John Beal was born James Andrew Bliedung on August 13, 1909, in Joplin,
Missouri. The son of a department store owner and concert pianist, he
began acting in school and church plays and decided to pursue it as a
career following his B.S. degree in economics from the University of
Pennsylvania. The more marquee-friendly stage moniker of "John Beal"
came from the names of two close college friends that same year.
Following repertory theatre work, he began his Broadway run as an
understudy and walk-on before earning his first lead in the short-lived
play "Wild Waves" in 1932. Following excellent notices in the hit play
"Another Language," John repeated his showcase role in the film version
of
Another Language (1933)
opposite
Helen Hayes. Declining a
Hollywood contract at the time, he returned to Broadway in 1933 for
"She Loves Me Not". It wasn't long, however, before he was
front-and-center again in films and showing great promise in RKO movie
parts opposite
Katharine Hepburn in
both
The Little Minister (1934)
and
Break of Hearts (1935), the
title role in
Laddie (1935) co-starring
Gloria Stuart, and in the prime role of
Marius in the
Charles Laughton/
Fredric March
version of
Les MisƩrables (1935).
Briefly signed by MGM, in which his best role was as
Gladys George's son in the studio's
classic, tear-stained drama
Madame X (1937), WWII took the wind out
of his career sails, serving as a staff sergeant in the motion picture
unit of the Army Air Force. Theatre, radio and film would take up much
of his time in the post-WWII years. Prestigious stage productions over
time included "The Voice of the Turtle," "Lend an Ear," "The Teahouse
of the August Moon," "Our Town," "The Long Christmas Dinner," "The
Front Page," "To Be Young Gifted and Black" and "The Little Foxes".
Excellent performances on TV in "A Trip to Bountiful," "Twelve Angry
Men" and "The Long Way Home" added flavor and distinction to his later
career.
Sporadic film roles included
I Am the Law (1938),
The Cat and the Canary (1939),
One Thrilling Night (1942),
My Six Convicts (1952),
The Vampire (1957),
The Sound and the Fury (1959),
The Bride (1973),
Amityville 3-D (1983), and his
last,
The Firm (1993), in which he
played a bearded villain. He was never able again to achieve his early
cinematic prowess of the early 1930s. In the 1960s Beal made a dent in
daytime soap dramas, in particular his Judge Vail in the cult vampire
series
Dark Shadows (1966).
Long married (1934-1986) to actress
Helen Craig and the father of two
daughters, he focused on his passion for portrait painting in later
years. Beal died in 1997 at age 87 in Santa Cruz, California, from the
lingering effects of a stroke.