Everything about Peter Lawford totally explained
Peter Sydney Lawford (
September 7,
1923 –
December 24,
1984) was a British-born
American actor, member of the "
Rat Pack," and brother-in-law to President
John F. Kennedy, perhaps more noted in later years for his off-screen activities as a
celebrity than for his acting. In his earlier professional years (late 1930s through the 1950s) he'd a strong presence in popular culture and starred in a number of highly acclaimed films. He was the close relation of
Patty Berg, a professional golfer.
Biography
Early life
Born in
London, on
September 7,
1923, the son of
English World War I hero Sir
Sydney Turing Barlow Lawford and the former May Somerville Bunny, he spent his early childhood in
France and began acting at a young age. Lawford's mother was said to have dressed him as a girl in private up until age eleven. Lady Lawford and Sir Sydney were not married when Peter was conceived. Young Peter lived all over the world with his parents. Because of his family's travels, Peter was never formally educated. His lack of education was allegedly a sore subject for the actor, which contributed to his feelings of inadequacy later on as a member of the Kennedy family, and throughout his adult life. In America, Sir Sydney and Lady Lawford were treated as royalty among the well-to-do in their new neighborhood of
Palm Beach, Florida, and were always invited to events and social occasions. However, they lost whatever source of money they'd when war was declared in England in 1939.
As a child Lawford severely injured his arm, in his words, "attempting to run through a glass door.". Doctors were able to save the arm, but the injury continued to bother him throughout his life, and the arm was slightly deformed. The injury was considered damaging enough to keep him from entering
World War II, but this turn of fate was probably the greatest boon to his career. At that time,
Hollywood was infatuated with heroic Englishmen, and as war movies were being churned out by the dozens and American actors volunteered or were drafted for the war, Lawford put his talents to work "
stateside".
Career
Prior to the war Lawford had gained a contract position with the
MGM studios. Once he signed with MGM, his mother, Lady May, insisted that studio head
Louis B. Mayer pay her a salary as Peter's personal assistant. Mayer declined. Lady Lawford responded by claiming her son to be "a bummer" and that he needed to be "supervised". When Peter learned of his mother's actions their relationship was never the same.
Lawford's first movie role was at age seven in the film
Poor Old Bill. Eight years later, he made his Hollywood debut in a minor part in
Lord Jeff. His first major movie role was
A Yank At Eton (1942). He played a
snobbish bully opposite
Mickey Rooney. The picture was a smash hit, and Lawford's performance was widely praised. Also that year, Lawford appeared in
Mrs. Miniver. He made an uncredited appearance as a sailor in "Sherlock Holmes Faces Death" (1943). He won even greater acclaim for his performance in
The White Cliffs Of Dover (1944), in which he played a young soldier in World War II. MGM gave him another important role in
The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945). Lawford also made
Son Of Lassie (1945) and won a
Modern Screen Magazine readers' poll as the most popular actor in Hollywood. His fan mail jumped to thousands of letters a week. Lawford had become a major star.
Lawford's busiest year as an actor was 1946, when two of his films opened within days of each other:
Cluny Brown (1946) and
Two Sisters From Boston (1946). With heartthrobs such as
Clark Gable and stalwarts like
James Stewart off to war, Lawford was recognized as
the romantic lead on the MGM lot. He appeared with
Frank Sinatra for the first time in the musical
It Happened in Brooklyn (1947). Lawford received rave reviews for his work in the film while Sinatra's were lukewarm. Lawford later admitted that the most terrifying experience of his career was the first musical number he performed (the Jitterbug). He also made his first comedy that same year:
My Brother Talks To Horses (1947). It was in the musical
Good News (1947) that he won his greatest acclaim as a performer, holding his own against other cast members with far more training in song and dance.
Lawford was given other important roles in MGM films over the next few years, including
On an Island with You (1948),
Easter Parade (1948),
Little Women (1949),
It Should Happen to You (1954),
Ocean’s Eleven (1960),
The Longest Day (1962), and
Advise and Consent (1962). In the late 1950s he co-starred with
Phyllis Kirk in a short-lived television series based on the
Thin Man films of the 1930s.
His first marriage, in 1954, was to
Patricia Kennedy, sister of then-U.S. Senator
John F. Kennedy. They had four children; actor
Christopher Kennedy Lawford (b.
March 29,
1955), and daughters Sydney Maleia Kennedy Lawford (b.
August 25,
1956 in
Santa Monica, California), Victoria Francis Lawford (b.
November 4,
1958 in
Santa Monica, California), and Robin Elizabeth Lawford (b.
July 2,
1961). Lawford became an
American citizen in 1960, in time to vote for his brother-in-law in the
presidential elections. Lawford, along with other members of the "Rat Pack," helped campaign for Kennedy and the
Democratic Party. Sinatra famously dubbed him "Brother-in-Lawford" at this time.
Personal life
Lawford had a reputation as a ladies' man, and was reported to have had many affairs with famous ladies of film, song, and politics. Lawford introduced
Marilyn Monroe as she stepped out to sing her infamous
Happy Birthday, Mr. President at
Madison Square Garden in May of 1962. He and brother-in-law
Robert F. Kennedy are rumoured to have visited Monroe on the day she died (August 4 or 5, 1962), and Lawford is said to have been the last person to see the troubled actress alive, although neither fact has ever been confirmed. However, it's assumed that Lawford is the last person to have spoken to her over the telephone. According to him, she declined to spend the Saturday evening of August 4, 1962 with him. The Kennedy family distanced itself from Lawford, as his antics proved increasingly embarrassing. Patricia Kennedy Lawford divorced him in 1966 because of his alcoholism and infidelity.
Lawford was very close to Frank Sinatra for a number of years, appearing in several Rat Pack movies and stage acts. Sinatra, however, threatened him with bodily harm when he learned that Lawford had had lunch with
Ava Gardner, Sinatra's primary love interest at the time. Lawford's friends managed to convince Sinatra that nothing was going on between Gardner and Lawford, but Sinatra refused to speak with Lawford for a number of years. The two were later reconciled, but Sinatra ultimately broke off the friendship after Lawford refused to act as a go-between for Sinatra and President Kennedy after their association had become controversial (Sinatra's alleged mob ties, even if based more on rumor than fact, made White House image guardians unhappy). The end of the Lawford-Sinatra relationship came when the President made plans to stay at crooner
Bing Crosby's house instead of Sinatra's during a visit to Los Angeles. Sinatra was especially incensed because Crosby was a Republican. Sinatra's feelings were such that once, when he learned Lawford was in the audience he was about to perform for, he refused to come out until Lawford and his wife were removed from the premises. Lawford and Sinatra never spoke again, though Lawford maintained a good friendship with Rat-Pack-pal
Sammy Davis, Jr.. The two starred together in the 1968 film
Salt and Pepper and its 1970 sequel
One More Time.
Lawford's alcohol abuse and later drug abuse, as well as strained relationships and financial difficulties, caused a great deal of stress on his increasingly fragile health. Lawford was reduced to television guest shots on such shows as
Alfred Hitchcock Presents,
Profiles in Courage (TV series),
The Wild Wild West,
I Spy,
The Name Of The Game,
The Virginian,
Bewitched,
The Patty Duke Show,
The Doris Day Show,
Hawaii Five-O,
The Jeffersons,
Fantasy Island and
The Love Boat. Besides sitcoms, he also guest-starred on variety shows such as
The Judy Garland Show and
Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, and game shows
What's My Line?,
Password, and
Pyramid.
Lawford married his second wife, Mary Rowan, the daughter of comedian
Dan Rowan, in 1971 when she was in her twenties; the marriage lasted eight months. In 1975, he married Deborah Gould, but the marriage lasted only two months. His fourth and final marriage, in July 1984, after a nine-year courtship, was to
Patricia Seaton. Lawford died in a hospital in
Los Angeles on
Christmas Eve 1984 of cardiac arrest complicated by kidney and liver failure, at the age of 61.
His body was cremated and the ashes were interred at
Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery. His original interment location was near that of Marilyn Monroe. According to his son, the actor
Christopher Lawford, talking on
Larry King's CNN talk-show on
September 27,
2005, none of the Rat Pack members attended the funeral, though a number of the Lawford/Kennedy cousins came. Because of a dispute between his widow and the cemetery, his ashes were removed and scattered in the
Pacific Ocean off the coast of California by his widow, Patricia Seaton Lawford, who invited the "National Enquirer" tabloid to photograph the event. Westwood Village Memorial Park still has, as of 2006, a plaque bearing Lawford's name. It isn't known if any ashes remain at the site.
Filmography
Further Information
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