Beau James: Inside Jim Garner’s New Autobiography

James GarnerSmooth-talking and amiable as they come, you’d think James Garner pretty much made his living playing himself on the big and small screen. But one of the revelations of The Garner Files, the new autobiography written by the actor with Jon Winokur, is that Garner is not who he appears to be.  At least, not all the time.

In fact, Garner calls himself a “curmudgeon,” then sets out to prove himself worthy of this description that he has given himself throughout The Garner Files. He does a nice job making his case, reveling in laying forth his no-holds-barred philosophies on show business, racing, golf, politics, people he’s worked with and, well, life.

Born James Bumgarner in  1928 in storm-heavy  Norman, Oklahoma, Garner escaped a fractured early life—his part Cherokee Indian mother dying when he was four, physical abuse from his stepmother, apathy leading to his becoming a high school dropout—to look for guidance by joining the Merchant Marines, then winning two Purple Hearts while fighting in the Korean War. A move to Los Angeles, a non-speaking part in a stage production of The Caine Mutiny Court Martial, and some swimsuit modeling helped get into the entertainment business.

Garner pulls no punches, particularly when it comes to his travails in front of the camera and behind-the-scenes in show biz. Maverick, he insists, was a landmark show that tweaked the typical western formula with humor. While Garner loved playing the part of the black-clad gambler, he hated working for Warner Brothers, who overworked and underpaid him, then hired Jack Kelly to play his brother and gave the performer a better contract.  This action persuaded him to take the studio to court to get out of his deal.

Of the popular TV show The Rockford Files, a program that played with the conventions of the detective genre, Garner loved the role of Jim Rockford, his co-star Noah Beery, Jr. and co-creator-writer Stephen J. Cannell. Eventually, however, the actor had it out twice with Universal Studios over monies owed for the show’s profits and syndication fees.

The actor, who has remained married to Lois Clarke since 1956 when they met at an Adlai Stevenson presidential campaign rally, is a lifelong Democrat. He was active in the Civil Rights Movement during the 1960s and is a staunch environmentalist. He writes vividly about joining Marlon Brando, Paul Newman , Joanne Woodward, Ruby Dee, Ossie Davis, Tony Curtis, Burt Lancaster and others during 1963’s March on Washington in which Martin Luther King gave his “I Have a Dream Speech.”  In fact, Garner says, he sat three rows away from King.

Garner’s TV career, which also includes stints in Nichols, Bret Maverick, 8 Simple Rules, such TV movies as My Name is Bill W, The Glitter Dome, Heartsounds and Breathing Lessons, and as a pitchman for Polaroid and the beef industry, brought him steady work and good money. He writes that he never had a problem mixing TV with film work, and never felt the need to take do “act-ing” (as he calls it) in the theater.

Of his movie roles, Garner is most proud of his parts in Sayonara, The Great Escape, The Americanization of Emily, Grand Prix (in which Garner, a seasoned racer, did his own driving), Support Your Local Sheriff, Murphy’s Romance and The Notebook, a film he calls “a magnificent love story.”  His insights into the making of all of these films are filled with anecdotal bon mots about Brando, McQueen and director John Sturges, Julie Andrews and writer Paddy Chayefsky, director John Frankenheimer, Joan Hackett and Jack Elam, director Martin Ritt and the son-mother tandem of director Nick Cassavetes and Gena Rowlands, respectively.

As for the films Garner shows least affection for, there’s Up Periscope, Mister Buddwing, How Sweet It Is, A Man Called Sledge, The Fan and the 1992 Eddie Murphy comedy The Distinguished Gentleman, of which Garner notes “I can’t remember a thing about this picture. I can live with that.”

If The Garner Files proves anything, it is that Garner stays true to his promise made at the beginning of the book and does not mince words. "Something funny happens when you get older," he writes.  "You don't hold back so much."

So, he has little positive to say about Jack Warner, Ronald Reagan or Charlton Heston. He popped Anthony Franciosca while making 1966’s A Man Could Get Killed because Francisoca was really hitting stuntmen. Fellow racing enthusiast Steve McQueen was a friend, but also a piece of work (Garner says he actually did some stunt driving in Sam Peckinpah’s  The Getaway with the actor and informs us that McQueen did not, in fact, do the famous motorcycle  stunt in The Great Escape).

But Garner is not easy on himself, either. In The Garner Files, he reveals his years of addiction to nicotine (he even smoked after his open heart surgeries), his medical problems (doing your own stunts often takes its toll) , his separation from his wife, his brief use of cocaine, and the habitual marijuana intake which, he claims, helps his severe arthritis pain.

At 83 years old, Garner is a survivor, an example of what you get when you mix Old World values and Hollywood success without the B.S.
The actor’s mantra is identified towards the end of his breezy, always entertaining and sometimes surprising biography.
“Deep down, curmudgeons are good people. They try to do the right thing. They have a sense of humor and a sense of proportion. They speak their mind and devil take the hindmost. They have principles and they don’t run from a fight.

“Curmudgeons know that some things are worth fighting for, that we all need boundaries that we’re ready to defend no matter what. If you don’t make an enemy or two along the way, you’re not doing it right.”

Stated like a true Maverick.

For further information on The Garner Files, go to www.thegarnerfiles.com

 
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  • marshall

    "The Americanization Of Emily" isn't just James Garner's best film. It's one of the best black comedies ever made. There's just one thing... How do you make an anti war film set in WWII? I mean, stopping Hitler was the right thing to do. This means, not only is war occasionally unavoidable, it could actually be downright necessary and morally correct. Certainly, this was true regarding American involvement in WWII. "The Americanization Of Emily" badly stumbled with its message that war is never the answer! That's just nonsense!

  • eddie quillen

    Marshall, IMHO, I'm not quite sure if the message of "Emily" is that war is never the answer, and Mr. Garner seems to address this in his book. The point of the movie, and Mr. Garner's interpretation of it (Garner was wounded twice as an infantryman in Korea and considers himself lucky to have survived his circumstance), really is more about the glorification of war and the myths we build around those who fight them; rather than dealing with the fear or pain war causes, even a just war like WWII, ultimately leads to more war.

    Anyway, Mr. Garner's book is a very interesting read, with him making no apologies for who he is. He is a man who, admittedly, abhors bullies, and has the moxie, showbiz power and toughness to back it up, which, to me, at times made him appear like a bit of a bully himself, although that could very well be a result of just how critical of himself, as a "curmudgeon," he can be. The book ends with a bunch of others, including people like Carol Burnett, writing anecdotes about him, and one of the things taken from that chapter is just how hard on himself Mr. Garner is in his own autobiography.

    My one criticism of the book is that it is a little choppy at times, with sometimes big jumps between chapters, skipping any mention of many of his films. He does, however, end the book with his filmography, and usually a comment or two regarding the making of each film.

  • Kai Ferano

    I was never a devoted James Garner fan, but I'll never forget nor stop appreciating his role as Audrey Hepburn's fiance in the magnificent movie, "The Children's Hour."

  • Ken

    I really enjoyed his portayal of Wyatt Earp in "Sunset", among a lot of other things from Maverick to Rockford Files and beyond. Seemingly a great guy and always a great actor.

  • Nick

    I thought he was really good in "The Children's Hour".

  • Gord

    I liked Garner's take on Philip Marlowe in the MGM film "Marlowe" as well as his work on "The Rockford Files", two among many of his great accomplishments.

  • joan m. slotnick

    To me, no matter what James Garner thinks of himself, he is and always will be one of my favorites Bret Maverick to the loving husband in The Notebook. Loved him in Victor/Victoria. He can be serious or comedic or just a lover. I will take him whatever he does.

  • DKW

    His affable, laid-back style was much MORE effective and suited for TV; But he DID provide the perfect support in "The Great Escape". And the 3 Western comedies he did, the "Support" movies and "The Skin Game", are PRICELESS!!

  • Don Hall

    As someone who had the pleasure of meeting Jim I can say he is fun to be around with a terrific sense of humor. I've enjoyed Jim in everything he's ever done whether I liked the film or not.
    As an actor he is always outstanding and the best with dialogue EVER.

  • Grace

    Ah...he's one of my "boyfriends" - probably my favorite!! :-)

  • Jack

    Looking forward to the book. Garner was one of my first TV heroes (more of an anti-hero, actually) when I discovered MAVERICK. Sundays against Ed Sullivan and did well against Sullivan. Maverick made parodies of Bonanza and Gunsmoke, to chagrin of James Arness.

  • frank pienkosky

    could never understand why he was so hostile towards me on "BREATHING LESSONS"....so I stole his script!.....[now we're even Jimbo!]

  • Marshall

    Don't forget James Garner's role in the 1963 comedy "The Thrill of it All". He played Doris Day's husband Dr. Gerald Boyer.

  • Pete

    Met Mr. Garner in Vietnam '66-'67, in a little place Called Sadec, Mekong Delta. He stepped off a huey one day, went from hootch to hootch just shooting the breeze. We really admired him and others who came so far to bring us a bit of "back home".

  • Ginny

    Jim Garner is my all time favorite actor. Maverick started our great relationship and I have love seeing him in any thing that came after. He made me laugh and feel good so many times that I wish I could have met him in person.God bless you Jim and thank you for all the great hours of enjoyment.

  • John Stanaway

    It is facile to rate one war as necessary and another as obscene. We learned little from Vietnam or Iraq, and make obscene glorification of "fighting for freedom." The theme of Americanization of Emily holds water precisely because it portrays the absurdity of war even within the context of a morally upright cause. Garner was the perfect personality to portray Charlie Madison because he could breezily voice the absurdity of fighting for a noble cause (What's a tiger doing in a man's house, anyway?)

  • Char

    Can't wait to read his book. I love this man - one of my all-time favorites. Westerns, comedy, drama, he excelled in everything he was involved in. And let's be honest, he was and is soooo handsome.

  • Dennis

    He was really good in "Victor/Victoria" (1982) a very funny film with Julie Andrews, Robert Preston, Lesley Ann Warren, and Alex Karris. Directed by Blake Edwards. A "makes you feel good" comedy with great songs and music!

  • Blair Kramer

    Fighting for a noble cause is absurd...? Ummm... I'm sorry, but that view is absurd!

  • Lorraine

    I posted a comment somewhere on YouTube awhile back about loving Clint Eastwood and bracing myself for the day that screen god finally leaves us. On second thought maybe I really meant James Garner, one of a very few actors who could move seamlessly from light comedy to dark drama and back again while making it all look so damned easy. (And Clint will forgive me, I'm sure; he himself did a wonderful Turner Classic Movies tribute to JG, recalling a moment in the mid-sixties when he and every yank on the premises of a Paris movie theater stood up and cheered at the scene in "The Americanization of Emily" where Charlie, who'd had enough of Emily's high-handed lecturing about "American barbarism," told her off so succinctly that even she was impressed.)

    For years now every hot young actor coming down the pike is sooner or later hailed as the "new Redford," the "new McQueen," the "new Poitier," the "new Dean"... A "new James Garner"? Not a chance!

  • Mayka

    Mr. Garner is a great actor with terrific films such as The Children's Hour, The Great Scape, The Americanization of Emily, etc. but I also have to thank him for being part of one of the most funny and enjoyable films from the 80's: Victor/Victoria.

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