Ross Alexander Explained

Ross Alexander
Birth Name:Alexander Ross Smith, Jr.
Birth Date:27 July 1907
Birth Place:Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Death Place:Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Occupation:Actor
Yearsactive:1924–1937
Spouse:

    Ross Alexander (born Alexander Ross Smith, Jr.; July 27, 1907 – January 2, 1937) was an American stage and film actor.

    Early years

    Alexander was born Alexander Ross Smith. Jr. in Brooklyn, New York,[1] the son of Maud Adelle (nee Cohen) and Alexander Ross Smith.[2]

    Alexander attended Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn until he and his family moved to upstate Rochester, New York. He attended high school there, but dropped out before graduating.[3] Alexander claimed in interviews that the high-school principal recommended to his parents that the student should follow the acting profession.

    When he was 17, he went to New York City and studied acting at the Packard Theatrical Agency.[4]

    Stage

    Alexander began his acting career with the Henry Jewett Players in Boston, debuting in Enter Madame.[5] By 1926, he was regarded as a promising leading man with good looks and an easy, charming style, and began appearing in more substantial roles.

    His Broadway credits include Enter Madame (1920), The Ladder (1926), Let Us Be Gay (1928), That's Gratitude (1930), After Tomorrow (1931), The Stork Is Dead (1932), Honeymoon (1932), and The Party's Over (1932).[6] Alexander looked back at The Ladder with bemusement because its oilman backer, who had declared that the play would have a record-breaking run, kept his word by keeping the show open -- despite audiences of perhaps a dozen people at each performance. Ross Alexander stayed with the ailing show for almost two years.[7]

    Film

    Alexander was signed to a film contract by Paramount Pictures, and made his film debut in The Wiser Sex[8] (1932). Paramount dropped his option and he returned to Broadway. In 1934, casting director Max Arnow signed him with Warner Bros. His bigger successes from this period were Flirtation Walk (1934), A Midsummer Night's Dream and Captain Blood (both 1935).

    In 1936, he starred in Hot Money. It was a defining role in his persona as a glamorous, well-dressed and dapper leading man, not in the usual Warner gangster mold of rough-hewn stars such as Edward G. Robinson or Paul Muni.

    His final film Ready, Willing and Able, a Ruby Keeler musical, was released posthumously. Supposedly Ronald Reagan was signed by the studio as a replacement for Alexander due to remarked similarities in their radio voices and mannerisms.[9]

    Personal life

    Alexander married actress Aleta Freel on February 28, 1934, in East Orange, New Jersey.[4] Freel committed suicide on December 7, 1935, shooting herself in the head with a .22 rifle.[10] On September 17, 1936, Alexander married actress Anne Nagel,[11] with whom he had appeared in the films China Clipper and Here Comes Carter (both 1936).[12]

    Death

    Alexander always had problems with money. According to a studio biography, "He ruefully says that he doesn't know how to save money, and guesses that he'll have to get a business manager. And the only thing he collects is -- not first editions or etchings -- but debts!"[13] By the end of 1936, despite his movie employment, he was deeply in debt. On January 2, 1937, three months after marrying Nagel, with his professional and personal life in disarray, Alexander shot himself in the head with a .22 pistol in the barn behind his home.[14] He is buried in lot 292 of the Sunrise Slope section of Forest Lawn Cemetery in Glendale, California.[15]

    Filmography

    YearTitleRoleNotes
    1932The Wiser SexJimmy O'Neill
    1934Social RegisterLester Trout
    Gentlemen Are BornTom Martin
    Flirtation WalkOskie
    1935Maybe It's LoveRims O'Neil
    Going HighbrowHarley Marsh
    We're in the MoneyC. Richard Courtney, aka Carter
    A Midsummer Night's DreamDemetrius
    Shipmates ForeverLafayette "Sparks" Brown
    Captain BloodJeremy Pitt
    1936Boulder DamRusty Noonan
    Brides Are Like ThatBill McAllister
    I Married a DoctorErik Valborg
    Hot MoneyChick Randall
    China ClipperTom Collins
    Here Comes CarterKent CarterAlternative title: The Voice of Scandal
    1937Ready, Willing, and AbleBarry GranvilleReleased posthumously

    Notes and References

    1. Book: Frasier. David K.. Suicide in the Entertainment Industry: An Encyclopedia of 840 Twentieth Century Cases. 2005. McFarland. 9781476608075. 9–10. June 16, 2017.
    2. News: Hundreds at Actor's Funeral. The Edwardsville Intelligencer. January 9, 1937. Illinois, Edwardsville. 3. Newspapers.com. June 16, 2017.
    3. Ross Alexander: The Life and Death of a Contract Player (2020) by John Franceschina.
    4. Web site: Allen. John R. Jr.. Ross Alexander. Classic Images. June 16, 2017. https://archive.today/20120707092711/http://carto.metro.free.fr/cartes/rer-idf/index.php?gpslat=48.96833076026883&gpslon=2.525190866956332&zoom=2. July 7, 2012. dead. dmy-all.
    5. News: Signed for Films. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. November 4, 1931. New York, Brooklyn. 21. Newspapers.com. June 16, 2017.
    6. Web site: ("Ross Alexander" search results). Playbill Vault. Playbill. June 16, 2017. https://archive.today/20170616135754/http://www.playbill.com/searchpage/search?q=Ross%20Alexander&shows=on&qasset=00000150-ac85-d16d-a550-ecbf20540000&. June 16, 2017. dead. dmy-all.
    7. Ross Alexander in Warner Bros. publicity for Maybe It's Love, 1936.
    8. Book: Monush. Barry. Screen World Presents the Encyclopedia of Hollywood Film Actors: From the silent era to 1965. 2003. Hal Leonard Corporation. 9781557835512. 7–8. June 16, 2017. en.
    9. Anger, Kenneth (1984). Hollywood Babylon II, Plume, New York, p. 215.
    10. Milestones. December 7, 1935. Time.
    11. News: Alexander Ended Life As Film Fame Neared. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Associated Press. January 4, 1937. New York, Brooklyn. 3. Newspapers.com. June 15, 2017.
    12. Web site: 2020-12-28. Ross Alexander: The Tragic Suicide of a Closeted 1930s Hollywood Star. 2021-11-27. Original Cinemaniac. en-US.
    13. Ross Alexander, publicity for Maybe It's Love.
    14. Book: Donnelley, Paul . Fade to Black: A Book of Movie Obituaries . Omnibus Press . 2005 . 1-84449-430-6 . 38.
    15. Book: Wilson, Scott . Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed. . August 19, 2016 . McFarland . 978-1-4766-2599-7 . 14 . en . January 22, 2021.