Gordon MacRae

Gordon MacRae

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Gordon MacRae
Radio: North side of the 6300 block of Hollywood Boulevard
Actor | Singer
Born Albert Gordon MacRae on March 12, 1921 in East Orange, N.J.
Died Jan. 24, 1986 of cancer of the mouth and jaw in Lincoln, NE

Gordon MacRae was a clean-cut, full-throated baritone who triumphed over the alcoholism that threatened his career, which peaked with his portrayal of Curly in the film version of "Oklahoma!"

Although he appeared in several successful stage, radio and television programs, MacRae will best be remembered for two film musicals — "Carousel" and "Oklahoma!" In each he appeared opposite Shirley Jones, and her lilting soprano proved an appealing complement to MacRae's sonorous baritone.

MacRae was the son of "Wee Willie" MacRae, a singer turned businessman who encouraged his son's innate talent.

The young MacRae was a page at NBC who joined Horace Heidt and His Musical Knights as a vocalist in 1941. He had minor roles on Broadway and radio but was drafted into the Army in 1943. After the war he starred on NBC radio on the old "Teentimers" show, but his career didn't really take off until Warner Bros. signed him to a contract in the late 1940s.

In all, he made 25 films including "West Point Story," "The Best Things in Life Are Free" and "Look for the Silver Lining."

But by the 1970s his life and his career were in decline because of his drinking.

"I was one hell of a drunk," he said in 1982, referring to the Lakeside Club in North Hollywood as his prep school for alcoholics. "I used to stand at the bar and try to out-drink Bogey [Humphrey Bogart] and Errol Flynn."

In 1978, a year after he was unable to sing in concert in South Carolina because he couldn't remember his lyrics, he entered an alcoholism treatment center in Lincoln, Neb.

He lived in Lincoln with his second wife, Elizabeth, until his death because "it reminded me of my hometown" (East Orange, N.J.).

One of his last appearances was in Las Vegas in October 1982, shortly before he suffered a stroke.

It was a benefit for the National Council on Alcoholism, which MacRae adopted as a favored charity after his own recovery.

He referred to the occasion as "our third annual Follies Berserk" but on a more serious note reflected how "you hit bottom, then you make up your mind. I'm sober 23 months now."

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