José Ferrer attended the Swiss boarding school Institut Le Rosey. In Switzerland, Ferrer received advanced musical training and excelled as a pianist. He used his musical talents throughout his career.
College/University
Gallery of José Ferrer
Princeton, NJ 08544, United States
Ferrer studied architecture in Princeton, graduating in 1933. While at Princeton, he formed a band called José Ferrer and His Pied Pipers.
Gallery of José Ferrer
New York, NY 10027, United States
Ferrer then studied Romance languages at Columbia University.
Career
Gallery of José Ferrer
1940
José Ferrer performing in scene from play Charley's Aunt.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1949
Gene Tierney and José Ferrer in Whirlpool.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1949
Gene Tierney and José Ferrer in Whirlpool.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1950
José Ferrer gestures as he talks to Belgian actor Albert Cavens during shooting on the set of director Michael Gordon's film, Cyrano de Bergerac.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1950
José Ferrer in costume and makeup as Cyrano de Bergerac.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1952
José Ferrer smiling in the film Anything Can Happen.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1953
Rita Hayworth and José Ferrer in Miss Sadie Thompson.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1954
José Ferrer and Doe Avedon in Deep in My Heart.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1954
Jim Backus, José Ferrer, Douglas Fowley, and Paul Stewart in Deep in My Heart.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1954
José Ferrer and Helen Traubel in Deep in My Heart.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1954
José Ferrer in The Caine Mutiny.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1954
José Ferrer, playing the role of Ungarian composer Sigmund Romberg, conducting an orchestra in the film Deep in My Heart.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1974
Peter Falk and José Ferrer in Mind Over Mayhem.
Gallery of José Ferrer
1984
José Ferrer and Siân Phillips in Dune.
Gallery of José Ferrer
José Ferrer and Sylva Koscina.
Gallery of José Ferrer
José Ferrer, Paul Henreid, Merle Oberon, Walter Pidgeon, and Paul Stewart.
Gallery of José Ferrer
Paul Robeson acting with Uta Hagen and José Ferrer in scene from Othello.
Gallery of José Ferrer
José Ferrer and Rosemary Clooney.
Achievements
Membership
Awards
Academy Award
The Academy Award that José Ferrer received in 1951.
Golden Globe
The Golden Globe that José Ferrer received in 1951.
Tony Award
Actors José Ferrer and Kim Hunter present each other with recently-won awards before the world premiere of their latest film 'Anything Can Happen' at the Mayfair Theatre in New York, 8th April 1952. Ferrer receives two Tony awards for his Broadway performances.
National Medal of Arts
The National Medal of Arts that José Ferrer received in 1985.
José Ferrer attended the Swiss boarding school Institut Le Rosey. In Switzerland, Ferrer received advanced musical training and excelled as a pianist. He used his musical talents throughout his career.
The Standard, High Line, 848 Washington St, New York, NY 10014, United States
American actor José Ferrer speaking on a live radio link from the La Zambra nightclub in New York to the 23rd Academy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles after hearing the news that he has won the Best Actor Award for his performance in 'Cyrano de Bergerac', 29th March 1951.
Rosemary Clooney and José Ferrer, put the final touches on their costumes on the set of director Stanley Donen's film, 'Deep In My Heart,' in which they both starred.
Actors José Ferrer and Kim Hunter present each other with recently-won awards before the world premiere of their latest film 'Anything Can Happen' at the Mayfair Theatre in New York, 8th April 1952. Ferrer receives two Tony awards for his Broadway performances.
The National Medal of Arts that José Ferrer received in 1985.
Connections
ex-wife: Uta Hagen
Uta Hagen
ex-wife: Phyllis Hill
Phyllis Hill
ex-wife: Rosemary Clooney
Rosemary Clooney
Son: Miguel Ferrer
Miguel Ferrer
Son: Gabriel Ferrer
Judge Judy Sheindlin and Gabriel Ferrer attend the wedding of Michael Feinstein and Terrence Flannery held at a private residence on October 17, 2008 in Los Angeles, California.
(Cyrano de Bergerac is a 1950 American adventure film base...)
Cyrano de Bergerac is a 1950 American adventure film based on the 1897 French Alexandrin verse drama Cyrano de Bergerac by Edmond Rostand. It uses poet Brian Hooker's 1923 English blank verse translation as the basis for its screenplay.
(Visually exquisite biopic of Toulouse-Lautrec, the crippl...)
Visually exquisite biopic of Toulouse-Lautrec, the crippled painter whose work perfectly captured the spirit of bohemian Paris in the naughty 1890s. Portrayed as an embittered loner, he is tormented by his doomed relationships with prostitute Marie Charlet and sympathetic model Myriamme.
(In a state-run mental hospital, theatrical director Jim D...)
In a state-run mental hospital, theatrical director Jim Downs (Jose Ferrer) is convalescing after a failed suicide attempt. His wife, Ann (June Allyson), visits every day under the pretext of offering love and support, but in fact she criticizes him mercilessly for his various failings. Jim's new love, a young actress named Charlotte (Joy Page), offers the possibility of escape, but first Jim must decide, with his psychiatrists' help, whether or not to give the marriage one more chance.
(The residents of Peyton Place are not happy when its most...)
The residents of Peyton Place are not happy when its most famous resident, Alison Mackenzie, writes a "shocking" novel detailing the sinful secrets of the town.
(Lawrence, a lieutenant in the British Army, is asked by C...)
Lawrence, a lieutenant in the British Army, is asked by Colonel Brighton to moderately assess Faisal, their ally. Lawrence is impressed with Faisal and seeks his help to plan an attack on the enemy.
(In this fact-based film, disillusioned Indian Nathuram Go...)
In this fact-based film, disillusioned Indian Nathuram Godse (Horst Buchholz) becomes so disturbed by the daily conflict he witnesses between Muslims and Hindu Nationalists that he decides he must assassinate Gandhi. In anticipation of his crime, Godse spends the hours leading up to the murder recounting the events of his life that brought him to this point, including his doomed love affair with married Rani (Valerie Gearon) and his own violent interactions with Muslims.
(Max Von Sydow, John Wayne, Charlton Heston, Sidney Poitie...)
Max Von Sydow, John Wayne, Charlton Heston, Sidney Poitier and Shelley Winters are exquisite in this inspiring, grand-scale portrayal of the life of Jesus Christ.
(When an eclectic group of passengers boards a cruise ship...)
When an eclectic group of passengers boards a cruise ship bound for prewar Germany, they form a microcosm of 1930s society. One passenger, a mysterious countess (Simone Signoret), is headed for a German prison camp. The charming Dr. Schumann (Oskar Werner) harbors a debilitating heart condition. Then there's American divorcée Mary Treadwell (Vivien Leigh), who vainly attempts to outrun time itself. During their weeks at sea, the group forges bonds and rivalries, and unearths secrets.
(Based on a real-life case, Lieutenant Theo Kojack (Telly ...)
Based on a real-life case, Lieutenant Theo Kojack (Telly Savalas) leads an investigation into the murders of two women who were found in their Manhattan apartment. A young black man is arrested and confesses to the crime, but Kojack feels something is off about the case. Using his connections on the streets, he gets a tip from a drug addict about the real killer. Soon Kojack realizes that his department contains crooked cops, and that the accused man was forced into the confession.
(When his patient Kim is nearly killed in a motor accident...)
When his patient Kim is nearly killed in a motor accident, Dr. Martin decides to investigate. His only clue is a strange trinket which Kim has clutched since her crash. An occult expert tells him it is Akasa - a Hittite God of revenge and destruction. Meanwhile Kim's car, apparently unmanned, rampages the roads causing carnage and disaster.
(A group of soldiers accidentally unleash Dracula's servan...)
A group of soldiers accidentally unleash Dracula's servant and his hound Zoltan during an excavation. They go on a journey to find and reconnect with the last descendant of the great Count.
(In 1961, Clarence Earl Gideon (Henry Fonda) is arrested o...)
In 1961, Clarence Earl Gideon (Henry Fonda) is arrested on charges of petty theft. Unable to afford an expensive lawyer to defend him, he is forced to represent himself and receives a five-year prison sentence. He becomes a model inmate and jailhouse scholar, focusing on the Fourteenth Amendment, which guarantees U.S. citizens the right of due process. With the help of an attorney (Jose Ferrer), Clarence makes a startling discovery that changes everything. The film is based on a true story.
(Impressed by his martial art skills, a mob kidnaps Jerry'...)
Impressed by his martial art skills, a mob kidnaps Jerry's brother's fiancee and forces Jerry to fight in a tournament. His easy-going life turns into a battle where he needs to fight to win.
(In the year 10191, a spice called melange is the most val...)
In the year 10191, a spice called melange is the most valuable substance known in the universe, and its only source is the desert planet Arrakis. A royal decree awards Arrakis to Duke Leto Atreides and ousts his bitter enemies, the Harkonnens. However, when the Harkonnens violently seize back their fiefdom, it is up to Paul (Kyle MacLachlan), Leto's son, to lead the Fremen, the natives of Arrakis, in a battle for control of the planet and its spice. Based on Frank Herbert's epic novel.
José Ferrer was a Puerto Rican actor, producer and film director. He starred in such films as The Secret Fury, Cyrano de Bergerac, Moulin Rouge and Who Has Seen the Wind. Ferrer also directed such films as The Shrike, The Fourposter, and Stalag 17.
Background
José Vicente Ferrer Otero y Cintran was born on January 8, 1912, in San Juan, Puerto Rico. He belonged to a notable and affluent Puerto Rican family known for its involvement in the island's cultural and literary landscape. His father, Rafael Ferrer, was a well-known lawyer. His mother was Providencia Cintrón.
Education
Ferrer attended elementary school at the San Agustin College in Río Piedras. When José was a young boy, his family moved to New York in search of help for Ferrer, who had been born with a cleft palate. On their arrival in New York, his father continued working as an attorney and Ferrer attended La Salle College, where he graduated from high school at the age of 14.
Although Ferrer gained immediate admission to Princeton University, he went first to Switzerland, where he attended the Swiss boarding school Institut Le Rosey. In Switzerland, Ferrer received advanced musical training and excelled as a pianist. He used his musical talents throughout his career. On his return to the United States, Ferrer enrolled in Princeton, where he studied architecture and graduated in 1933.
While at Princeton, he formed a band called José Ferrer and His Pied Pipers. Assisted by his fellow Princetonian Jimmy Stewart, the 14-member band was a hit on campus and toured Europe during the summer of 1930 with considerable success. He had multiple roles as the band's director, singer, piano player, saxophonist, and clarinetist. In addition to his musical interests, he participated in school theatrical productions at the Triangle Club. His first incursion into theater was as a director of the musical Fol-de-Rol.
After his graduation from Princeton, Ferrer tried his luck as a musical performer on a Long Island showboat, where he debuted in the melodrama The Periwinkle. However, he moved on to Columbia University, where he did graduate work in literature and romance languages.
Later in life, the University of Puerto Rico awarded Ferrer his first honorary doctorate in 1949. As an act of goodwill and admiration toward his homeland, he donated his Oscar to the university. Ferrer was also awarded an honorary Master's of Fine Arts from Princeton, as well as an honorary doctorate from Bradley University in Illinois.
In 1935 Ferrer joined a Broadway production company where Joshua Logan, a member of his former band, José Ferrer and His Pied Pipers, worked. He was given a job as a stagehand and worked sporadically in several walk-on parts. One of his fellow actors spotted the actor's potential talent and persuaded the producers to give him a one-line role as a policeman in the production of A Slight Case of Murder (1935). The next year he landed a more important role as one of a trio of Virginia Military Institute cadets in the comedy Brother Rat. In 1936 he played the leading role in Phillip Barry's Spring Dance at the Empire Theater. He continued reading for several different parts and asking for more prominent and demanding acting opportunities.
Ferrer's first notable theatrical role was Iago in Shakespeare's Othello in 1943. The critically acclaimed play was groundbreaking in many ways: it was an adaptation done by Paul Robeson, an African-American, and the producers cast the first Puerto Rican in the lead role on Broadway. One of the most important roles of his lifetime was as Cyrano de Bergerac, which he played on Broadway in 1946. This performance won him a Tony in 1947.
In 1948, while still working in theater, Ferrer began a film career. His first movie was Joan of Arc (1948) alongside Ingrid Bergman. Although he was nominated for an Oscar, it was a mediocre film. His Broadway success Cyrano de Bergerac was adapted for film in 1950 and his role won him an Oscar as best actor the same year, making Ferrer the first Puerto Rican to win both a Tony and an Oscar. Fellow Puerto Rican Rita Moreno later replicated this achievement.
In the early 1950s he was caught up in the general hysteria of the McCarthy era but was not blacklisted thanks in part to a successful public relations campaign launched under the advice of former Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas. His сurrent wife, actress Uta Hagen, was blacklisted and had considerable problems finding acting jobs for the rest of her career.
During the 1950s, which were considered by many critics as the height of his career, Ferrer appeared in many films such as Whirlpool (1950), Moulin Rouge (1952), The Caine Mutiny (1954), The Great Man (1956), and I Accuse! (1958), the last two of which he also directed.
The final important period of Ferrer's career in Hollywood was in the 1960s, when he appeared in Lawrence of Arabia (1962), The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965), and Ship of Fools (1965). He appeared in more than 40 movies from the 1970s to the 1990s and entertainment critics consider him one of the best character actors of the twentieth century. Ferrer died in Coral Gables, Florida, on January 26, 1992, after a brief illness. His ashes were taken to his beloved Puerto Rico shortly after his death.
José Ferrer was a Puerto Rican actor, producer and film director, famous for his roles in such films as Cyrano de Bergerac, The Greatest Story Ever Told, Nine Hours to Rama and Dune. In 1951, Ferrer became the first Hispanic actor to win an Academy Award. He also received the Golden Globe for Best Actor in 1951. In 1947, he received the Tony Award for his theatrical performance of Cyrano de Bergerac and in 1952, he won the Distinguished Dramatic Actor Award for The Shrike, and also the Outstanding Director Award for directing the plays The Shrike, The Fourposter, and Stalag 17. He was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame. In 1985, Ferrer received the National Medal of Arts from Ronald Reagan, becoming the first actor and Hispanic to receive that honor.
(When his patient Kim is nearly killed in a motor accident...)
1976
Views
Quotations:
"A man, when he wishes, is the master of his fate."
"We can make ourselves actors, but only the audience can make a star."
"The truth is I made a few good movies in the '50s, then went into freefall."
Membership
José Ferrer was a member of the Princeton Triangle Club and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Personality
A constant element in Ferrer's life was his love for his native Puerto Rico. In 1970, when he was playing in Man of La Mancha on Broadway, he took the production of the island so that his fellow Puerto Ricans would have the chance to see the musical. In a newspaper column published by Puerto Rican newspaper, El Nuevo Dia, notable Puerto Rican scholar José Ferrer Canales recalled how Ferrer identified with the Puerto Ricans who moved to New York during the first wave of migration from the island in the 1940s.
Ferrer never hesitated to greet Puerto Rican servers at restaurants, telling them that he was also Puerto Rican. He always looked forward to the time when Puerto Rico and Puerto Ricans would stop being provincial and open themselves to the world to showcase their natural talents and abilities.
Connections
José Ferrer married Uta Hagen in 1938. The marriage produced a daughter, Leticia Thyra Ferrer. Ferrer and Hagen divorced in 1948, partly due to Hagen's long-concealed affair with Paul Robeson, with whom Hagen and Ferrer had co-starred in the Broadway production of Othello. In 1948 José Ferrer married Phyllis Hill and they moved to Burlington, Vermont in 1950. Ferrer returned to Puerto Rico because his mother died. Ferrer and Hill divorced on January 12, 1953.
In 1953 José Ferrer married Rosemary Clooney. They moved to Santa Monica, California, in 1954, and then to Los Angeles in 1958. The marriage produced five children: Miguel, Maria, Gabriel, Monsita and Rafael. Ferrer and Clooney divorced in 1961, but in 1964 they remarried. The marriage again crumbled because Ferrer was carrying on an affair with the woman who would become his last wife, Stella Magee. Clooney found out about the affair, and she and Ferrer divorced again in 1967. In 1977 José Ferrer married Stella Magee and they remained together until his death.
Father:
Rafael Ferrer
Mother:
Maria Providencia Cintron
ex-wife:
Uta Hagen
Uta Hagen was an American actress who is famous for her role of Martha in the 1962 Broadway premiere of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
Daughter:
Leticia Thyra Ferrer
ex-wife:
Phyllis Hill
ex-wife:
Rosemary Clooney
Rosemary Clooney was an American singer and actress.
Son:
Miguel Ferrer
Miguel Ferrer was an American actor and voice actor.
Daughter:
Maria Ferrer
Son:
Gabriel Ferrer
Daughter:
Monsita Ferrer
Son:
Rafael Ferrer
Rafael Ferrer is an American actor and voice actor.
From Cyrano to Magoo: My Years with Jose Ferrer and Jim Backus
After detailing his experiences with The Beach Boys in his book, Endless Summer: My Life With The Beach Boys, Jack Lloyd now retraces his life as he emerges from the psychedelic drug scene of the 1960s with rock stars Jimi Hendrix and Eric Burdon to a chance meeting with award-winning actor and film star, José Ferrer.
1947, Cyrano de Bergerac Best Actor in a Play
1952, The Shrike Best Actor in a Play
1952, The Shrike Best Director
1952, The Fourposter Best Director
1952, Stalag 17 Best Director