a Pale HorseManuel ArtiguezAlso executive producer[17]
1964John F. Kennedy: Years of Lightning, Day of DrumsNarratorDocumentary[42]
1965MirageDavid Stillwell[17]
1966ArabesqueDavid Pollock[43]
1968The Stalking MoonSam Varner[44]
1969Mackenna's GoldMackenna[45]
1969The ChairmanJohn Hathaway[46]
[47]
1969MaroonedCharles Keith[17]
1970I Walk the LineSheriff Henry Tawes[17]
1971Shoot OutClay Lomax[17]
1972The Trial of the Catonsville NineProducer[48]
1974Billy Two HatsArch Deans[17][49]
1974The DoveProducer[50]
1976The OmenRobert Thorn[51]
1977MacArthurGeneral Douglas MacArthur[52]
1978The Boys from BrazilJosef Mengele[53]
1980The Sea WolvesColonel Lewis Pugh[54]
1987Amazing Grace and ChuckPresident[55]
1989Old GringoAmbrose Bierce[56]
1989Super Chief: The Life and Legacy of Earl WarrenNarratorDocumentary[57]
1991Other People's MoneyAndrew "Jorgy" Jorgenson[58]
1991Cape FearLee Heller[59]
1994The Hunt for Adolf EichmannNarratorDocumentary[60]
1995Wild Bill: Hollywood MaverickHimselfDocumentary[61]
1999The Art of Norton SimonNarratorDocumentary short film[62]
2000A Conversation with Gregory PeckHimselfDocumentary[63]
2024The First OmenRobert ThornArchival footage[64]

Television

Peck as Abraham Lincoln in a still from the television miniseries The Blue and the Gray (1982)
Year(s)TitleRole(s)NotesRef(s)
1982The Blue and the GrayAbraham LincolnTelevision miniseries[65]
1983The Scarlet and the BlackMonsignor Hugh O'FlahertyTelevision film[66]
198557th Academy AwardsProducer[67]
1990Sanford Meisner: The American Theatre's Best Kept SecretHimselfDocumentary[68]
1991Frederic Remington: The Truth of Other DaysNarratorDocumentary[69]
1993The PortraitGardner ChurchTelevision film; also executive producer[70]
1994BaseballKid Gleason and Connie MackVoice, Documentary miniseries[71]
1998Moby DickFather MappleTelevision miniseries[72]
1999American Prophet: The Story of Joseph SmithNarratorDocumentary[73]

Stage

Year(s)TitleRoleTheatreNotesRef.
1942The Morning StarCliff ParrilowMorosco TheatreSeptember 14 – October 3[74]
1942–1943The Willow and IKirkland Todd and Robin ToddWindsor TheatreDecember 10, 1942 – January 2, 1943[74]
1943Sons and SoldiersAndrew TadlockMorosco TheatreMay 4–22[74]
1947Angel StreetMr. ManninghamLa Jolla PlayhouseAugust 26–31[75][76]
1948The Male AnimalTommy TurnerLa Jolla PlayhouseAugust 24–28[75][77]
1949Light Up the SkyUnknownLa Jolla PlayhouseJuly 26–31[75]
1991–1993The Will Rogers FolliesMr. Ziegfeld (voice)Palace TheatreMay 1, 1991 – September 5, 1993[74]

Radio

Publicity photograph for CBS Radio
Year(s)TitleRoleNotesRef(s)
1944That They Might LiveDick[78]
1944Screen Guild PlayersCount VronskyEpisode: "Anna Karenina"[78][79]
1945This Is My BestUnknownEpisode: "Jupiter Laughs"[80]
1945Screen Guild PlayersThomas ArmstrongEpisode: "Romance"[80]
1945The Doctor FightsDr. Harry JosephEpisode: "Medicine for the Enemy"[81]
1946Theatre of RomanceHolger BrandtEpisode: "Intermezzo"[81]
1946Lux Radio TheatrePaul ScottEpisode: "Valley of Decision"[82]
1946Lux Radio TheatreJerry DuranceEpisode: "Now, Voyager"[82][83]
1946Cavalcade of AmericaGeorge WashingtonEpisode: "Young Major Washington"[84]
1946SuspenseSteve GareEpisode: "The Lonely Road"[84][85]
1946Hollywood PlayersSullivanEpisode: "Sullivan's Travels"[86]
1946Hollywood PlayersUnknownEpisode: "No Time for Comedy"[87]
1946Hollywood PlayersGregoryEpisode: "All Through the House"[88]
1947Screen Guild PlayersPa BaxterEpisode: "The Yearling"[88]
1947Cavalcade for AmericaJim DavenportEpisode: "School for Men"[89]
1948Duffy's TavernHimself[90]
1948SuspenseRidge FowlerEpisode: "Hitchhiker Poker"[91]
1949SuspenseJeffrey BrunoEpisode: "Murder Through the Looking Glass"[92]
1949Screen Directors PlayhouseJames "Stretch" DawsonEpisode: "Yellow Sky"[93]
1949SuspenseBenEpisode: "Nightmare"[94]
1949The Hotpoint Holiday HourBurt JeffersonEpisode: "The Man Who Came To Dinner"[95]
1951Screen Directors PlayhouseJimmy RingoEpisode: "The Gunfighter"[96]
1951SuspenseMr. MacIntyreEpisode: "The Truth About Jerry Baxter"[91]
1952Cavalcade of AmericaUnknownEpisode: "A Prisoner Named Brown"[97]
1952Lux Radio TheatreCaptain Horatio HornblowerEpisode: "Captain Horatio Hornblower"[98]
1952Stars in the AirPa BaxterEpisode: "The Yearling"[99]

Bibliography

  • Biltereyst, Daniel; Maltby, Richard; Meers, Philippe (February 5, 2019). The Routledge Companion to New Cinema History. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-35395-9.
  • Haney, Lynn (March 24, 2005). Gregory Peck: A Charmed Life. Pavilion Books. ISBN 978-1-86105-824-9.
  • Molyneaux, Gerard (1995). Gregory Peck: A Bio-bibliography. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-28668-1.

References

External links