Harvard-educated stage and screen actor Richard Jordan was born into a
socially prominent family on July 19, 1937 in New York City, the
grandson of
Learned Hand, the greatest
American jurist never to have served on the U.S. Supreme Court.
Newbold Morris, his stepfather, was a member of the New York City Council
during Mayor
Fiorello LaGuardia's
administration. Young Richard was educated in private Manhattan schools
and then at the exclusive Hotchkiss prep school in Lakeville,
Connecticut. While at Hotchkiss, he was outstanding as the eponymous
lead of the school play "Mr. Roberts", which won him a place in the
Sharon, Connecticut summer stock company. Jordan went to England as an
exchange student at the Sherbourne School, a college (private school)
that was over 1,000 years old. After graduating from Sherbourne, Jordan
entered Harvard College and took his degree in three years.
At Harvard, Jordan was a member of the Dramatic Club, both as an actor
and as a director. It was while at Harvard that he decided to become a
professional actor and began performing with off-campus stage
companies. After graduating from Harvard, Jordan launched what was to
be a prolific stage career in New York, making his Broadway debut in
December 1961 in the play "Take Her, She's Mine" under the direction of
the venerable
George Abbott in
Biltmore Theatre. The play, which starred
Art Carney,
Elizabeth Ashley in a Tony
Award-winning turn, and
Heywood Hale Broun, was a hit,
playing 404 performances.
Jordan next appeared in a one-night flop, in "Bicycle Ride to Nevada",
which opened and closed on September 24, 1963. He was more lucky with
his next play, "Generation", a comedy starring
Henry Fonda that played for 300 performances
in the 1965-66 season. He last appeared on Broadway in a success
d'estime,
John Osborne's "A Patriot
for Me", directed by
Peter Glenville and
starring
Maximilian Schell and
Tommy Lee Jones, who was making his
Broadway debut. By that time, Jordan had established himself as a
leading player Off-Broadway and Off-Off-Broadway, which accounted for
the majority of his over 100 New York stage appearances.
Jordan, as actor and director, was a major force in the development of
New York's "Off-Off-Broadway" theater that flourished in the 1960s. He
was one of the founders of the Gotham Arts Theater, which put on plays
in an old funeral parlor on West 43rd Street. Fittingly, the company's
first play was about necrophilia. Jordan engaged young New York artists
to design the sets, the results of which were not always auspicious.
Jordan said of this development, "With our weirdo plays against their
far-out sets...it was total insanity!" He made a significant
breakthrough, career-wise, with his appearance in the anti-war play
"The Trial Of The Catonsville Nine" in both New York and California.
Jordan spent eight years with
Joseph Papp's
New York Shakespeare Festival. He made his debut with Papp's
Shakespeare Festival in 1963, playing "Romeo" opposite the "Juliet" of
Kathleen Widdoes, the fellow Papp stock
company member who would become his wife, in Papp's Shakespeare in the
Park series. The couple married in 1964, and their eight-year marriage
produced a daughter,
Nina Jordan, born in
1964, who would later co-star with her father in the movie
Old Boyfriends (1979).
Although he appeared on television during the 1960s, the tall, handsome
and talented Jordan did not make his motion picture debut until 1971,
when he appeared in a supporting role in
Michael Winner's horse opera
Lawman (1971), which featured a first-rate
cast, including
Burt Lancaster,
Robert Ryan,
Lee J. Cobb and
Robert Duvall. However, it was his role as
the baby-faced, amoral Treasury agent in
The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1973)
that made him a known commodity on-screen, while it was the monumental
mini-series
Captains and the Kings (1976)
that made his reputation. His performance as the Irish immigrant
"Joseph Armagh" brought him an Emmy nomination and a Golden Globe
award, and it also brought him his long-time companion, co-star
Blair Brown, whom he lived with for
many years and by whom he had a son.
An actor rather than a star, Jordan played many unsympathetic roles,
including that of Nazi
Albert Speer in the
TV movie
The Bunker (1981).
He continued to appear on the stage, Off-Broadway and in stock
companies touring the major cities of the U.S., while appearing in
films and on TV. Jordan was the manager of the L.A. Actors Theater in
Los Angeles during the 1970s, where he produced, directed and wrote his
own plays. For the 1983-84 Off-Broadway season, he won an Obie Award
for his performance in Czech playwright
Václav Havel's "A Private View". He won the
Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award for directing Havel's "Largo
Desolato" at the Taper, Too in 1987.
In 1992, Jordan had begun filming
The Fugitive (1993) when his fatal
illness forced him to leave the production. Thus, Jordan's final role
was that of "General Lewis Armistead" in the film
Gettysburg (1993), which was a labor
of love for him. He was close friends with
Michael Shaara, the author of the novel
"The Killer Angels", which the movie was based upon, and contributed to
the screenplay. Jordan's last appearance as an actor was the death of
his on-screen character, "General Armistead".
Richard Jordan died in Los Angeles, California of a brain tumor on
August 30, 1993. He was 56 years old.