Calendar: May 5

A Year: Day to Day Men: 5th of May

Barroco Tesouro

May 5, 1914 is the birthdate of American film actor Tyrone Edmund Power III.

Tyrone Power went to Hollywood in 1936. The director Henry King was impressed with his looks and poise, and he insisted that Power be tested for the lead role in “Lloyd’s of London”. Producer Darryl F. Zanuck decided to give Power the role, believing Power had a great screen presence. Power had fourth billing in the credits; but he had the most screen time of the actors. On the night of the movie premier, he walked in an unknown and walked out a star.

Power racked up hit after hit from 1936 until 1943, when his career was interrupted by military service. In those years he starred in comedies, westerns, dramas, and swashbucklers such as: “Thin Ice”, “Blood and Sand”, “Alexander’s Ragtime Band”, “Jesse James”, “The Black Swan” and”The Mark of Zorro”. Power was named the second biggest box office draw in 1939, surpassed only by Mickey Rooney.

In 1940 the direction of Power’s career took a dramatic turn when his movie “The Mark of Zorro” was released. Power played the role of Don Diego Vega/Zorro, fop by day, bandit hero by night. The film was a hit, and 20th Century Fox often cast Power in other swashbucklers in the years that followed. Power was a talented swordsman in real life, and the dueling scene in “The Mark of Zorro” is highly regarded. The great Hollywood swordsman Basil Rathbone, who starred with him in the film, commented, “Power was the most agile man with a sword I’ve ever faced before a camera. Tyrone could have fenced Errol Flynn into a cocked hat.”

The 1955 movie “Untamed” was Tyrone Power’s last movie made under his contract with 20th Century Fox. The same year saw the release of “The Long Gray Line”, a successful military John Ford film for Columbia Pictures with Power playing the lead role. Power’s old boss, Darryl F. Zanuck, persuaded him to play the lead role in the 1957 “The Sun Also Rises”, adapted from the Hemingway novel. This was his final film with Fox.

For Power’s last completed film role, he was cast against type as the accused murderer Leonard Vole in the first film version of Agatha Christie’s “Witness for the Prosecution”, directed by Billy Wilder. Robert Fulford, film critic of the Washington Post, commented on Power’s “superb performance” as “the seedy, stop-at-nothing exploiter of women”. The movie was well received and a success at the box office.

In September of 1958 Tyrone Power went to Spain to film the epic “Solomon and Sheba”. He had filmed about 75 per cent of his scenes when he was stricken by a massive heart attack while filming a dueling scene with his co-star and friend George Sanders. Power died in Madrid on November 15, 1958 at the age of 44. On his tombstone at Hollywood Forever Cemetery are the masks of comedy and tragedy, with the inscription “Good night, sweet prince”.

Leave a Reply