Jack Warden

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Jack Warden

Birth name John H. Lebzelter
Born September 18, 1920
Flag of United States Newark, New Jersey
Died July 19, 2006, age 85
New York City, New York

Jack Warden (September 18, 1920July 19, 2006), was an Emmy Award-winning Oscar-nominated American character actor.

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Born John H. Lebzelter in Newark, New Jersey to a poor Jewish family,[1] he was the son of John Warden Lebzelter and the former Laura Costello. Raised in Louisville, Kentucky, he was expelled from high school for fighting and eventually fought as a professional boxer under the name Johnny Costello. He had 13 welterweight bouts but earned little money. He worked as a nightclub bouncer, tugboat deckhand and lifeguard before joining the Navy in 1938. He was stationed in China for three years with the Yangtze River Patrol.

In 1941, he joined the United States Merchant Marine; but quickly tiring of the long convoy runs, he switched to the Army in 1942 where he served as a paratrooper in the elite 101st Airborne Division during World War II. In 1944, on the eve of the D-Day invasion (during which many of his friends died), Warden shattered his leg by landing on a fence during a night-time practice jump in England. After almost a year in the hospital (during which time he read a Clifford Odets play and decided to become an actor after the end of the war), he recovered enough to participate in the Battle of the Bulge in 1944.

After leaving the military with the rank of sergeant, he moved to New York City and pursued an acting career on the G.I. Bill. He joined the company of the Dallas Alley Theater and performed on stage for five years. In 1948 he made his television debut on The Philco Television Playhouse and Studio One. He made an uncredited film debut in 1951 in You're in the Navy Now, a movie which also featured the film debuts of Lee Marvin and Charles Bronson.

Warden had his first credited film role in The Man with My Face in 1951, and in 1952 he began a three-year role in the television series Mr. Peepers. After a role as a sympathetic corporal in From Here to Eternity (1953), Warden's breakthrough film role was his performance as Juror No. 7, a salesman who wants a quick decision in a murder case, in 12 Angry Men (1957).

He received a supporting actor Emmy Award for his performance as Chicago Bears coach George Halas in Brian's Song (1971), and was nominated for Academy Awards as Best Supporting Actor for his performances in Shampoo (1975) and Heaven Can Wait (1978). He also had notable roles in such films as All the President's Men (1976), ...And Justice for All and Being There (both 1979), The Verdict (1982), Problem Child (1990) and its sequel (1991), While You Were Sleeping (1995), and the Norm MacDonald film Dirty Work (1998).

Warden is widely known and admired for his classic "Stick 'Em" scene in "Problem Child 2." When his son Ben (played by John Ritter) suggests that Warden babysit his on-camera grandchild, Junior, Warden is shown smoking a cigar and watching a boxing match on the television. It is then that he recites, with the cigar hanging out of his mouth, the timeless phrase, "Aaww, Stick 'em, Stick 'em, Stick 'em...aawww...they don't make fightuhs like they used to..."

Warden appeared in over one hundred movies, typically playing gruff cops, sports coaches, trusted friends and similar roles, during a career which spanned six decades. His last film was 2000s The Replacements, opposite Gene Hackman and Keanu Reeves.

Warden married French actress Vanda Dupre in 1958 and had one son, Christopher. Although they separated in the 1970s they never divorced.[2]

Warden died of heart and kidney failure in a New York hospital on July 19, 2006 at the age of 85.



Persondata
NAME Warden, Jack
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Lebzelter, John H.
SHORT DESCRIPTION actor
DATE OF BIRTH September 18, 1920
PLACE OF BIRTH Newark, New Jersey
DATE OF DEATH July 19, 2006
PLACE OF DEATH New York City, New York
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