Chosen
by Empire magazine as one of the 100 Sexiest Stars in film history (#42). [1995]
Ranked
#33 in Empire (UK) magazine's "The Top 100 Movie Stars of All Time" list. [October 1997]
The famous
Failure Analysis Associates, from Menlo Park, California, re-constructed
and re-created all details of the accident at the same approximate time on September 30th and have concluded that James Dean
was traveling 55 to 56 m.p.h. when the fateful accident occurred, thereby proving he had not been speeding, as rumor had it.
Most of his so-called
affairs with various starlets were made up by the Warner Brothers PR. He did have love affairs with Pier Angeli and Liz Sheridan.
He also worked
as a "stunt tester" on the game show "Beat the Clock" (1950), testing the safety of the stunts that some of the studio audience members
would later perform.
Interred
at Park Cemetery, Fairmount, Indiana, USA.
Reportedly, Dean
was very much in love with Pier Angeli and they planned to marry, but her mother blocked the union because Dean wasn't Catholic
and she helped arrange Pier's marriage to Vic Damone. Before she committed suicide, Pier wrote that Dean was the only man she had ever
really loved.
Briefly studied
dance with Katherine Dunham.
Won the
Bloom Award as "Best Newcomer" for early Broadway work in "The Immoralist".
He was
issued a speeding ticket only two hours and fifteen minutes before his fatal accident.
The Eagles penned a lyric about him that went: "Too fast to live, too young to die."
Was the first
actor to receive an Academy Award nomination posthumously, for his role in East of Eden (1955). However, he did not win.
Fraternal grandson
of Charles Dean and Emma Dean.
Nephew of Ortense Winslow (sister of his father) and Marcus Winslow.
Cousin of Marcus Winslow
Jr.
Immortalized
in 1974 by the song "Rock On" sung by David Essex.
Only actor
in history to receive more than one Oscar nomination posthumously.
Pictured
on a 32¢ US commemorative postage stamp in the Legends of Hollywood series, issued 24 June 1996.
Pledged
Sigma Nu fraternity but dropped out of college before being initiated.
Ironically, he
filmed a highway safety commercial with actor Gig Young on the set of Giant (1956) in July 1955. Dean told Young, "I used to fly around quite a bit, took a
lot of unnecessary chances on the highway....Now when I drive on the highway, I'm extra cautious."
Donald
Turnupseed, the driver of the other car involved in Dean's accident, died of cancer in 1995. Turnupseed couldn't swerve out
of the way of Dean's Porsche Spyder, but he successfully swerved journalists who frequently pestered him for interviews about
the accident.
He is one of
several famous and tragic figures from history to be featured on the front and back sleeves of rock band Marillion's "Clutching at Straws" album, released in 1987.
East of Eden (1955) was the only one of the three movies in which he had major roles to be released
while he was alive.
One of only four
male actors to be posthumously nominated for an Oscar as best actor in a leading role. The others were Spencer Tracy, Peter Finch and Massimo Troisi.
Contrary to popular
belief, Dean's middle name was not taken from Lord Byron, but from a relative, "Byron" Dean.
During the filming
of Giant (1956), he and Rock Hudson did not get along. This tension heightened their on-screen clashes. However, according
to Hudson's ex-wife Phyllis Gates, he cried after hearing the news of Dean's death. Gates wrote, "Rock couldn't be
reached. He was overcome by guilt and shame, almost as though he himself had killed James Dean."
At the
time of his death, Dean did not leave behind a will, so most of his possessions went to his father, Winton Dean, whose relationship
with him was distant at best.
Was engaged to
Liz Sheridan, who wrote a book about their love called "Dizzy and Jimmy".
Dean's
acting breakthrough came on Broadway in the drama "See the Jaguar", despite its run of less than a week (only 4 days).
Along with Martin Sheen and Steve McQueen, is mentioned in R.E.M.'s song "Electrolite".
Referenced by
name in the John Mellencamp song "Jack and Diane".
He was
voted the 22nd Greatest Movie Star of all time by Entertainment Weekly.
Was a graduate
from Santa Monica College, a California junior college that boasts its elite drama program. Went
on to UCLA but left after appearing in one stage production, as Malcolm in "Macbeth", as he was anxious to get his acting
career started.
According to
"The Mutant King", David Dalton's 1974 biography of James Dean, the rumor that Dean was a masochist who liked to
have cigarettes stubbed out on his naked body can be traced to a pencil sketch of his called "The Human Ash Tray". The sketch
featured a human body, in the guise of an ash tray, with many cigarette stubs in it. Dalton
speculates that the sketch has nothing to do with Dean's sexual proclivities but much to do with the fact that he was a heavy
smoker.
Marlon Brando, in his 1994 autobiography "Songs My Mother Taught Me", says that Dean, who idolized
him, based his acting on him and his lifestyle on what he thought Brando's lifestyle was.
Dated Ursula Andress when she was a starlet in Hollywood
in the mid-1950s, as did his idol, Marlon Brando.
Elia Kazan, in his 1988 autobiography "A Life", says that during the production of East of Eden (1955), he had to have Dean move into a bungalow near his on the Warner Bros. lot
to keep an eye on him, so wild was his nightlife.
Director Elia Kazan did not believe that Dean would have been able to sustain the momentum of his career.
He felt that Dean's career, had he lived, would have sputtered out, as he was not well-trained and relied too much on his
instincts, as opposed to his idol Marlon Brando, who, contrary to what people believed, had been very well-trained by his acting teacher
Stella Adler and relied on that training to create his characters.
His favorite
book was "The Little Prince" by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.
He was
voted the 30th Greatest Movie Star of all time by Premiere Magazine.
Was named
#18 greatest actor on The 50 Greatest Screen Legends list by the American Film Institute.
Loved playing
practical jokes on friends and reading.
Is portrayed
by James Franco in James Dean (2001) (TV); by Nick Carpenter in The Mystery of
Natalie Wood (2004) (TV); by Stephen McHattie in James Dean (1976) (TV) and by Casper Van Dien in James Dean: Race
with Destiny (1997) (TV).
Hilary Duff's 2005 "Most Wanted" album includes the song "Mr. James Dean", which is all about
him.
Is one of the
many movie stars mentioned in Madonna's song "Vogue"
Had a fondness
for auto racing and had purchased the 1955 Porsche Spyder sports car, one of only 90 made of that year model, planning to
participate in the upcoming races in Salinas, CA
on Oct 1, 1955.
He was
descended largely from early British settlers to America.
One of the many
personalities mentioned in Billy Joel's song "We didn't start the fire" (1989).
Received posthumous
Oscar nominations for his his first and last ever screen performances: East of Eden (1955) and Giant (1956).
Aping Marlon Brando, he also bought a Triumph motorcycle. Instead of Brando's 650cc 6T Thunderbird model,
which he used in the film, The Wild One (1953), he bought the smaller 500cc TR5 Trophy model. This Triumph featured in a famous
series of photographs by Phil Stern, the motorcycle itself being recovered, restored and currently displayed at the
"James Dean Museum"
in Fairmount, Indiana.
Lost his
two front teeth in a motorcycle accident in his youth.
President Ronald Reagan referred to Dean as "America's
Rebel".
Cousin of country
singer/entrepreneur Jimmy Dean.
His favorite
drink was coffee and his favorite ice cream flavors were coffee and raspberry.
His tastes in
music were eclectic. He liked African Tribal music and Afro-Cuban music, as well as classical (Béla Bartók, Igor Stravinsky); jazz/blues(Billie Holiday) and pop (Judy Garland and Frank Sinatra). His favorite song was Billie Holiday's "When Your Lover Has Gone" and his favorite
album was Sinatra's "Songs for Young Lovers".
His first
professional acting gig was in a Coca-Cola commercial, handing out bottles of Coke to teenagers who were riding a merry-go-round.
His final screen
test for East of Eden (1955) was shot with Paul Newman, who also was in the final running for one of the roles. Originally, director Elia Kazan had considered casting Marlon Brando and Montgomery Clift in the roles of the two brothers, but they were too old to play teenagers as they were
both in the their 30s in 1954. Newman's age, 29, also put him at a disadvantage. Dean, 23 years old and Richard Davalos, aged 19, were cast as the fraternal twins.
At the time of
his death, Dean was signed to appear in Somebody Up There
Likes Me (1956) at M.G.M. and The Left Handed
Gun (1958) at Warner Bros. Both parts subsequently were taken by 'Paul Newman' (I) and helped
make him a star. Newman's career may very well have been retarded if Dean had lived as, while still alive, they competed for
the same roles (East of Eden (1955)).
Signed
a 9-picture, $1 million deal with Warner Bros before his death. He did not live long enough to honor it.
Like his hero
Marlon Brando (Dean had been separated from his own father as a child and was distant from him. Brando
apparently served as a role model for Dean) Dean wanted to write. He told gossip columnist Hedda Hopper that writing was his supreme ambition.
According to
Marlon Brando, Dean would often call him, leaving messages with Brando's answering service. Brando
would sometimes listen, silently, as Dean instructed the service to have Brando call back. Brando, disturbed that Dean was
copying his life-style (motorcycle, bongo drums) and acting techniques, did not return his calls. The two met at least three
times: on the set of East of Eden (1955); on the set of Desirée (1954) and at a party, where Brando took Dean aside and told him he had emotional
problems that required psychiatric attention.
While a
struggling actor in the 1950s, he once lived at 19 West 68th Street,
off Manhattan's Central Park West.
Was good friends
with Martin Landau.
His performance
as Jim Stark in Rebel Without a
Cause (1955) is ranked #43 on Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Performances of All Time
(2006).
Just before his
death, his agent, Jane Deacy, negotiated a 9-picture deal over 6 years with Warner Bros. worth $900,000. Dean's next
project was to be a television version for NBC of Emlyn Williams' play "The Corn is Green", in which he was to star with Judith Anderson. His next film was to be Somebody Up There
Likes Me (1956), a biopic of boxer Rocky Graziano, in which he was replaced by Paul Newman. Newman also replaced him in the role of Billy The Kid in The Left Handed
Gun (1958). Two other roles with which he was being linked were the leads in Gun for a Coward (1957) and Cat on a Hot Tin
Roof (1958).
Was Oscar
nominated in 2-thirds of his films, a record which will probably never be bettered.
He was given
a Siamese cat as gift by Elizabeth Taylor.
Was terribly
near-sighted and wore thick glasses when not on screen.
Referenced
by name in the Skid Row song, "Forever" ("wild cigarettes like James Dean").
Was biggest idol
of Elvis Presley.
Mentioned
in Don McLean's hit song "American Pie".
Was originally
considered on the leading role of "Oklahoma!" (1955).