Sterling Hayden Interviewed By Tom Synder — Photos and Videos

Posted on July 13, 2013. Filed under: American History, Blogroll, Communications, Culture, Entertainment, European History, history, Law, liberty, Life, Links, media, Movies, People, Philosophy, Politics, Raves, Security, Talk Radio, Video, War, Wisdom | Tags: , , , , , , , , |

sterlinghayden

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Tom Russell : Sterling Hayden

This song comes from Tom Russell’s 2011 release, ‘Mesabi’, available through Tom’s website – http://www.tomrussell.com – and the usual record outlets. Sterling Hayden (March 26, 1916 — May 23, 1986) was an American actor and author. For most of his career as a leading man, he specialized in westerns and film noir, such as Johnny Guitar, The Asphalt Jungle and The Killing. Later on he became noted as a character actor for such roles as Gen. Jack D. Ripper in Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964). He also played the Irish policeman, Captain McCluskey, in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather in 1972, and the novelist Roger Wade in 1973’s The Long Goodbye. The quote at the beginning of the video comes from Hayden’s autobiography, “Wanderer” (1963).

Dr. Strangelove – Precious Bodily Fluids

Dr. Strangelove (4/8) Movie CLIP – Water and Commies (1964) HD

The Godfather (3/9) Movie CLIP – Killing Sollozzo and McCluskey (1972) HD

Sterling Hayden- The Golden Hawk (1952) 1

The Asphalt Jungle-Doublecross scene

Sterling Hayden in Johnny Guitar (1954) – Coffee & Smoke Scene

“The Killing” Chess Club Scene (Stanley Kubrick, 1956)

Martin Scorsese introduces Johnny Guitar (USA, 1954) dir. Nicholas Ray

Johnny Guitar

Taste of Strangelove Number 2

“The Killing” Chess Club Scene (Stanley Kubrick, 1956)

Dr. Strangelove (4/8) Movie CLIP – Water and Commies (1964) HD

The Godfather (3/9) Movie CLIP – Killing Sollozzo and McCluskey (1972) HD

Sterling Hayden interview Part 1 of six on the Tomorrow Show

Sterling Hayden interview Part 2 of six on the Tomorrow Show

Sterling Hayden interview Part 3 of six on the Tomorrow Show

Sterling Hayden interview Part 4 of six on the Tomorrow Show

Sterling Hayden interview Part 5 of six on the Tomorrow Show

Sterling Hayden interview Part 6 of six on the Tomorrow Show

Sterling Hayden, 2nd interview of three, Part 1 of four on  Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder  5-29-1980

Sterling Hayden, 2nd interview of three, Part 2 of four on Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder  5 29 1980

Sterling Hayden, 2nd interview of three, Part 3 of four on Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder  5 29 1980

Sterling Hayden, 2nd interview of three, Part 4 of four on Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder

Sterling Hayden, 3rd interview of 3 Part 1 of three on  Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder

Sterling Hayden, 3rd interview of 3 Part 2 of three on  Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder

Sterling Hayden, 3rd interview of 3 (part 3 of 3) Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder 

Cinéma Cinémas – Sterling Hayden (suite & fin) 

Kansas Pacific (1953) STERLING HAYDEN

1954 – Suddenly – FRANK SINATRA & STERLING HAYDEN | Lewis Allen

Suddenly 1954 – Frank Sinatra/Sterling Hayden/James Gleason/Nancy Gates

Sterling Hayden – Top Gun (1955) Full Western 

Valerie 1957 Sterling Hayden Anita Ekberg Legendado

Sterling Hayden – Kansas Pacific – Full Movie – 1953

Sterling Hayden

Sterling Hayden (born Sterling Relyea Walter; March 26, 1916 – May 23, 1986) was an American actor and author. For most of his career as a leading man, he specialized in westerns and film noir, such as Johnny Guitar, The Asphalt Jungle and The Killing. Later on he became noted as a character actor for such roles as Gen. Jack D. Ripper in Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964). He also played the Irish-American policeman, Captain McCluskey, in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather in 1972, and the novelist Roger Wade in 1973’s The Long Goodbye. He played the role of Leo Dalcò in Bernardo Bertolucci’s 1900 in 1976. At six feet five inches (196 cm),[1] he was taller than most actors.

Biography

Early life, education

He was born in Montclair, New Jersey, to George and Frances Walter, who named him Sterling Relyea Walter.[2][3] After his father died, he was adopted at the age of nine by James Hayden and renamed Sterling Walter Hayden. He grew up in coastal towns of New England,[4] and as a child lived in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Washington, D.C., and Maine, where he attended Wassookeag School in Dexter, Maine.

Hayden was a genuine adventurer and man of action, not dissimilar from many of his movie parts. He dropped out of high school at the age of 16 and took a job as mate on a schooner.[5] His first voyage was to Newport Beach, California from New London, Connecticut.[4] Later, he was a fisherman on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland, ran a charter yacht, and served as a fireman on eleven trips to Cuba aboard a steamer.[4] He skippered a trading schooner in the Caribbean after earning his master’s license, and in 1937 he served as mate on a world cruise of the schooner Yankee.[4] After serving as sailor and fireman on larger vessels and sailing around the world several times, he was awarded his first command aged 22, skippering the square rigger Florence C. Robinson 7,700 miles from Gloucester, Massachusetts, to Tahiti in 1938.[4][6][7]

Hollywood years and military service

Hayden became a print model and later signed a contract with Paramount Pictures, who dubbed the 6′ 5″ (1.96 m)[1] actor “The Most Beautiful Man in the Movies” and “The Beautiful Blond Viking God”. His first film, Virginia (1941), starred Madeleine Carroll, with whom he fell in love and married.

After two film roles, he left Hollywood and joined the Marines as a private, under the name “John Hamilton” (a pseudonym Hayden only used in the military). While at Parris Island he was recommended for Officer Candidate School. After graduation, he was commissioned a second lieutenant and was transferred to service as an undercover agent with William J. Donovan’s COI office. He remained there after it became the OSS.[8][9][10]

As OSS agent John Hamilton, his World War II service included sailing with supplies from Italy to Yugoslav partisans and parachuting into fascist Croatia. Hayden, who also participated in the Naples-Foggia campaign and established air crew rescue teams in enemy-occupied territory, became a first lieutenant on September 13, 1944, and a captain on February 14, 1945. He received the Silver Star (for gallantry in action in the Balkans and Mediterranean; “Lt. Hamilton displayed great courage in making hazardous sea voyages in enemy-infested waters and reconnaissance through enemy-held areas”), a Bronze Arrowhead device for parachuting behind enemy lines, and a commendation from Yugoslavia’s Marshal Tito. He left active duty on December 24, 1945.[10]

His great admiration for the bravery of the Communist partisans led to a brief membership in the Communist Party. He was apparently active in supporting an effort by the Communist-controlled motion picture painters’ union to absorb other film industry unions.[11] As the Red Scare deepened in U.S., he cooperated with the House Un-American Activities Committee, confessing his brief Communist ties and “naming names.”[2] His wife at that time, Betty de Noon, insisted that the ‘names’ her ex-husband provided were already in the hands of the Committee, which had a copy of the Communist Party’s membership list. In any event, Hayden subsequently repudiated his cooperation with the Committee, stating in his autobiography “I don’t think you have the foggiest notion of the contempt I have had for myself since the day I did that thing.”[2]

Personal life

Sterling Hayden often professed distaste for film acting, claiming he did it mainly to pay for his ships and voyages. In 1958, after a bitter divorce, he was awarded custody of his children. He defied a court order and sailed to Tahiti with all four children, Christian, Dana, Gretchen and Matthew.[12] The crew sailed from San Francisco Bay to Tahiti, where Hayden had planned to film a movie. Hayden also invited well known photographer Dody Weston Thompson along to document the trip and to help shoot location choices. Her South Seas folio is replete with fascinating photographs of the Hayden’s ship The Wanderer, on-deck photos of life aboard the ship, colorful prints of his children, Tahitian women and children, and of unique artifacts on shore. The film did not materialize, however, and according to Dody’s notes U.S. Camera printed these photographs of paradise in 1961.

Marin County Superior Court Judge Harold Haley would later order Hayden to repay Republic Pictures, who financed the trip with two promissory notes, nearly $50,000 for defaulting on an agreement to repay the debt.[13] In 1960, he married Catherine Devine McConnell. They had two sons, Andrew and David, and were married until his death in 1986. McConnell also had a son from her first marriage, to journalist Scott McConnell.

In the early 1960s, Hayden rented one of the pilot houses of the retired ferryboat Berkeley, docked in Sausalito, California where he resided while writing his autobiography Wanderer, which was first published in 1963. In it, he reminisces about turning points in his life:

“The sun beats down and you pace, you pace and you pace. Your mind flies free and you see yourself as an actor, condemned to a treadmill wherein men and women conspire to breathe life into a screenplay that allegedly depicts life as it was in the old wild West. You see yourself coming awake any one of a thousand mornings between the spring of 1954, and that of 1958 ‑ alone in a double bed in a big white house deep in suburban Sherman Oaks, not far from Hollywood.
“The windows are open wide, and beyond these is the backyard swimming pool inert and green, within a picket fence. You turn and gaze at a pair of desks not far from the double bed. This is your private office, the place that shelters your fondest hopes: these desks so neat, patiently waiting for the day that never comes, the day you’ll sit down at last and begin to write.
“Why did you never write? Why, instead, did you grovel along, through the endless months and years, as a motion‑picture actor? What held you to it, to something you so vehemently professed to despise? Could it be that you secretly liked it—that the big dough and the big house and the high life meant more than the aura you spun for those around you to see?
“‘Hayden’s wild,’ they said. ‘He’s kind of nuts‑but you’ve got to hand it to him. He doesn’t give a damn about the loot or the stardom or things like that—something to do with his seafaring, or maybe what he went through in the war . . .'”[2]:151

In the 1970s, after his appearance in The Godfather, he appeared several times on NBC’s Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder, where he talked about his career resurgence and how it had funded his travels and adventures around the world. Hayden bought a canal barge in the Netherlands in 1969, eventually moving it to the heart of Paris and living on it part of the time. He also shared a home in Wilton, Connecticut with his family and had an apartment in Sausalito.

Hayden wrote two acclaimed books: an autobiography, Wanderer (1962), and a novel Voyage (1976).

Sterling Hayden died of prostate cancer in Sausalito in 1986, age 70.[5]

Bibliography

Filmography

References in Popular Culture

In the film Three Days of the Condor (Sydney Pollack, 1975), two veteran CIA officers were reminiscing about their past. Higgins (Cliff Robertson) asked Mr. Wabash, “You served with Col. Donovan in the OSS, didn’t you, sir?” Wabash (John Houseman) replies, “I sailed the Adriatic with a movie star at the helm. It doesn’t seem like much of a war now, but it was.”

In 2011 the American singer-songwriter Tom Russell released the song “Sterling Hayden” on his album Mesabi.

Hayden, under his nom de guerre Lieutenant John Hamilton, and his role as an OSS agent play a secondary part in the 2012 novel Deaths Door: A Billy Boyle World War II mystery by author James R. Benn. Hayden/Hamilton assists in getting protagonist Billy Boyle through German-occupied Italy.[14]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Hayden 1977, p. 224
  2. ^ a b c d Hayden 1998, pp. 65–66, 76, 354
  3. ^ United States Census for 1920, Montclair Town, Essex County, New Jersey, p. Sheet 6B
  4. ^ a b c d e “Sterling Hayden Gives Up Sailing, Settles For Movie Career, Family”. Toledo Blade (Google News). January 14, 1951. Retrieved October 8, 2009. [dead link]
  5. ^ a b Krebs, Albin (May 24, 1986). “Sterling Hayden Dead at 70; an Actor, Writer and Sailor”. The New York Times (The New York Times Company). Retrieved October 8, 2009.
  6. ^ Hayden 1977, pp. 225–227
  7. ^ “New in the News”, Boy’s Life, Feb 1939, p. 25
  8. ^ “Chef Julia Child, others, part of WWII spy network”. CNN.com. Associated Press. August 14, 2008. Archived from the original on August 22, 2008.
  9. ^ Schlesinger, Robert (August 20, 2008). “Arthur Schlesinger Jr.’s Not-So-Secret Career as a Spy”. US News and World Report. Retrieved October 8, 2009.
  10. ^ a b Schuon, Karl (1963). U. S. Marine Corps Biographical Dictionary. New York: Watts. pp. 99–100. OCLC 1360534.
  11. ^ Meroney, John, “Left in the Past”, LA Times Magazine, February 2012.
  12. ^ “HOLLYWOOD: To Break Out”. TIME (New York: Time Inc.). February 9, 1959. Retrieved July 6, 2010.
  13. ^ “Film Actor Handed $49,518 Judgment”. Reading Eagle (Reading, Pennsylvania). Associated Press. August 6, 1961. p. 12. Retrieved July 6, 2010.
  14. ^ Benn, James R. (2012). New York, New York: Soho Press. ISBN 978-1-61695-185-6. Missing or empty |title= (help)

References

  • Hayden, Sterling (1977). Wanderer. New York: Norton. ISBN 0-393-07521-4. Unknown parameter |refs= ignored (help)
  • Hayden, Sterling (1998). Wanderer. Dobbs Ferry: Sheridan House. ISBN 978-1-57409-048-2. Unknown parameter |refs= ignored (help)

External links

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Ayn Rand–Videos

Posted on January 19, 2010. Filed under: Blogroll, Communications, Culture, Demographics, Economics, Education, Employment, Energy, government spending, Health Care, Immigration, Investments, Language, Law, liberty, Life, Links, media, People, Philosophy, Politics, Quotations, Raves, Regulations, Religion, Resources, Taxes, Video, Wisdom | Tags: , , , , |

 

Achievement of your happiness is the only moral purpose of your life, and that happiness, not pain or mindless self-indulgence, is the proof of your moral integrity, since it is the proof and the result of your loyalty to the achievement of your values.

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The truth is not for all men, but only for those who seek it.

 

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By Richard Baehr

“…For Rand, more even than Levin, was a purist, and brooked no moderation around the edges of  the philosophy she developed, which came to be known as objectivism. Rand challenged critics and dissenters to prove her ideas wrong, and thrilled by the challenge of taking on all comers in debates on her ideas.  Her life was one of intellectual battles, including a fight to be acknowledged for her achievements in developing her new philosophy. Many of the leaders on the right who were her contemporaries, such as William F. Buckley, had no use for her. Buckley, who  worked to link his Christian beliefs to the conservative movement,  hated Rand’s unadulterated atheism. Literary snobs thought her novels were badly written. Academics never took her seriously. 

But many readers did.
Burns, who is not an objectivist, spent 8 years researching the development of Rand’s thinking and principles, and she has produced a terrific book — a serious consideration of Rand’s ideas, and her role in the conservative movement of the past three quarters of a century, that is empty of academic jargon and accessible to those unfamiliar with Rand’s life or ideas.
The book is an intellectual biography, rather than a month by month catalogue of what happened in Rand’s life.  Burns does not focus on Rand’s romantic relationships with Nathaniel Branden, as have many other books or movies about her life. Burns describes the battles Rand fought with herself and others, while writing  her two key novels, “The Fountainhead” and “Atlas Shrugged”, very lengthy novels that took 5 and 12 years, respectively to complete. Burns describes these books as the “gateway drug to life on the right” for young conservatives  for decades. This is not meant as an attack, but to describe the power of Rand’s ideas and the hold she maintained over her followers (at least those who stayed with her). 
Burns is honest about contradictions that plagued Rand. For example, she was a vigorous proponent of reason and individualism, but among her followers, criticism was not a route to the inner circle, and was viewed as disloyalty, which could lead to a lifetime freeze-out in relations.  The meetings of the “Collective” (Nathaniel Branden and his wife Barbara, Alan Greenspan, and select others) on Saturday nights at her New York apartment took on cult-like qualities (a religion of sorts?). …”

Cloward-Piven-Rand?

“…Cloward and Piven, meet Ayn Rand.

I have no idea whether Richard Cloward or Frances Piven has read Atlas Shrugged. But if they didn’t, they should, because though no one could differ more than Cloward-Piven and Rand on ends, they are astonishingly in total agreement on means. Recall the basic plot of Atlas Shrugged: John Galt, a disgruntled inventor whose work is appropriated for “the common good,” decides to “stop the motor of the world” by convincing the world’s innovators, inventors, and producers to stop innovating, inventing, and producing. Galt’s theory is that, deprived of these people’s intellect and industry, the state would be forced to supply the wealth that Galt and his ilk do not. As the state has no means to do this, the system would break down, force government to “get out of the way,” and herald the advent of pure capitalism.
Of course, Atlas Shrugged holds a place of honor on most conservatives’ must-read lists. So let’s be honest: A lot of us would like to bring down the current system, too. So if we do in fact share, at least temporarily, Cloward-Piven’s intermediate goal, should we not at least consider working with, rather than against, them? Why not a Cloward-Piven-Rand Strategy whereby, simultaneously, we convince the innovators, inventors, and producers to stop innovating, inventing, and producing — and they convince every eligible American to apply for every available social program and lobby for government at all levels to create even more? Would our combined efforts not bring down the current system — a goal we both share — even faster?
Ultimately, the Cloward-Piven crowd’s path and ours would necessarily diverge, to put it mildly. But for the present, while we share a common goal, why not work together, just as America and the Soviet Union fought together in World War II? Later, when the war is the war won, when the common enemy — the current system — is defeated, we can go back to fighting each other.
And then may the better system prevail.”

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Biographical Information about Ayn Rand

http://www.noblesoul.com/orc/bio/index.html

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Chronology and Bibliography of Ayn Rand’s Works

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