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Roman Bohnen

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Cause of death
  
Heart attack

Spouse
  
Hilda Bohnen (m. ?–1941)

Years active
  
1937-49

Name
  
Roman Bohnen

Children
  
Marina Bohnen

Role
  
Film actor


Roman Bohnen wwwdennisgoodnocomRoman20BohnenRoman20amp20pi

Full Name
  
Roman Aloys Bohnen

Born
  
November 24, 1901 (
1901-11-24
)
St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S.

Died
  
February 24, 1949, Hollywood, California, United States

Movies
  
Arch of Triumph, The Song of Bernadette, The Best Years of Our Lives, Of Mice and Men, The Tell‑Tale Heart

Similar People
  
Lewis Milestone, Henry King, Clifford Odets, Jules Dassin, Zoltan Korda

Roman Bohnen


Roman Aloys "Bud" Bohnen (November 24, 1901 – February 24, 1949) was an American stage and film actor.

Contents

Roman Bohnen Dennis Goodno39s Genealogy

Early life and education

Roman Bohnen Roman Bohnen

Born in St. Paul, Minnesota, Bohnen attended the University of Minnesota, where he was a cheerleader. He was the son of a portrait painter, and the family was financially hard-pressed during his youth.

Roman Bohnen Roman Bohnen Actor Films episodes and roles on

After graduating in 1923 with a B.A., Roman served his acting apprenticeship in theater companies in St. Paul and Chicago, eventually spending five years with the Goodman Theatre. At the Goodman, he fell in love with fellow actor Hildur Ouse, who became his wife.

Group Theatre

The Bohnens moved to New York City, where he made his Broadway debut in 1931 in As Husbands Go. Bohnen, In the summer of 1932, at the behest of his friend from the Goodman Theatre Art Smith, he was invited to join the Group Theatre, which became his artistic home for the next nine years. As a member of the Group, he appeared in numerous plays and was active in all aspects of the company. In her book on the Group Theatre, author Wendy Smith observes that Bohnen "fit easily and naturally into the Group" and was appreciated for his sense of humor, generosity and hard work.

Roman Bohnen Streamline The Official Filmstruck Blog Roman Bohnen A

On January 2, 1933, Bohnen took over a lead part in the Group's hit play, Success Story by John Howard Lawson. The very next day, Incubator, a play Bohnen had written with John Lyman, opened on Broadway (produced by another organization). Although Incubator received favorable reviews, it closed quickly. In the plays written by his friend, Clifford Odets, for the Group Theatre, he created the roles of Dr. Barnes in Waiting for Lefty, Schlosser in Awake and Sing!, Gus Michaels in Paradise Lost, Tom Moody in Golden Boy and Mr. Tucker in Night Music.

Roman Bohnen Watch and Download Unforgotten Crime courtesy of Jimbo Berkey

Bohnen summered at Pine Brook Country Club in Nichols, Connecticut. Pinebrook is best known for becoming the summer home of the Group Theatre. Some of the other artists who summered there were Elia Kazan, Harry Morgan, John Garfield, Lee J. Cobb, Will Geer, Clifford Odets, Howard Da Silva and Irwin Shaw. The Group Theatre disbanded in 1941, the same year that Hildur died.

Films

After the failure of a play called Five Alarm Waltz in 1941, Bohnen and his daughter Marina moved to Hollywood. His first film was the Vogues of 1938 (1937). By 1941, he was working almost exclusively in film. Among his better-known roles are Candy in Of Mice and Men (1939) and Pat Derry in The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). He also played Durand Laxart, Joan's uncle, who takes her to see the Dauphin of France, in the Ingrid Bergman film, Joan of Arc (1948). He played the Old Man in Jules Dassin's short film The Tell-Tale Heart (1941)

Bohnen was cast as President Harry Truman in The Beginning or the End, an MGM docu-drama about the atomic bomb. After a private screening in late 1946, Truman let it be known that he disapproved of his portrayal regarding the decision to drop atomic bombs on Japan. On December 2, 1946, Bohnen wrote Truman that he should portray himself. On December 12, Truman responded to Bohnen's letter, but declined the chance to portray himself, and said that he was "sure you (Bohnen) will do the part creditably". Ultimately, the scenes were re-shot with actor Art Baker re-cast as Truman.

Actors' Laboratory

With other former Group Theatre actors, he was co-founder of the politically active Actors' Laboratory Theatre, serving on its executive board. The Actors' Laboratory was accused of Communist leanings, and in February 1948 Bohnen and other members of the group were subpoenaed to appear before a California Senate committee. He and the others refused to answer questions about whether or not they had ever been Communists. Subsequently the U.S. Internal Revenue Service revoked the Actors' Laboratory's tax-exempt status. Bohnen worked hard to keep the group alive, and was recognized as the "driving force behind all of its activities.

Personal life

The Bohnens had a daughter in 1936, Marina. Hildur died in 1941.

He was working on the Actors' Lab production of A Distant Isle when he collapsed and died of a heart attack during a performance of the play in Hollywood, California in 1949. The stress of the Lab's difficulties, and his personal problems as a single parent, contributed to his death. The Lab closed in 1950.

Filmography

Actor
1949
Mr. Soft Touch as
Barney Teener
1949
Fireside Theatre (TV Series) as
The Hussar (segment "A Terribly Strange Bed")
- The Stronger/A Terribly Strange Bed (1949) - The Hussar (segment "A Terribly Strange Bed")
1949
Kazan as
Maitlin
1949
Your Show Time (TV Series)
- Mademoiselle Fifi (1949)
1948
Joan of Arc as
Durand Laxart - Her Uncle
1948
Night Has a Thousand Eyes as
Melville Weston - Special Prosecutor
1948
Arch of Triumph as
Dr. Veber
1948
Open Secret as
Roy Locke
1947
For You I Die as
Smitty
1947
Song of Love as
Dr. Hoffman
1947
Brute Force as
Warden A.J. Barnes
1947
California as
Col. Stuart
1946
The Best Years of Our Lives as
Pat Derry
1946
Mr. Ace as
Prof. Joshua L. Adams
1946
The Strange Love of Martha Ivers as
Mr. O'Neil
1946
Winter Wonderland as
Timothy Wheeler
1946
The Hoodlum Saint as
Father O'Doul
1946
Deadline at Dawn as
Frantic Man with Injured Cat
1946
Miss Susie Slagle's as
Dean Wingate
1946
Two Years Before the Mast as
Macklin
1945
A Bell for Adano as
Carl Erba - Cart Man
1945
Counter-Attack as
Kostyuk
1944
None But the Lonely Heart as
Dad Pettyjohn
1944
The Hairy Ape as
Paddy
1944
The Hitler Gang as
Captain Ernst Röhm
1943
Interrogation of Enemy Airmen (Documentary short) as
Captain Schwartz (uncredited)
1943
The Song of Bernadette as
François Soubirous
1943
Mission to Moscow as
Mr. Krestinsky
1943
Edge of Darkness as
Lars Malken
1943
The Hard Way as
Sam Chernen (uncredited)
1942
Grand Central Murder as
Ramon
1942
The Affairs of Jimmy Valentine as
Tom Forbes / Jimmy Valentine
1942
Young America as
Mr. Barnes
1942
The Bugle Sounds as
Leech
1941
Appointment for Love as
Dr. Gunther
1941
The Tell-Tale Heart (Short) as
Old Man
1941
They Dare Not Love as
Baron Shafter
1941
Ghost Treasure (Short) as
Pete Wilkins (uncredited)
1941
So Ends Our Night as
Herr Kern
1939
Of Mice and Men as
Candy
1937
52nd Street as
James
1937
Vogues of 1938 as
Morgan's Lawyer (uncredited)
Archive Footage
1956
MGM Parade (TV Series documentary) as
Pete Wilkins in 'Ghost Treasure'
- Episode #1.19 (1956) - Pete Wilkins in 'Ghost Treasure'

References

Roman Bohnen Wikipedia