Humphrey Bogart filmography
Humphrey Bogart (December 25, 1899 – January 14, 1957) was an American actor whose career spanned thirty-five years. He appeared in over seventy films. Bogart was nominated for two Academy Awards for Best Actor on the films, Casablanca and The Caine Mutiny. He also won the award for The African Queen (1951).
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1928 | The Dancing Town | Man in Doorway at Dance | Edmund Lawrence | Short film |
1930 | Broadway's Like That | Ruth's Fiancé | Arthur Hurley | Short film, soundtrack lost |
Up the River | Steve Jordan | John Ford | Film debut | |
A Devil with Women | Tom Standish | Irving Cummings | ||
1931 | Body and Soul | Jim Watson | Alfred Santell | |
Bad Sister | Valentine Corliss | Hobart Henley | ||
Women of All Nations | Stone | Raoul Walsh | Deleted scenes | |
A Holy Terror | Steve Nash | Irving Cummings | ||
1932 | Love Affair | Jim Leonard | Thornton Freeland | |
Big City Blues | Shep Adkins | Mervyn LeRoy | Uncredited | |
Three on a Match | Harve | Mervyn LeRoy | ||
1934 | Midnight | Garboni | Chester Erskine | aka Call It Murder |
1936 | The Petrified Forest | Duke Mantee | Archie Mayo | |
Bullets or Ballots | Nick "Bugs" Fenner | William Keighley | ||
Two Against the World | Sherry Scott | William C. McGann | aka One Fatal Hour | |
China Clipper | Hap Stuart | Ray Enright | ||
Isle of Fury | Valentine "Val" Stevens | Frank McDonald | ||
1937 | Black Legion | Frank Taylor | Archie Mayo | |
The Great O'Malley | John Phillips | William Dieterle | ||
Marked Woman | District Attorney David Graham | Lloyd Bacon | ||
San Quentin | Joe "Red" Kennedy | Lloyd Bacon | ||
Kid Galahad | Turkey Morgan | Michael Curtiz | ||
Dead End | Hugh "Baby Face" Martin | William Wyler | ||
Stand-In | Doug Quintain | Tay Garnett | ||
1938 | Swing Your Lady | Ed Hatch | Ray Enright | |
Crime School | Deputy Commissioner Mark Braden | Lewis Seiler | ||
Men Are Such Fools | Harry Galleon | Busby Berkeley | ||
Racket Busters | Pete "Czar" Martin | Lloyd Bacon | ||
The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse | "Rocks" Valentine | Anatole Litvak | ||
Angels with Dirty Faces | James Frazier | Michael Curtiz | ||
Swingtime in the Movies | Himself | Crane Wilbur | Uncredited | |
1939 | King of the Underworld | Joe Gurney | Lewis Seiler | |
The Oklahoma Kid | Whip McCord | Lloyd Bacon | ||
You Can't Get Away with Murder | Frank Wilson | Lewis Seiler | ||
Dark Victory | Michael O'Leary | Edmund Goulding | ||
The Roaring Twenties | George Hally | Raoul Walsh | ||
The Return of Doctor X | Dr. Maurice Xavier, aka Marshall Quesne | Vincent Sherman | ||
Invisible Stripes | Chuck Martin | Lloyd Bacon | ||
1940 | Virginia City | John Murrell | Michael Curtiz | |
It All Came True | Grasselli aka Chips Maguire | Lewis Seiler | ||
Brother Orchid | Jack Buck | Lloyd Bacon | ||
They Drive by Night | Paul Fabrini | Raoul Walsh | ||
1941 | High Sierra | Roy Earle | Raoul Walsh | |
The Wagons Roll at Night | Nick Coster | Ray Enright | ||
The Maltese Falcon | Sam Spade | John Huston | First film appearance of Sydney Greenstreet | |
1942 | All Through the Night | Alfred 'Gloves' Donahue | Vincent Sherman | |
The Big Shot | Joseph "Duke" Berne | Lewis Seiler | ||
Across the Pacific | Rick Leland | John Huston | ||
Casablanca | Rick Blaine | Michael Curtiz | Nominated for Best Actor Oscar | |
1943 | Action in the North Atlantic | Lt. Joe Rossi | Lloyd Bacon | |
Sahara | Sgt. Joe Gunn | Zoltan Korda | ||
Thank Your Lucky Stars | Himself | David Butler | ||
1944 | Passage to Marseille | Jean Matrac | Michael Curtiz | |
To Have and Have Not | Harry "Steve" Morgan | Howard Hawks | First film appearance of his wife Lauren Bacall | |
I Am an American[1] | Himself | Crane Wilbur | ||
1945 | Conflict | Richard Mason | Curtis Bernhardt | |
1946 | Two Guys From Milwaukee | Himself | David Butler | Uncredited |
The Big Sleep | Philip Marlowe | Howard Hawks | ||
Never Say Goodbye | Phil's Bogart impression | James V. Kern | Voice | |
1947 | Dead Reckoning | Capt. Warren "Rip" Murdock | John Cromwell | |
The Two Mrs. Carrolls | Geoffrey Carroll | Peter Godfrey | ||
Dark Passage | Vincent Parry | Delmer Daves | ||
1948 | Always Together | Himself | Frederick De Cordova | Uncredited |
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre | Fred C. Dobbs | John Huston | ||
Key Largo | Frank McCloud | John Huston | ||
1949 | Knock on Any Door | Andrew Morton | Nicholas Ray | |
Tokyo Joe | Joseph "Joe" Barrett | Stuart Heisler | ||
1950 | Chain Lightning | Lt. Col. Matthew "Matt" Brennan | Stuart Heisler | |
In a Lonely Place | Dixon Steele | Nicholas Ray | ||
1951 | The Enforcer | Dist. Atty. Martin Ferguson | Bretaigne Windust | |
Sirocco | Harry Smith | Curtis Bernhardt | ||
The African Queen | Charlie Allnut | John Huston | Won the Best Actor Oscar | |
1952 | Deadline – U.S.A. | Ed Hutcheson | Richard Brooks | |
Road to Bali | Himself | Hal Walker | ||
1953 | Battle Circus | Maj. Jed Webbe | Richard Brooks | |
Beat the Devil | Billy Dannreuther | John Huston | ||
1954 | The Caine Mutiny | Lt. Cmdr. Philip Francis Queeg | Edward Dmytryk | Nominated for Best Actor Oscar |
Sabrina | Linus Larrabee | Billy Wilder | ||
The Barefoot Contessa | Harry Dawes | Joseph L. Mankiewicz | ||
The Love Lottery | Cameo role at end as himself in British Ealing comedy | Charles Crichton | Uncredited | |
1955 | Producers' Showcase: The Petrified Forest | Duke Mantee | Delbert Mann | Reprised his role as Mantee for this live TV broadcast |
We're No Angels | Joseph | Michael Curtiz | ||
The Left Hand of God | James "Jim" Carmody | Edward Dmytryk | ||
The Desperate Hours | Glenn Griffin | William Wyler | ||
1956 | The Harder They Fall | Eddie Willis | Mark Robson | Final film role |
Box office ranking
At the height of his career, film exhibitors regularly voted Bogart among the most popular stars in the US (the Quigley Annual Poll) and the UK:
- 1943: 7th (US)
- 1944: 7th (US)
- 1945: 6th (US)
- 1946: 6th (US)
- 1947: 5th (US)
- 1948: 6th (US)
- 1949: 9th (US)
- 1952: 18th (US), 10th (UK)
- 1953: 24th (US)
- 1954: 12th (US)
- 1955: 8th (US), 10th (UK)
References
- The 16 minute film, I Am an American, was featured in American theaters as a short feature in connection with "I Am an American Day" (now called Constitution Day). I Am an American was produced by Gordon Hollingshead, also written by Crane Wilbur. Besides Bogart, it featured Gary Gray, Dick Haymes, Danny Kaye, Joan Leslie, Dennis Morgan, Knute Rockne, and Jay Silverheels. See: I Am An American at the TCM Movie Database and I Am an American at IMDb.
- McCarty, Clifford. (1990). The Complete Films of Humphrey Bogart. Secaucus, New Jersey: Citadel Press. ISBN 0-8065-0955-4.
- "Humphrey Bogart > Filmography". IMDb. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
- "Humphrey Bogart > Filmography". The New York Times. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.