Child Actor Success Stories: The Comeback Kids

Guest contributor Victoria Balloon writes:

Jackie Coogan Childhood StarPeople have always been enthralled by showbiz talent in the very young, and movies are the ultimate showcase for young entertainers. Unfortunately, they are also a way for parents with unfulfilled ambitions to live vicariously through their children, who are easy to manipulate.

There’s no end to the tales of children who were exploited or who, after a few years in film, faded into an adulthood that was a pitiful effort to relive past glories. But there are those who had early success and faced the difficulties of a failing Hollywood career to come back for a second or even third act, either as actors, advocates, or by completely reinventing themselves.

Jackie Coogan was an actor who began his career in both vaudeville and silent films. He was “discovered” by Charlie Chaplin, who was delighted by Coogan’s uncanny ability to mimic people. Coogan’s most memorable early role is as Charlie Chaplin’s plucky pal in The Kid (1921), but Coogan and Chaplin also appeared together in A Day’s Pleasure (1919) and Nice and Friendly (1922).

A generation before Shirley Temple, Coogan’s name and likeness were attached to candies, trading cards, dolls, and figurines. In 1923 he was one of the highest paid actors in Hollywood, but by 1927 at the age of 13, Jackie Coogan had already peaked.

In 1935 Coogan was in an auto accident which killed his father, friend and child actor Junior Durkin, producer/director Robert J. Horner, and a local ranch hand. Coogan survived only because he was able to jump from the rumble seat before the car went over the cliff. Coogan’s mother married his agent, Arthur Bernstein.

In 1937 Coogan married starlet Betty Grable. In 1938 when Coogan wanted the money he had made from his childhood films, Bernstein refused, later stating publicly that “Jackie has had all that he is entitled to and more. He isn’t entitled to that money. It belongs to us.” Coogan filed suit for the approximately $4 million he had earned but was only ever awarded $125,000.

However, the lawsuit caused sufficient public outcry that other parents of Hollywood stars rushed to make provisions for their children, and eventually resulted in the creation of the California Child Actor’s Bill, sometimes known as the The Coogan Act.

Coogan and Grable divorced in 1940, and during World War II Coogan served in the China-Burma-India Theater as an Army transport glider pilot. He was absent from films for almost 10 years; when he returned, his roles were usually bit parts and bad guys.

It was in television that he began to find work: appearances on The Red Skelton Show (1957-70), as Stoney Crockett in Cowboy G-Men (1952-53), as Sgt. Barnes in McKeever and the Colonel (1962-63), and most notably as Uncle Fester in The Addams Family (1964-66). After The Addams Family, Coogan never lacked for work.

Beginning in 1922 Hal Roach’s Our Gang series of shorts (also known as The Little Rascals) was a major showcase for child actors and several of the players made the transition from silent films to talkies. Some did well:

Tommy Bond worked on the Our Gang series from 1931-34 before going back to school. He did periodic roles and voice work for Warner Bros under director Tex Avery; his most remembered role is the speaking voice of “Owl Jolson” in the 1936 Merrie Melodies cartoon, I Love to Singa.

He returned to Our Gang as Butch in 1936 and worked on the series until 1940. In later years he appeared in several episodes of The Little Peppers serials and was the first actor to play cub-reporter Jimmy Olsen in the Superman serials, but ultimately he found his place behind the cameras in directing and production during the 1960s and 70s.

Our Gang Alum Jackie Cooper

Our Gang Alum Jackie Cooper

Jackie Cooper probably had the longest acting career of the Our Gang alumni. He made only 13 of the shorts, the most popular revolving around his crush on teacher Miss Crabtree, played by June Marlowe. Producer Hal Roach loaned him to Paramount Studios to star in Skippy (1931), and Cooper earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor at age of nine.

In 1931 Hal Roach sold Cooper’s contract to MGM because he believed Cooper would have more success in feature films, and indeed he did.

Some of Cooper’s most memorable roles were starring opposite Wallace Beery, and the two were together for a total of five films including The Champ (1931) and Treasure Island (1934).

But as Cooper aged there were fewer and fewer well-written roles. During World War II he served in the United States Navy, holding the rank of Captain. Though he worked after the war as an actor, he quickly recognized that his future lay behind the camera.

Even as he starred in such television series as The People’s Choice (1955-58) and Hennesey (1961-62), he also served as the producer and director on several episodes of each.

He served as the vice president of program development for Columbia Pictures’ TV division. By the 1970s his primary career was directing; Cagney & Lacey, Jake and the Fatman, Magnum P.I., The Rockford Files and Mary Tyler Moore are but a few of the series he worked on.

Cooper earned two Emmy Awards for directing — one for M*A*S*H and one for The White Shadow. His most notable acting role from his later career is as Perry White in all four of the Superman movies starring Christopher Reeve.

Despite what many would consider a smooth transition from being a child actor to an adult, in the later part of his career as an actor and a director, Cooper disliked working with children and had difficult memories of his acting childhood. Of his three children he said, “No way I’d let them get near the business.”

Mickey Rooney initially went to Hollywood in 1924 for a part in the Our Gang series, but missed out on a role. As Joe Yule, Jr. (his given name) Rooney was already a veteran actor of vaudeville, but his mother hoped to get him into film. Her perseverance paid off in 1927 when Rooney was cast in a now almost forgotten series of films based on comic strip character Mickey McGuire, the town bully from Toonerville Folks.

From the same time period as Our Gang and also featuring a band of rag-tag children, the Mickey McGuire shorts catapulted Mickey Rooney to fame. Rooney was so identified with the role that his mother changed his name to Mickey McGuire until Fontaine Fox, the cartoonist who created the Toonerville Folks strip, sued. Thus Joe Yule, Jr. became Mickey McGuire became Mickey Rooney. “Rooney sounded Irish,” his mother said.

Rooney’s popularity as a child actor peaked with the Andy Hardy series and his “backyard musical” song and dance films with Judy Garland.

Boys Town Starring Mickey Rooney

Boys Town Starring Mickey Rooney

The American public could not get enough of Rooney and Garland’s all-American charm, and for the release of 1939’s Babes in Arms, the two went on a cross-country promotional tour. When Rooney and Garland arrived in New York City, Grand Central Station was mobbed. The pair eventually made nine films together, six of them between 1938-1941.

Mickey Rooney’s career was at an all-time high in 1938-40 when the Motion Picture Herald poll voted him the most popular actor two years running, ahead of such stars as Clark Gable and Spencer Tracy. During this time Rooney made a total of 18 films, including his dramatic role in Boys Town with Spencer Tracy.

During World War II Rooney served for 21 months in the Army with the Armed Forces Network. After the war, due to the lack of roles, the departure of Louis B. Mayer from MGM, and personal problems, his career went into a slump. The work was steady, but the roles weren’t particularly good. Nevertheless, there were some notable films: The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954), Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962), and (1963). Notable for its controversy was Rooney’s portrayal of the buck-toothed Mr. Yunioshi in Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961).

It was his role as retired jockey Henry Dailey in The Black Stallion (1979) and his appearance with Ann Miller in the 1979 Broadway production of the burlesque hit Sugar Babies that bolstered his career and laid the foundation for a successful third act.

Now the younger generation knows Mickey Rooney as the quintessential voice of Santa in Rankin and Bass Christmas classics such as Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town (1970) and The Year Without a Santa Claus (1974) as well as security guard Gus from A Night at the Museum (2006). With the longest career of any actor and perhaps the oldest one alive to have made the transition from silents to sound, Rooney has 5 movies currently filming or in post-production as of this writing.

While researching images for this article, we ran across this industry ad featuring Jackie Cooper and Mickey Rooney on eBay. There were six copies offered for sale on eBay, but the text wasn’t legible and no further info is provided in the listing. So we have no idea when this photo was taken, who produced it and for what purpose. Should you have any information on this ad, please leave a comment and share it with us.

More Child Actor Success Stories can be found at Matinee At The Bijou blogspot.

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In 1989, TV’s Entertainment Tonight did a segment on what became of the child actors who achieved fame as members of Hal Roach’s classic Our Gang shorts. You can watch it here:

Victoria Balloon is a writer, classic film enthusiast, and pop-culture pundit. In addition to knitting small appliances, Victoria is currently involved in helping to bring back the Matinee At The Bijou TV series in an HD sequel to be hosted by Debbie Reynolds.