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Howard Keel

from the trailer for Annie Get Your Gun (1950)
Born Harold Clifford Keel
April 13, 1919(1919-04-13)
Gillespie, Illinois, U.S.
Died November 7, 2004 (aged 85)
Palm Desert, California, U.S.
Years active 1948–2002
Spouse(s) Rosemary Cooper (1943-1948) (divorced)
Helen Anderson (1949-1970) (divorced)
Judy Keel (1970-2004) (his death)

Howard Keel (April 13, 1919 – November 7, 2004) was an American actor and singer. He starred in many film musicals of the 1950s.

Contents

Early years

Harry Keel was born in Gillespie, Illinois, to Navyman-turned-coalminer Homer Keel and his wife, Grace Osterkamp Keel. (It is often stated that his birth name was Harold Leek; this was a mistake made by the MGM publicity department in the 1950s.)

Young Harry spent his childhood in poverty. As a young boy in Gillespie one of his teachers, Miss Rosa Burke, noticed Harry wasn't eating any lunch. From that day forward, Miss Burke would pack two lunches,—one for herself and one for Harry. When Harry became famous and would perform near Gillespie, Miss Burke was always sent tickets to attend his performances.

After his father's death in 1930, he and his mother moved to California, where he graduated from Fallbrook High School at the age of 17 and took various odd jobs until finally settling at Douglas Aircraft Company, where he became a traveling representative.

Career and personal life

At the age of 20, he was overheard singing by his landlady, Mom Rider, and was encouraged to take vocal lessons. One of his musical heroes was the great baritone Lawrence Tibbett and Howard would later say that finding out that his own voice was a basso cantante was one of the greatest disappointments of his life. Nevertheless, his first public performance came in the summer of 1941 when he played the role of Samuel the Prophet in Handel's oratorio Saul and David (singing a duet with bass-baritone George London).

Just a couple years after this, in 1943, Harold met and married his first wife, actress Rosemary Cooper. In 1945 Harold briefly understudied for John Raitt in the Broadway hit Carousel, before being assigned to Oklahoma! by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II. It was during this time, he accomplished a feat that has never been duplicated: he performed the leads in both shows on the same day.

In 1947 Oklahoma! became the first American musical, post-war, to travel to London, England, and Harold went with it. On the opening night, 30 April, at the Drury Lane Theatre, the capacity audience (which included the future Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom) demanded fourteen encores. Harold Keel was hailed as the next great star and was the toast of the West End.

During the London run, the marriage of Harold and Rosemary ended in divorce, and Harold fell in love with a young member of the show's chorus, dancer Helen Anderson. They married in January 1949 and, a year later, Harold - now called Howard - became a father for the first time to daughter Kaija.

While living in London, Keel made his film debut as Howard Keel at the British Lion studio in Elstree, in The Small Voice (1948), released in the US as Hideout, playing an escaped convict, holding up a playwright and his wife in their English country cottage.

Additional Broadway credits include Saratoga, No Strings, and Ambassador. He appeared at The Muny in St. Louis, MO as General Waverly in White Christmas (2000), Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady (1996); Emile de Becque in South Pacific (1992), and Adam in Seven Brides For Seven Brothers (1978).

MGM years

From London's West End, Howard ended up at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer making his film musical debut as Frank Butler in the movie version of Irving Berlin's Annie Get Your Gun (1950).

Howard's MGM career was to be a frustrating business. MGM never seemed to know quite what to do with him and, outside of plum roles in the films Show Boat (1951), Kiss Me Kate (1953), Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954), and Kismet (1955), he was forced into a stream of unremarkable musicals and B-films. On loan-out at Warner Brothers, he played Wild Bill Hickok in Calamity Jane (1953), a highly popular, Oscar-winning musical filmed in 1953, starring Doris Day in one of her most famous screen roles. This film was Warner Brothers' answer to Annie Get Your Gun, also including the smash hit song "Secret Love".

There were two more children born to Howard and Helen, daughter Kirstine in 1952 and son Gunnar in 1955. Soon after, Howard was released from his contract and returned to his first love, the stage.

1960s and early 1970s

As America's taste in entertainment changed, finding jobs became harder and harder for Howard. The 1960s held little chance for career advancement, with a round of nightclub work, B-Westerns and summer stock.

Under the strain, Howard began to drink heavily, and his marriage to Helen crumbled. They divorced in 1970.

But 1970 proved to be fortuitous for Howard after all. He was set up on a blind date with airline stewardess Judy Magamoll, who was 25 years his junior and had never even heard of him. Years later Howard would say it was love at first sight, but the age difference bothered him tremendously. For Judy, however, it wasn't a problem, and with the aid of Robert Frost's poem "What Fifty Said", she convinced him to try the relationship. They were married in December 1970 and his drinking problem soon ceased. He resumed his routine of nightclub, cabaret and summer stock jobs with his new wife at his side, and, in 1971-72, appeared briefly in the West End and Broadway productions of the flop musical, Ambassador.

Then, in 1974, Howard became a father for the fourth time, to daughter Leslie Grace.

The Love Boat, Dallas, and his revived career

Howard continued to tour, his wife and daughter in tow, but by 1980 he had had enough of struggling to find work and he moved his family to Oklahoma, intending to join an oil company. They had barely settled there when Howard was called back to California to appear with Jane Powell on an episode of The Love Boat. While he was there, he was told that the producers of the smash hit television series Dallas wanted to talk to him. After several cameo appearances, Howard joined the show permanently as the dignified, if hot tempered, oil baron Clayton Farlow and his career reached heights it had never seen before.

Recording career

With his renewed fame, Howard began his first solo recording career at age 64, as well as a wildly successful concert career in the UK. He released an album in 1984 called "With Love", that sold poorly, thus indicating that though the American public were happy to see him as a supporting actor on hit TV show, they were not prepared for a full resumption of his previous stardom. In January 1986 he underwent double heart bypass surgery.

Even after Dallas he continued to sing, and kept his voice in remarkable shape. In 1994, he and Judy moved to Palm Desert, CA. The Keels were always active in charity events, helping their community and were well loved amongst the residents. In particular, Howard and Judy attended the annual Howard Keel Golf Classic at Mere Golf Club in Cheshire, England, which raised money for the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC). He attended for many years, up until the year of his death.

Death

Howard died at his home in Palm Desert on November 7, 2004, six weeks after being diagnosed with colon cancer. He is survived by Judy, his wife of 34 years, his four children, ten grandchildren and a great-granddaughter. He was cremated and his ashes scattered at various favorite places including Mere Golf Club, Liverpool John Lennon Airport, and in Tuscany, Italy.

Family

Keel had four children, three with second wife Helen Anderson – two daughters, Katija Liane (born January 14, 1950) and Kirstine Elizabeth (born June 21, 1952), and a son, Gunnar Louis (born June 3, 1955) – and one with his third wife Judy – a daughter, Leslie Grace (born September 1, 1974).

Filmography

Film
Year Film Role Notes
1948 The Small Voice Boke as Harold Keel
1950 Annie Get Your Gun Frank Butler
Pagan Love Song Hazard Endicott
1951 Three Guys Named Mike Mike Jamison
Show Boat Gaylord Ravenal
Across the Wide Missouri Narrator
Texas Carnival Slim Shelby
Callaway Went Thataway Stretch Barnes/ Smoky Callaway Alternate title: The Star Said No
1952 Desperate Search Vince Heldon
Lovely to Look At Tony Naylor
The Hoaxters Narrator Short Subject
1953 Fast Company Rick Grayton
Ride, Vaquero! King Cameron
Calamity Jane Wild Bill Hickok
Kiss Me Kate Fred Graham / 'Petruchio'
1954 Rose Marie Capt. Mike Malone
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers Adam Pontipee
Deep in My Heart Specialty in 'My Maryland'
1955 Jupiter's Darling Hannibal
Kismet The Poet
1959 Floods of Fear Donovan
The Big Fisherman Simon Peter
1961 Armored Command Col. Devlin
1962 The Day of the Triffids Bill Masen
1966 Waco 'Waco'
1967 Red Tomahawk Capt. Tom York
The War Wagon Levi Walking Bear
1968 Arizona Bushwhackers Lee Travis
1994 That's Entertainment! III Himself
2002 My Father's House Roy Mardis
Television
Year Title Role Notes
1957 Zane Grey Theater Will Gorman 1 episode - Gift from a Gunman
1958 Roberta John Kent TV Movie
1961 Tales of Wells Fargo Justin Brox 1 episode - Casket 7.3
1963 Death Valley Days Diamond Jim Brady 1 episode - Diamond Jim Brady
1964 Kiss Me Kate Fred Graham TV Movie
1965 Run for Your Life Hardie Rankin 1 episode - The Time of the Sharks
1967 The Red Skelton Show Police Officer McGoogle 1 episode - A Christmas Urchin
1969 Here's Lucy 1 episode - Lucy's Safari
Insight 1 episode - Is the 11:59 Late This Year?
1976 The Quest Shanghai Pierce 1 episode - Seventy-Two Hours
1981-1983 The Love Boat Duncan Harlow 2 episodes
Long Time No See/The Bear Essence/Kisses and Makeup
Maid for Each Other/Lost and Found/Then There Were Two
1981-1991 Dallas Clayton Farlow 208 episodes
1982 Fantasy Island Guest Star 1 episode - The Big Bet/Nancy and the Thunderbirds
1984 Entertainment Express 1 episode - Episode #2.2
1991 Good Sports Sonny Gordon 1 episode - The Return of Nick
Murder, She Wrote Larry Thorson 1 episode - A Killing in Vegas
1994 Hart to Hart: Home Is Where the Hart Is Capt. Quentin "Jack" Jackson TV Movie
1995 Walker Texas Ranger Daniel Lamont 1 episode - Blue Movies

References

External links








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