Keenan Wynn
Keenan Wynn was born on Jul 27, 1916 in USA. Keenan Wynn's big-screen debut came with Chained directed by Clarence Brown in 1934. Keenan Wynn is known for The Goonies directed by Richard Donner, Sean Astin stars as Mikey and Josh Brolin as Brand. Keenan Wynn has got 1 awards and 1 nominations so far. The most recent award Keenan Wynn achieved is Walk of Fame. The upcoming new movie Keenan Wynn plays is Hyper Sapien: People from Another Star which will be released on Dec 19, 1986.
The talented scion of a show-business family, Keenan Wynn's father was the great burlesque and television buffoon Ed Wynn while his maternal grandfather, Frank Keenan, earned distinction on the other side of the entertainment ladder as a Shakespearean tragedian. Mother Hilda Keenan was also a minor actress. Born in New York City on July 27, 1916, during the height of his father's Broadway popularity, Keenan grew up in the lap of luxury and was educated at St. John's Military Academy. He initially followed in his grandfather's dramatic footsteps as opposed to his father's clown shoes, making his professional bow in Maine with the Lakewood Players in a production of "Accent of Youth". By 1937, he was on Broadway with "Hitch Your Wagon" in two small roles. During the run of the show, he met first wife, actress Evie Wynn Johnson, who became his coach, manager and advisor. At the same time, he began to get steady radio work.Through the aid and encouragement of his wife and her contacts, he eventually wrangled screen tests for both 20th Century-Fox and MGM. Turned down by the first studio, he signed with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer at a rather low pay scale of $300 a week. At MGM, Keenan became the utilitarian character player, adept at playing almost anything handed to him. Balding, homely but with real distinctive, imposing features, he made his unbilled debut in Somewhere I'll Find You (1942), and went on to play a grab-bag of shady brutes, usually in comic relief style. He was Gene Kelly's agent in Pour moi et ma mie (1942), a gangster in L'ange perdu (1943), a soldier buddy to Robert Walker in See Here, Private Hargrove (1944) and its sequel; a drunk in a diner in L'horloge (1945); Lucille Ball's tipsy beau in the Katharine Hepburn / Spencer Tracy vehicle Sans amour (1945); and a news editor paired up with Ms. Ball again in Ève éternelle (1946). Moreover, he was given "B" co-star assignments in lesser material such as Rio, rythme d'amour (1946), Pas de congé, pas d'amour (1946) and The Cockeyed Miracle (1946).Two sons were born to Keenan and Eve during the war years but he and Eve soon drifted apart. In 1946, the couple filed divorce papers with a third-party involvement in the form of family close friend and MGM star Van Johnson. Eve went on to marry Johnson the day after the couple's divorce was decreed in 1947. Keenan's second marriage in 1949 to Betty Jane Butler lasted only four years.He resigned with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the postwar years and ventured on as one of Hollywood's strongest character players. The drawback was that not many of his roles were high-quality challenges, roles that might have moved him toward the top of the MGM hierarchy. The more scene-stealing roles that came to him were his disagreeable, self-important burlesque star in the Clark Gable starrer Marchands d'illusions (1947); his jazz reedman in Meurtre en musique (1947); and the songwriter friend to Kirk Douglas in Ma chère secrétaire (1948). He was also given his quota of vulgar, blunt-talking villains to play, both comically and dramatically, in such films as Ma brute chérie (1950), Femme en péril (1951) and, in particular, his Runyonesque gangster in the musical classic Embrasse-moi, chérie (1953). Partnered with co-hort James Whitmore, their rendering of "Brush Up Your Shakespeare" was one of many comedy highlights. He also doled out a number of brash soldier types in such films as L'intrépide (1952), Le cirque infernal (1953), L'auto sanglante (1953) and Escadrille Panthère (1954).After leaving Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1954, he set his sights on television, but the lure of films (and steady work) never stopped. In Quand le masque tombe (1956), Keenan finally appeared with father Ed Wynn, who had suffered a major career slide and subsequent nervous breakdown. Keenan, who at one time had gone to great lengths to extricate himself from his father's famous shadow, was now an instrument of encouragement. He suggested the elder Wynn abandon his old-styled clowning in favor of a serious character acting. His father agreed to try and appeared in a small role in the film but they had no scenes together. The risk worked. The following year both were being hailed for their superlative work together in the dramatic television production Playhouse 90: Requiem for a Heavyweight (1956).Disney employed both father and son in the 1960s with a mustachioed Keenan as an exceptionally hissable villain in the studio's comedy feature Monte là-dessus (1961) and its sequel, Après lui, le déluge (1963). His hammy antics were spurred on in Dr. Folamour ou : Comment j'ai appris à ne plus m'en faire et à aimer la bombe ! (1964), La grande course autour du monde (1965), Viva Max (1969) and Si tu crois fillette (1971), along with standard, if not always stand-out, television work. His annoying, fast-talking conmen, scheming tycoons and other unappetizing cronies never lost their demand. In 1975, he earned an Emmy Award nomination for his guest-starring role on Sergent Anderson (1974).Though his later years were marred by a severe case of tinnitus (a ringing in the ear that blocks out exterior sound), he was able to continue acting until the very end. One of his last roles was as a regular on the short-lived television series The Last Precinct (1986). Sons Ned Wynn ("Edmund") and Tracy Keenan Wynn became successful writers in the business. On October 14, 1986, Keenan Wynn died of pancreatic cancer at age 70 and was survived by third wife Sharley Jean Hudson, who had three daughters by him: Hilda, Emily and Edwina. His granddaughter Jessica Keenan Wynn (Edwina's daughter) is also a Broadway singer and actress.
Birthday
Jul 27, 1916Place of Birth
New York City, New York, USA
Known For
Awards
1 wins & 1 nominations
Movies & TV Shows
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