William Holden (April 17, 1918 – November 12, 1981) was an
American film
actor.
Holden won the
Academy Award for Best Actor in 1954, and the
Emmy Award for Best Actor in 1974. One of the top stars of the 1950s, he was named one of the "Top 10 stars of the year" six times (1954-1958, 1961) and appeared on the
American Film Institute's
AFI's 100 Years... 100 Stars list as #25.
Early life and career
Holden, eldest of three sons (brothers were Robert & Richard), was born as
William Franklin Beedle, Jr. in
O'Fallon, Illinois, the son of Mary Blanche (
née Ball), a schoolteacher, and William Franklin Beedle, Sr., an industrial
chemist.
The family, which moved to
South Pasadena, California when he was three, was of
English descent; Holden's paternal great-grandmother, Rebecca Westfield, was born in
England in 1817, while some of his mother's ancestors emigrated in the
17th century to
Millenback,
Lancaster County, Virginia in the
U.S. from
England.
After graduating from
South Pasadena High School, Holden attended
Pasadena Junior College, where he became involved in local radio plays. Contrary to legend and theatre publicity, he did not study at the
Pasadena Playhouse, nor was he discovered in a play there. Rather, he was spotted by a talent scout from
Paramount Pictures in 1937 while appearing as an old man in a play at the Playbox, a separate and private theatre owned by
Pasadena Playhouse director Gilmor Brown. His first film role was in
Prison Farm the following year.
Hollywood's "Golden Boy"
His first starring role was in
Golden Boy (1939), in which he played a
violinist turned
boxer.
After
Columbia Pictures picked up half of his contract, he alternated between starring in several minor pictures for Paramount and Columbia before serving as a 2nd lieutenant in the
United States Army Air Forces during
World War II, where he acted in training films. Beginning in 1950, his career rebounded when
Billy Wilder tapped him to star as the down-at-the-heels screenwriter Joe Gillis who is taken in by faded silent-screen star Norma Desmond (
Gloria Swanson) in
Sunset Boulevard, for which Holden earned his first Best Actor Oscar nomination.
Following this breakthrough film, he played a series of roles that combined good looks with cynical detachment, including a prisoner-of-war entrepreneur in
Stalag 17 (1953), for which he won the
Academy Award for
Best Actor, a pressured young engineer/family man in
Executive Suite (1954), an acerbic stage director in
The Country Girl (1954), a conflicted jet pilot in the Korean War film
The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954), a wandering braggart in
Picnic (1955), a dashing war correspondent in
Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955), an ill-fated prisoner in
The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) and a WWII tug boat captain in
The Key (1958).
He also played a number of sunnier roles in light comedy, such as the handsome architect pursuing virginal
Maggie McNamara in the controversial
Production Code-breaking
The Moon is Blue (1953), as
Judy Holliday's tutor in
Born Yesterday (1950), as a playwright captivated by
Ginger Rogers' character in
Forever Female (1953) and as
Humphrey Bogart's younger brother, a playboy, in
Sabrina (1954), which also starred
Audrey Hepburn.
Holden starred in his share of forgettable movies — which he was forced to do by studio contracts — such as
Paris When It Sizzles (1964), also co-starring
Audrey Hepburn. By the mid-1960s, his roles were having less critical and commercial impact.
Later career
In 1969, Holden starred in director
Sam Peckinpah's graphically violent Western
The Wild Bunch, winning much acclaim. Also in 1969, Holden starred in director
Terence Young's family film
L'Arbre de Noel, co-starring Italian actress
Virna Lisi, based on the novel of the same name by Michel Bataille. This film was originally released in the United States as
The Christmas Tree and on home video as
When Wolves Cry.Five years later, he starred with
Paul Newman and
Steve McQueen in
The Towering Inferno. He was also praised for his Oscar-nominated leading performance in
Sidney Lumet's
Network (1976), playing an older version of the character type he had perfected in the 1950s, only now more jaded and aware of his own mortality. In 1980, Holden appeared in
The Earthling with child actor
Ricky Schroder, playing a loner dying of cancer who goes to the
Australian
outback to end his days, meets a young boy whose parents have been killed in an accident, and teaches him how to survive. Schroder later named one of his sons Holden.
During his last years, he also appeared in
When Time Ran Out and
Blake Edwards's
S.O.B.. While his second
Irwin Allen was a critical and commercial failure and largely disliked by Holden himself, his other last film directed by Edwards was more successful and a
Golden Globe-nominated picture.
Personal life

Brenda Marshall, 1952
Holden was married to actress
Brenda Marshall from 1941 until their divorce (after many long separations) in 1971. They had two sons, Peter Westfield (born in 1944) and Scott Porter (born in 1946, died 2005, San Diego, CA). He also adopted his wife's daughter Virginia from her first marriage.
Although never involved in politics himself, he was best man at the marriage of his friend
Ronald Reagan to
Nancy Davis in 1952. He maintained a home in
Switzerland and also spent much of his time working for
wildlife conservation as a managing partner in an animal preserve in
Africa. His
Mount Kenya Safari Club in
Nanyuki, Kenya, (founded 1959) became a mecca for the international
jet set.
In 1974, he began a relationship with actress
Stefanie Powers which sparked her interest in animal welfare. After his death, Powers set up the
William Holden Wildlife Foundation at Holden's Mount Kenya Game Ranch.
Holden suffered from
alcoholism and
depression. In 1966, he was involved in a car accident in
Italy in which the other driver was killed. It was determined that Holden had been
driving under the influence of alcohol; he was charged with
vehicular manslaughter and received an eight-month suspended prison sentence. Overcome with guilt, friends said this led the actor to even heavier bouts of drinking.
His younger brother, Robert W. "Bobbie" Beedle, was a Navy fighter pilot who was killed in action in
World War II, on January 5, 1945. After
The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1955) was released, Beedle was remembered by his squadron-mates as having been very much like Holden's character Lt. Harry Brubaker.
Death
In late 1980 Holden reportedly was diagnosed with
lung cancer after visiting a lung specialist in
Hanover. Holden was alone and intoxicated in his apartment in
Santa Monica, California, when he apparently slipped on a throw rug, severely lacerated his head on a night table, and bled to death. Evidence suggests he was conscious for at least half-an-hour after the fall but may not have realized the severity of the injury and did not summon aid or was unable to call for help. His body was found on November 16, but forensic evidence suggests Holden likely died four days earlier. He was 63 years old.
Holden was cremated and his ashes scattered in the
Pacific Ocean.
Filmography
Features
- Prison Farm (1938) (uncredited)
- Million Dollar Legs (1939) (uncredited)
- Those Were the Days! (1940)
- The Remarkable Andrew (1942)
Short subjects
- Reconnaissance Pilot (1943)
- You Can Change the World (1951)
Awards and nominations
Academy Award
BAFTA Award
- Best Foreign Actor Nomination for Picnic (1955)
- Best Foreign Actor Nomination for Network (1976)
Emmy Award