James Craig(1912-1985)
- Actor
- Writer
- Soundtrack
Tall, rugged James Craig's career as an MGM contract player blossomed
in the 1940s. This was due in large part to his strong physical and vocal resemblance to the studio's top leading man, Clark Gable (who was -- by the time Craig was signed to MGM -- serving in the U.S. Army Air Forces). The Rice Institute
graduate had studied to be a physician until a sojourn in the movie
capital persuaded him to try his luck as an actor. He was tutored by
thespian Cyril Delevanti in 1934 and
began in the industry as an extra. Having lived for some time in Texas,
he had the perfect drawl just tailor-made for a western hero. James Henry
Meador consequently transformed himself into James Craig when it looked
like he might be given a role in the melodrama
Craig's Wife (1936). As it turned out, he
was mainly cast in low-budget second-feature westerns for the first two years of his
Hollywood tenure. Craig's breakthrough arrived courtesy of a loan-out to RKO where
he was co-starred opposite Ginger Rogers
in Kitty Foyle (1940). He had some
critical success as farmer Jabez Stone in
The Devil and Daniel Webster (1941)
and scored high-profile parts in a couple of other A-grade features: the
caliph in Kismet (1944), and as Halverson
in
Our Vines Have Tender Grapes (1945).
However, before long, Mr. Gable returned from the war and it was back
to low budget horse operas for Craig. After working in episodic
television for several years in the 1960s, he called it quits and turned
his talents towards a lucrative career in real estate.