When John Agar
died on April 7, 2002, we lost one of the good guys. He fought crooked
sheriffs, tarantulas, Japs at Iwo, Indians at Fort Apache, brains from
planet Arous, and even King Kong. At the height of his career, he stood
alongside John Wayne, Kirk Douglas, and Robert Ryan taking direction from
John Ford and Raoul Walsh. When things started to slide, he found himself in
the backwaters of Texas battling bargain monsters for Larry Buchanan. but no
matter what the circumstance or the budget, John Agar always gave his best.
John was born to a wealthy Chicago family and was
often the date to Hollywood's most glamorous actresses of the '40s. A
date with Shirley Temple led to marriage and a contract with David O.
Selznick. John always said he was "thrown into the deep end of the pool"
when he was cast in both Fort Apache and She Wore a Yellow Ribbon
in 1948. John Ford rode him mercilessly (treatment that co-star John Wayne
could sympathize with), but young Agar gave a good account of himself. So
good, Wayne asked for him for 1949's Sands of Iwo Jima, directed by
Alan Dwan. But by John's own account, things were moving too fast. He was
enjoying the high life and when his marriage to Shirley Temple fell apart,
so did a good deal of his A-movie reputation. But John soldiered on, working
under contract to Universal in Westerns like Star in the Dust to all
those great science-fiction flicks. He also happily re-married, this time to
beautiful Loretta, and they remained together until the end of her life.
Like many contract actors, John Agar was out of
the studio system by the late '50s, but found steady work on television in
Lawman, The Virginian, and Wagon Train and dozens of
police dramas like Police Story. He even traveled to the Philippines
to appear in the odd Cavalry Command directed by Eddie Romero of
Mad Doctor of Blood Island fame. By the '60s, John was a regular member
of A. C. Lyles' stock company and played good roles in Waco,
Johnny Reno, Young Fury and Stage to Thunder Rock. It
always seemed that if John wasn't blasting monsters like The Invisible
Raiders, he was shooting it out with outlaws on a backlot street. Old
friend John Wayne contacted John for a mini-reunion in The Undefeated
(1969) and that started a pattern of John popping up in Duke's productions
like Big Jake and Chisum.
Later in his life, John went to work for the Brunswick Company, promoting
bowling for senior citizens. He enjoyed his work enormously, saying that he
was able to "meet and greet folks who'd been fans since the '40s." It was
during this time that Famous Monsters magazine published a premature
obituary for John. John laughed about that, saying he got more fan
mail than ever from people who were sorry about his passing! It was through
this gaff that John discovered he had legions of new fans and for years
attended as many conventions and fan gatherings as he could. He was never
shy about his admiration for Wayne or director Jack Arnold or his admission
that his career took a left turn when he was on the verge or stardom. There
was never a hint of bitterness, just a hearty laugh and a "I've had a really
great life." John Agar
was a nice man, and a star in the truest sense of the word. |