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Charles John Holt, III

Also Known As: "Tim Holt"
Birthdate:
Death: 1973 (53-54)
Immediate Family:

Son of Jack Holt and Margaret Helen WOOD
Brother of Private; Private and Jennifer Holt

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Tim Holt

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Holt

Tim Holt (February 5, 1919 – February 15, 1973) was an American film actor best known for his youthful leading roles in Western films and his co-starring role opposite Humphrey Bogart in the 1948 film The Treasure of the Sierra Madre.

Early life

Charles John Holt III was born February 5, 1919 in Beverly Hills, California, the son of actor Jack Holt and Margaret Woods. During his early years, he accompanied his father on location, even appearing in an early silent film. Holt was educated at Culver Military Academy in Culver, Indiana, graduating in 1936. Immediately afterward, he went to work in the Hollywood film business.

Acting career

Holt was signed to a contract by Walter Wanger in January 1937. Wanger gave him a small role in I Met My Love Again and was going to use him in Blockade, but that film was postponed. In between he portrayed Anne Shirley's suitor in Stella Dallas (1937) for Sam Goldwyn, attracting the attention of RKO. They cast him in the Western The Renegade Ranger supporting George O'Brien, who was their leading star of B-westerns. RKO tried him again in The Law West of Tombstone. Wanger then used Holt in the role of young Lieutenant Blanchard in the 1939 classic Stagecoach, then his contract expired. However RKO signed Holt to a seven year contract in December 1938.

RKO

Holt soon became a favorite with RKO management, starring opposite Ginger Rogers and playing important roles in films such as The Girl and the Gambler and Swiss Family Robinson. Although he initially appeared in a number of different genres, he was particularly effective in Westerns and RKO decided to star him in a series of low budget B-westerns. These proved highly popular and Holt wound up making 46 of them for the studio in all. Holt usually played a cowboy who had one or two friends, who occasionally sang. His most frequent director was Lesley Selander.

Holt would occasionally make other movies. His best known one was the lead in Orson Welles's The Magnificent Ambersons (1942). He also starred as a Nazi in Hitler's Children (1943), which was one of RKO's most profitable films during the war.

Holt became a decorated combat veteran of World War II, flying in the Pacific Theatre with the United States Army Air Forces as a B-29 bombardier. He was wounded over Tokyo on the last day of the war and was awarded a purple heart.>

Postwar

Following the war, Holt returned to films, appearing as Virgil Earp to Henry Fonda's Wyatt Earp in the John Ford western My Darling Clementine (1946).

Holt was next cast in the role that he is probably best remembered for (in a film in which his father also appeared in a small part)—that of Bob Curtin to Humphrey Bogart's Fred C. Dobbs in John Huston's The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948).

Before the film was released, Holt did another four westerns and afterward made two dozen more up until 1952, when television eroded the B-western market.

Later career

Holt was then absent from the screen for five years until he starred in a less-than-successful horror film, The Monster That Challenged the World, in 1957. Over the next 16 years, he appeared in only two more motion pictures. However he kept busy managing theatres and making personal appearances. He worked as a builder, produced rodeos, staged and performed Western music jamborees, and worked as an advertising manager for a radio station.

Personal life

Holt was married three times and had four children: three sons (one to his first marriage), and a daughter.

Tim Holt died from bone cancer on February 15, 1973 in Shawnee, Oklahoma, where he had been managing a radio station. He was interred in the Memory Lane Cemetery in Harrah, Oklahoma. Tim Holt Drive in Harrah, where he and his wife had lived, was subsequently named in his honor.

Legacy

Robert Mott of the Washington Post later said of Holt:

Holt was the hero, strong and silent and always more comfortable in the presence of boots and saddles, horses and he-men, than with the heroine – though he almost invariably ended up marrying her... Like many sons of famous entertainers, Tim Holt never achieved the stature of his father, and projected a bland image in contrast with the elder Holt's strong characterization.

In 1991, Tim Holt was inducted posthumously into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

Filmography

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_Holt#Filmography

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Tim Holt's Timeline

1919
1919
1973
1973
Age 54