Richard Widmark
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Kissofdeath.jpg
Widmark first appeared in movies in 1947's Kiss of Death (in which he giggles as he pushes a wheelchair-bound old woman down a flight of stairs), which started his seven year contract with 20th Century Fox. He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for the performance. Widmark's character in this film was the inspiration for the song, "The Ballad of Tommy Udo" by the band Kaleidoscope.
Widmark became so popular so fast that it was only two years later that he had his handprints cast in cement at Grauman's Chinese Theater. In the intervening two years, he had appeared in Slattery's Hurricane, Down to the Sea in Ships, Yellow Sky, Road House and The Street with No Name.
Other starring roles include:
- Night and the City
- Panic in the Streets (1950)
- No Way Out (1950 film)
- Halls of Montezuma
- Destination Gobi
- Pickup on South Street
- Take the High Ground!
- The Cobweb
- Backlash
- Run for the Sun
- The Last Wagon
- Warlock
- The Alamo
- The Secret Ways
- Two Rode Together
- Judgment at Nuremberg
- How the West Was Won
- The Long Ships
- Cheyenne Autumn
- The Bedford Incident
- When the Legends Die
- Murder on the Orient Express
- Coma
- Madigan (Widmark also starred in the Madigan' television series, which was based on this movie).
For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Richard Widmark has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6800 Hollywood Blvd. In 2002, he was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.