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Gwyllyn Samuel Newton Ford (May 1, 1916 – August 30, 2006), known as Glenn Ford, was a Canadian-born American actor. He was most prominent during Hollywood's Golden Age as one of the biggest box-office draws of the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, and had a career that lasted more than 50 years.

Ford often portrayed ordinary men in unusual circumstances. Although he starred in many genres of film, some of his most significant roles were in the Gilda (1946) and The Big Heat (1953), and the high-school drama Blackboard Jungle (1955). For comedies and Westerns, though, he received acting laurels, including three Golden Globe Award nominations for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, winning for Pocketful of Miracles (1961). He also played a supporting role as 's mild-mannered alter ego Clark Kent's adoptive farmer father, Jonathan Kent, in the first film of the franchise series Superman (1978).

Five of his films have been selected for the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant: Gilda (1946), The Big Heat (1953), Blackboard Jungle (1955), (1957), and Superman (1978).


Early life
Gwyllyn Samuel Newton Ford was born on May 1, 1916, in Sainte-Christine-d'Auvergne, Quebec, Kulzer, Dina-Marie. "Glenn Ford: An Interview (1990)." Dina-Marie Kulzer's Classic Hollywood Biographies. Retrieved: September 19, 2013. "Photos from the Glenn Ford Library." Ford family. Retrieved: October 30, 2008. the son of Hannah Wood ( née Mitchell) and Newton Ford, an engineer with the Canadian Pacific Railway."Marriage Certificate of Newton Ford and Hannah Wood Mitchell." Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621–1967 (Portneuf Church of England), 1914.
(2025). 9780299281533, University of Wisconsin Press. .
Through his father, Ford was a great-nephew of 's first Prime Minister, Sir John A. Macdonald,Severo, Richard. This not a fact, the Ford family was not related to Sir John A. Macdonald. "Glenn Ford, Leading Man in Films and TV, Dies at 90." The New York Times, August 31, 2006. Retrieved: May 3, 2010. and was also related to America's eighth President Martin Van Buren (1782–1862, served 1837–1841). In 1922, when Ford was age six, the family emigrated southwest across the border into the United States, first to Venice, California, and then to Santa Monica, west of ; his father became a motorman on a for the Venice Electric Tram Company, a job he held until he died at age 50 in 1940, when his son Glenn was 24.

While attending Santa Monica High School, Glen was active in school drama productions with other future actors, such as . After graduation around 1934, he began working in small theatre groups. While in high school, he took odd jobs, including working for future famous comedian and entertainer , who taught him horsemanship. Ford later commented that his father had no objection to his growing interest in acting, but told him, "It's all right for you to try to act, if you learn something else first. Be able to take a car apart and put it together. Be able to build a house, every bit of it. Then you'll always have something." Ford heeded the paternal advice and decades later during the 1950s, when he was one of Hollywood's most popular actors, he regularly worked on plumbing, wiring, and air conditioning at his home.

At age 23, Ford gave up his status as a subject of the King (Canadian citizenship) and became a naturalized citizen of the United States on November 10, 1939, taking the oath of allegiance.

(2025). 9780299281533, University of Wisconsin Press. .


Early career

Columbia Pictures
Ford acted in West Coast stage companies and had a role in the short Night in Manhattan (1937) before joining Columbia Pictures in 1939. His stage name came from his father's hometown of Glenford, Alberta.

His first major movie part was in Heaven with a Barbed Wire Fence (1939) at 20th Century Fox studios, written by . Ford's first movie for Columbia was a "B", My Son Is Guilty (1939). He went on to other "B" movies, such as (1940), Men Without Souls (1940), Babies for Sale (1940), and Blondie Plays Cupid (1941).

Ford was in the bigger-budgeted The Lady in Question (1940), which co-starred . This was a well-received courtroom drama in which Ford plays a young man who falls in love with Rita Hayworth when his father, , tries to rehabilitate her in their bicycle shop. Directed by Hungarian emigre , the two rising young stars instantly bonded.


So Ends Our Night
Top Hollywood director John Cromwell was impressed enough with his work to borrow him from Columbia for the independently produced drama, So Ends Our Night (1941), where Ford delivered a poignant portrayal of a 19-year-old exile on the run in Nazi-occupied Europe.

Working with Academy Award-winning and wooing (onscreen) 30-year-old Margaret Sullivan, (who had been nominated for an for 1938's Three Comrades), Ford's portrayal of a shy, ardent young refugee riveted attention even in such stellar company. "Glenn Ford, a most promising newcomer," wrote The New York Timess in a review on February 28, 1941, "draws more substance and appealing simplicity from his role of the boy than anyone else in the cast."

After the film's highly publicized premiere in and a gala fundraiser in , President Franklin D. Roosevelt saw the film in a private screening at the , and admired the film greatly. Young Ford was invited to Roosevelt's annual Birthday Ball. Inspired and enthused by the President, he returned to Los Angeles and promptly registered as a Democrat and a fervent FDR supporter. "I was so impressed when I met Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt," recalled Glenn Ford to his son decades later, "I was thrilled when I got back to Los Angeles and found a beautiful photograph personally autographed to me. It always held a place of high honor in my home." Glenn Ford – A Life (Wis. 2011) by Peter Ford, p. 35.

After 35 interviews and glowing reviews for him personally, Glenn Ford soon had young female fans begging for his autograph, too. However, the young man was disappointed when Columbia Pictures did nothing with this prestige and new visibility and instead kept plugging him into conventional films for the rest of his seven-year contract. His next picture, Texas, was his first Western, a genre with which he would be associated for the rest of his life. Set after the American Civil War, it paired him with another young male star also under contract, , who became a lifelong friend. More routine films followed, none of them memorable, but lucrative enough to allow Ford to buy his mother and himself a beautiful new home in the Pacific Palisades community..

So Ends Our Night also affected the young star in another way; in the summer of 1941, while the United States was still neutral in the Second World War, he enlisted in the United States Coast Guard Auxiliary, though he had a class 3 deferment (for being his mother's sole support). He began his training in September 1941, driving three nights a week to his waterfront unit in San Pedro and spending most weekends there.

He continued to appear in movies for Columbia such as Go West, Young Lady (1941) and The Adventures of Martin Eden (1942).


World War II and Eleanor Powell
Ten months after Ford's portrait of a young anti-Nazi exile, the United States entered World War II with the Imperial Japanese surprise attack on the naval and air bases in . After playing a young pilot in his 11th Columbia film, Flight Lieutenant (1942), Ford went on a cross-country, 12-city tour to sell war bonds for Army and Navy Relief. In the midst of the many stars also donating their time – from to to Claudette Colbert – he met popular dancing star . The two soon fell in love; they attended the official opening of the Hollywood canteen together in October.

Ford made (1942), another Western. Then, while making another war drama, Destroyer with ardent antifascist Edward G. Robinson, Ford impulsively volunteered for the United States Marine Corps Reserve on December 13, 1942. The startled studio had to beg the Marines to give their second male lead four more weeks to complete shooting on their picture.Peter Ford, p. 49 In the meantime, Ford proposed to Eleanor Powell, who subsequently announced her retirement from the screen to be near her fiancé as he started Marine Corps boot camp.

Ford recalled later to his son that his friend William Holden, who had joined the U.S. Army Air Corps, and Ford had "talked about it and we were both convinced that our careers, which were just getting established, would likely be forgotten by the time we got back ... if we got back."Peter Ford, p. 50

He was assigned in March 1943 to active duty at the Marine Corps Base in . With his Coast Guard service, he was offered a position as a Marine Corps officer, but Ford declined, feeling it would be interpreted as preferential treatment for a movie star, and instead entered the Marines as a private. He trained at the Marine base in San Diego, where , the number-one male movie star at the time, was also based. Power suggested Ford join him in the Marines' weekly radio show Halls of Montezuma, broadcast Sunday evenings from San Diego. Ford excelled in training, winning the Rifle Marksman Badge, being named "Honor Man" of the platoon, and being promoted to sergeant by the time he finished.

Awaiting assignment at Marine Corps base, Ford volunteered to play a Marine raider – uncredited – in the film Guadalcanal Diary, made by Fox, with Ford and others charging up the beaches of Southern California. He later showed this to his little boy Peter, along with his many other black-and-white battle scenes in other films. Frustratingly for Ford, filming battle scenes was the closest he would ever get to any enemy action. After being sent to Marine Corps Schools Detachment (Photographic Section) in Quantico, Virginia, three months later, Ford returned to the San Diego base in February 1944 and was assigned to the radio section of the Public Relations Office, Headquarters Company, Base Headquarters Battalion, where he resumed work on the Halls of Montezuma film.

Just as Eleanor, now his wife, was expecting the birth of their child and Ford himself was looking forward to Officers Training School, he was hospitalized at the U.S. Naval Hospital in San Diego with what turned out to be ,Ford 2011, pp. 53–54. which afflicted him for the rest of his life. He was in and out of the hospital for the next five months and finally received a medical discharge on the third anniversary of Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1944. Though without the combat duty for which he had been hoping, Ford was awarded several service medals for his three years in the Marines Reserve Corps: the American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal, and the World War II Victory Medal, created in 1945 for anyone who had been on active duty since December 1941. After the war, Ford continued his military career in the U.S. Naval Reserve well into the era, achieving the rank of captain.


Gilda
The most memorable role of Ford's early career came with his first postwar film in 1946, starring alongside in Gilda. This was Glenn Ford's second pairing with Hayworth; like the first, it was directed by Charles Vidor.

The New York Times movie reviewer Bosley Crowther did not much like, or as he freely admitted, even understand the movie, but he noted that Ford had "just returned from war duty" and did show "a certain stamina and poise in the role of a tough young gambler."

Reviewing the film in 1946, Crowther did not yet have the phrase with which Gilda would soon be associated, a term that French critics had not even invented in 1946: . The erotic sadism and covert homoeroticism were actively encouraged on set by director Vidor, a sophisticated Budapest-born expatriate, though Glenn Ford always denied any awareness of the latter in his character's fervent loyalty to his boss, who had unwittingly married the love of Johnny's life.

The film was entered in the Cannes Film Festival in , then in its first year. Ford went on to be a leading man opposite Hayworth in a total of five films. and after their location romance (his marriage survived, hers did not), the two became lifelong friends and next-door neighbors, and lovers. Beautifully shot in black-and-white by cinematographer Rudolph Mate, Gilda has endured as a classic of film noir. It has a 96% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, and, in 2013, was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Library of Congress announces 2013 National Film Registry selections Washington Post. December 18, 2013. Retrieved March 10, 2020.


Leading star
Now established as a star of "A" movies, Ford was borrowed by Warner Bros. studios to play ' leading man in A Stolen Life (1946). Back at Columbia, he was in (1946), a biopic of John Joseph Montgomery; then, he did a thriller, Framed (1947), and a comedy, The Mating of Millie (1948). Hayworth and he were reunited with Vidor in the expensive color filming of the drama, The Loves of Carmen (1948).

Ford appeared in a comedy, The Return of October (1948) and a popular Western The Man from Colorado (1948). The latter co-starred William Holden. Both Ford and his friend William Holden flourished throughout the 1950s and 1960s, but Ford was frustrated that he was not given the opportunity to work with directors of the caliber that Holden did in his Oscar-winning career, such as and . He missed out on From Here to Eternity – as did Rita Hayworth – when production was stalled by Columbia studio head . He also made the mistake, which he bitterly regretted later, of turning down the lead in the brilliant comedy Born Yesterday (also planned with Rita Hayworth), which Holden then snatched up.

Columbia kept Ford constantly busy: The Undercover Man (1949), a film noir; Lust for Gold (1949), a Western with ; and Mr. Soft Touch (1949), with - another crime mystery film noir. borrowed him for The Doctor and the Girl (1950), and he went over to Studios for The White Tower (1950). Back at Columbia, Ford did Convicted (1950) with Broderick Crawford and The Flying Missile, a -era movie.


Freelance star
Ford went to Paramount for The Redhead and the Cowboy (1951) and Fox for Follow the Sun (1951), where he played , and the Western The Secret of Convict Lake (1951). At United Artists, he starred in The Green Glove (1952), then MGM called him back for Young Man with Ideas (1952).

Ford was reunited with Rita Hayworth a third time in Affair in Trinidad (1952). He went to Britain to star in MGM's Time Bomb (1953), then to Universal for the Western The Man from the Alamo (1953).

Ford made Plunder of the Sun (1953) with John Farrow, then was cast in the lead of The Big Heat (1953), 's classic crime melodrama with , at Columbia. After Appointment in Honduras (1953) at RKO, Ford reunited with Lang and Grahame in (1954). Ford did two Westerns, The Americano (1955) at RKO and The Violent Men (1955) at Columbia.


MGM

Blackboard Jungle
Ford's career went up another notch when cast in the lead of Blackboard Jungle (1955), a landmark film of teen angst at MGM. Unlike the comparatively white-bread Rebel Without a Cause and The Wild One, Blackboard Jungle tackled racial conflicts head-on. Ford played an idealistic, harassed teacher at an urban high school that included a very young and other black and Hispanic cast members. played a dangerous juvenile delinquent. Bill Haley's "Rock Around the Clock" under the opening credits was the first use of a rock 'n' roll song in a Hollywood film. Richard Brooks, the film's writer and director, had discovered the music when he heard Ford's son Peter playing the record at Glenn Ford's home.

The movie was a huge hit and MGM signed Ford to a long-term contract. They put him in Interrupted Melody (1955), a biopic of Marjorie Lawrence with , and another big success; so, too, were the dramas Trial (1956) and Ransom! (1956). Ford returned to Columbia for the Western Jubal (1956), then back at MGM made another Western, the hugely popular The Fastest Gun Alive (1956).


Comedy
Ford's versatility allowed him to star in a number of popular comedies, often as a beleaguered, well-meaning but nonplussed facing difficult circumstances. In The Teahouse of the August Moon (1956), he played an American soldier who is sent to Okinawa to convert the occupied island's natives to the American way of life, but is instead converted by them.

All of Ford's starring vehicles in this era became hits: the Columbia Western (1957), the MGM military comedy Don't Go Near the Water (1957), and Cowboy (1958) with Jack Lemmon at Columbia.

Ford first worked with director George Marshall in (1958), a popular MGM Western. They reteamed for the service comedy Imitation General (1958) and the war film (1958). Marshall and he made two comedies with Debbie Reynolds: It Started with a Kiss (1959) and (1959). At the end of the 1950s, Ford was among the greatest stars in Hollywood.


1960s
Ford's first financial flop since he had reached star status was the epic Western Cimarron (1960). He appeared in some comedies, including Cry for Happy (1961) with Marshall and Pocketful of Miracles (1961) with Frank Capra, but neither was as well-received as were his comedies from the previous decade. Ford was cast in the lead of The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1961), a notorious box-office fiasco.

Ford's box-office standing recovered with the thriller Experiment in Terror (1962) and the comedy The Courtship of Eddie's Father (1963). Less popular were the comedies Love Is a Ball (1963) and Advance to the Rear (1964), the latter directed by Marshall. He was in the drama Fate Is the Hunter (1964) and the romantic comedy (1964).

Ford made two films with Burt Kennedy, The Rounders (1965) and The Money Trap (1965). He was one of many famous faces in Is Paris Burning? (1966) and went to Mexico for Rage (1966).

Ford was in some Westerns: A Time for Killing (1967), The Last Challenge (1967), Day of the Evil Gun (1968), Smith! (1968), and Heaven with a Gun (1969).


Later career
In 1976, Ford played Rear Admiral Raymond Spruance in the epic Midway alongside Henry Fonda, who portrayed Admiral Chester Nimitz, and Charlton Heston, who played the fictional captain Matt Garth. In 1978, Ford had a supporting role in Superman as 's adoptive father Jonathan Kent.


Later military service
Following his abbreviated World War II-era service, Ford returned to the military in 1958. He received a direct commission as a lieutenant commander in the United States Naval Reserve (a nominally junior yet relatively high rank that took Ford's Hollywood imprimatur into consideration, given his conspicuous lack of an undergraduate degree amid the contemporaneous -era emphasis on education in the officer ranks of United States Armed Forces) and was initially assigned as a public affairs officer (the same role held by his character in the successful comedy Don't Go Near the Water). During his annual training tours, he promoted the Navy through radio and television broadcasts, personal appearances, and documentary films.

Ford continued to combine his film career with his military service, and was promoted to commander in 1963. He was again promoted to captain in 1968 after visiting in 1967 for a month's tour of duty as a location scout for combat scenes in a training film entitled Global Marine. In support of President 's escalation of the , he traveled with a combat camera crew from the Vietnamese Demilitarized Zone south to the . For his service in Vietnam, the Navy awarded him a Navy Commendation Medal. He retired from the Naval Reserve in the 1970s at the rank of captain.Wise and Rehill 1997, pp. 259–264. Additionally, he was awarded the Armed Forces Reserve Medal, which recognizes those who complete 10 years of honorable reserve service, in 1968.


Television
In 1971, Ford signed with to star in his first television series, a half-hour comedy/drama titled The Glenn Ford Show. However, CBS head suggested a Western series, instead, which resulted in the series Cade's County. Ford played southwestern Sheriff Cade for one season (1971–1972) in a mix of police mystery and Western drama.

In The Family Holvak (1975–1976), Ford portrayed a -era preacher in a family drama, reprising the same character he had played in the TV film The Greatest Gift. In 1978, Ford was host, presenter, and narrator of the disaster documentary series When Havoc Struck for the Mobil Showcase Network. In 1981, Ford costarred with Melissa Sue Anderson in the slasher film Happy Birthday to Me.

In 1991, Ford agreed to star in the cable network series . However, prior to the start of the series, he developed blood clots in his legs that required a lengthy stay at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. Eventually he recovered, but at one time, his situation was so severe that he was listed in critical condition. Ford was forced to withdraw from the series and was replaced by .


Radio
In 1950, Ford played the title role in The Adventures of Christopher London, created by Erle Stanley Gardner and directed by William N. Robson. London was a private investigator in the weekly adventure series, which ran on Sundays at 7:00 pm on the NBC radio network from January 22 to April 30, 1950.
(1998). 9780195076783, Oxford University Press. .


Personal life
Ford's first wife was actress and dancer (1943–1959), with whom he had his only child, actor Peter Ford (b. 1945). The couple appeared together on screen once in a short film produced in the 1950s titled Have Faith in Our Children. When they married, Powell was more famous than Ford. They divorced in 1959.

Ford did not remain on good terms with his ex-wives. He was a notorious womanizer, who had affairs with many of his leading ladies, including Rita Hayworth, , Geraldine Brooks, , , , , and . He had a one-night stand with in 1962 and a fling with in the early 1940s.

Ford dated Christiane Schmidtmer, , and during the mid-1960s, and he also had relationships with , , Suzanne Pleshette, , , Susie Lund, Terry Moore, , , Jill St. John, , and . He subsequently married actress (1966–1969), though, and marriages to Cynthia Hayward (1977–1984) and Jeanne Baus (1993–1994) would later follow; all four marriages ended in divorce. He also had a long-term relationship with actress in the early 1960s. According to his son Peter Ford's book Glenn Ford: A Life (2011), Ford had affairs with 146 actresses, all of which were documented in his personal diaries, including a 40-year, intermittent affair with Rita Hayworth that began during the filming of Gilda in 1945. Their affair resumed during the making of their 1948 film The Loves of Carmen.Ford, Peter. Glenn Ford: A Life (Wisconsin Film Studies). Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 2011. p. 96. Ford had also been engaged to Debra Morris in the 1980s and Karen Johnson in the early 1990s.

In 1960, Ford moved to a home next to Hayworth's residence in Beverly Hills; they continued their relationship until the early 1980s.Ford, Peter. Glenn Ford: A Life. (Wisconsin Film Studies). Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 2011. pp. 202–203

Ford's affair with stripper and cult actress was chronicled by her in the 1991 book My First 2,000 Men. She ranked Ford as one of her top-five best lovers.

Ford also documented his many relationships by taping every phone conversation with all of his celebrity lovers and friends for 40 years. Presidents and are on these recordings, as well as Rita Hayworth, , William Holden, , , , , , , , , , , , , and . Ford installed the recording system to eavesdrop on the conversations of his first wife Eleanor Powell, fearing that she would discover his serial cheating and leave him. She divorced him in 1959 on grounds of adultery and mental cruelty.

At the height of his stardom, Glenn Ford supported the Democratic Party. He supported Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1940s, Adlai Stevenson II in 1956, and John F. Kennedy in 1960. Ford later switched his support to the Republican Party. He campaigned for his old friend and fellow actor Ronald Reagan in the 1980 and 1984 presidential elections.Ford 2011, pp. 72–73, 137.

In May 1980, Ford attempted to purchase the of the National Hockey League, with the intention of keeping the team in the city. He was prepared to match a $14 million offer made by and , but was outbid by an investment group led by , which included the Seaman brothers. The group acquired the franchise for $16 million on May 23 and eventually moved it to . "Actor Glenn Ford offers to buy Flames." The Associated Press, Friday, May 2, 1980. "Atlanta Flames are sold." The Associated Press, Saturday, May 24, 1980.

Ford lived in Beverly Hills, California, where he illegally raised 140 White Leghorn chickens until he was stopped by the Beverly Hills Police Department.Scott, Vernon. "Farming in Beverly Hills Experience for Glenn Ford." Pittsburgh Press, July 14, 1970.


Death
Ford retired from acting in 1991 at age 75 with heart and circulatory problems. He suffered a series of minor that left him in frail health in the years preceding his death. He died at his Beverly Hills home on August 30, 2006, at the age of 90.


Awards
After being nominated in 1957, 1958, and 1962, Ford won a as Best Actor for his performance in 's Pocketful of Miracles, a remake of Lady for a Day (1933) that Ford helped produce.

Ford was listed in Quigley's Annual List of Top Ten Box Office Champions in 1956, 1958, and 1959, topping the list in 1958. For 10 consecutive years from 1955 through 1964, Ford was listed among Quigley's list of the top-25 box-office stars.

In 1958, Ford won the for Top Male Comedy Performance for his role in Don't Go Near the Water.IMDB

For his contribution to the motion-picture industry, Ford has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6933 Hollywood Blvd. In 1978, he was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. In 1987, he received the at the San Sebastian International Film Festival, and in 1992, he was awarded the Légion d'honneur medal for his actions in World War II.

Ford was scheduled to make his first public appearance in 15 years at a 90th-birthday tribute gala in his honor hosted by the American Cinematheque at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood on May 1, 2006. At the last minute, he was found to be too ill to attend. Anticipating during the previous week that his health might prevent his attendance, Ford had recorded a special filmed message for the audience, which was screened after a series of in-person tributes from friends, including , , , and Debbie Reynolds.

3852 Glennford is named in honor of Ford.


U.S. military awards

Submarine Warfare insignia
Navy and Marine Corps
Commendation Medal
Combat Action RibbonAmerican Defense Service MedalAmerican Campaign Medal
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal
w/ 1
World War II Victory MedalNational Defense Service Medal
w/ 1
Vietnam Service Medal
w/ 1
Armed Forces Reserve MedalNavy Sharpshooter Rifle Ribbon
Medal of a liberated FranceUnidentifiedUnidentified


Legacy
In a 1981 interview, Ford said his favorites of his own films were The Blackboard Jungle, Gilda, Cowboy, 3:10 to Yuma, The Sheepman, and The Gazebo. "They may not have been the best pictures I did, but they're the ones I remember most fondly because of the people involved," he said. "People like George Marshall, who directed six pictures with me, and Debbie Reynolds."GLENN FORD NEARS 65 WITH A SHRUG: FIRST Associated Press. Boston Globe March 11, 1981: 1.


Filmography

Film
1937Night in ManhattanEmceeShort film
1939Heaven with a Barbed Wire FenceJoe
1939My Son Is GuiltyBarney
1940Jim Brent
1940Men Without SoulsJohnny Adams
1940Babies for SaleSteve Burton, aka Oscar Hanson
1940The Lady in QuestionPierre Morestan
1940Blondie Plays CupidCharlie
1941So Ends Our NightLudwig Kern
1941TexasTod Ramsey
1941Go West, Young LadySheriff Tex Miller
1942The Adventures of Martin EdenMartin Eden
1942Flight LieutenantDanny Doyle
1943Cheyenne Rogers
1943DestroyerMickey Donohue
1946GildaJohnny Farrell / Narrator
1946A Stolen LifeBill Emerson
1946John Joseph Montgomery
1947FramedMike Lambert
1948The Mating of MillieDoug Andrews
1948The Loves of CarmenDon José Lizarabengoa
1948The Return of OctoberProf. Bentley Bassett Jr.
1948The Man from ColoradoCol. Owen Devereaux
1949The Undercover ManFrank Warren
1949Lust for GoldJacob "Dutch" Walz
1949Mr. Soft TouchJoe Miracle
1949The Doctor and the GirlDr. Michael Corday
1950The White TowerMartin Ordway
1950ConvictedJoe Hufford
1950The Flying MissileCmdr. William A. Talbot
1951The Redhead and the CowboyGil Kyle
1951Follow the Sun
1951The Secret of Convict LakeJim Canfield
1952The Green GloveMichael "Mike" Blake
1952Young Man with IdeasMaxwell Webster
1952Affair in TrinidadSteve Emery
1953Time Bomb aka Terror on a TrainMaj. Peter Lyncort
1953The Man from the AlamoJohn Stroud
1953Plunder of the SunAl Colby
1953The Big HeatDet. Sgt. Dave Bannion
1953Appointment in HondurasSteve Corbett
1954City StoryNarratorShort film
1954Jeff Warren
1955The AmericanoSam Dent
1955The Violent MenJohn Parrish
1955Blackboard JungleRichard Dadier
1955Interrupted MelodyDr. Thomas "Tom" King
1955TrialDavid Blake
1956Ransom!David G. "Dave" Stannard
1956JubalJubal Troop
1956The Fastest Gun AliveGeorge Temple / George Kelby Jr.
1956The Teahouse of the August MoonCapt. Fisby
1957Ben Wade
1957Don't Go Near the WaterLt. J.G. Max Siegel
1958CowboyTom Reese
1958Jason Sweet
1958Imitation GeneralMSgt. Murphy Savage
1958Lt. Cmdr. Barney Doyle
1959It Started with a KissSgt. Joe Fitzpatrick
1959Elliott Nash
1960CimarronYancey "Cimarron" Cravat
1961Cry for HappyCPO Andy Cyphers
1961Pocketful of MiraclesDave "the Dude" Conway
1962Four Horsemen of the ApocalypseJulio Desnoyers
1962Experiment in TerrorJohn "Rip" Ripley
1963The Courtship of Eddie's FatherTom Corbett
1963Love Is a BallJohn Lathrop Davis
1964Advance to the RearCapt. Jared Heath
1964Fate Is the HunterSam C. McBane
1964Harry Mork
1965The RoundersBen Jones
1965The Money TrapJoe Baron
1966Is Paris Burning?Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley
1966RageDoc Reuben
1967A Time for KillingMaj. Tom Wolcott
1967The Last ChallengeMarshal Dan Blaine
1968Day of the Evil GunLorne Warfield
1969Smith!Smith
1969Heaven with a GunJim Killian / Pastor Jim
1973SanteeSantee
1976MidwayRAdm. Raymond A. Spruance
1978SupermanJonathan Kent
1979The VisitorDet. Jake Durham
1979Day of the AssassinChristakis
1980VirusPresident Richardson
1981Happy Birthday to MeDr. David Faraday
1989Casablanca ExpressMajor Gen. Williams
1990Sheriff John Danaher
1991Raw NerveCaptain Gavin


Television
1970The Brotherhood of the BellProf. Andrew PattersonTV movie
1971Cade's CountySam CadeTV series
1973JarrettSam JarrettTV movie
1974Punch and JodyPeter "Punch" TraversTV movie
1974The Disappearance of Flight 412Colonel Pete MooreTV movie
1974The Greatest GiftRev. HolvakTV movie
1975The Family HolvakRev. Tom HolvakTV series
1976Once an EagleGen. George CaldwellTV miniseries
1977The 3,000 Mile ChasePaul Dvorak / Leonard StaveckTV movie
1978Evening in ByzantiumJesse CraigTV movie
1979Tom SundayTV miniseries
1979Beggarman, ThiefDavid DonnellyTV movie
1979The GiftBilly DevlinTV movie
1986DisneylandLucas WheelerTV series, episode: "My Town"
1991Final VerdictRev. RogersTV movie, final film role


Box office ranking
For many years, the Quigley Publishing Company's Poll of Film Exhibitors ranked Ford as one of the most popular stars in the US:
  • 1955 – 12th most popular
  • 1956 – 5th most popular
  • 1957 – 16th most popular
  • 1958 – 1st most popular (also 7th most popular in the UK)
  • 1959 – 6th most popular
  • 1960 – 12th most popular
  • 1961 – 15th most popular
  • 1962 – 21st most popular
  • 1963 – 19th most popular
  • 1964 – 19th most popular


Radio appearances
    A Man to Remember
   
   "End of the Road"
    A Stolen Life
    The Mating of Millie


Bibliography
  • Ford, Peter. Glenn Ford: A Life (Wisconsin Film Studies). Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2011. .
  • Thomas, Nick. Raised by the Stars: Interviews with 29 Children of Hollywood Actors. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland, 2011. . (Includes an interview with Ford's son, Peter)
  • Wise, James E. and Anne Collier Rehill. Stars in Blue: Movie Actors in America's Sea Services. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1997.


External links

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