Guy Madison(1922-1996)
- Actor
- Producer
- Soundtrack
Handsome American leading man Guy Madison stumbled into a film career
and became a television star and hero to the Baby Boom generation. As a
young man he worked as a telephone lineman, but entered the Coast Guard
at the beginning of the Second World War. While on liberty one weekend
in Hollywood, he attended a Lux Radio Theatre broadcast and was spotted
in the audience by an assistant to
Henry Willson, an executive for
David O. Selznick. Selznick wanted an
unknown sailor to play a small but prominent part in
Since You Went Away (1944),
and promptly signed Robert Moseley to a contract. Selznick and Willson
concocted the screen name Guy Madison (the "guy" girls would like to
meet, and Madison from a passing Dolly Madison cake wagon). Madison
filmed his one scene on a weekend pass and returned to duty. The film's
release brought thousands of fan letters for Madison's lonely,
strikingly handsome young sailor, and at war's end he returned to find
himself a star-in-the-making. Despite an initial amateurishness to his
acting, Madison grew as a performer, studying and working in theatre.
He played leads in a series of programmers before being cast as
legendary lawman Wild Bill Hickok in the TV series
Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok (1951).
He played Hickok on TV and radio for much of the 1950s, and many of the
TV episodes were strung together and released as feature films. Madison
managed to squeeze in some more adult-oriented roles during his
off-time from the series, but much of this work was also in westerns.
After the Hickok series ended Madison found work scarce in the U.S. and
traveled to Europe, where he became a popular star of Italian westerns
and German adventure films. In the 1970s he returned to the U.S., but
appeared mainly in cameo roles. Physical ailments limited his work in
later years, and he died from emphysema in 1996. His first wife was
actress Gail Russell.