Please click
to Digg our site.in recognition of twenty-five years of staunch
support for the Republican Party, the Conservative Actor Ronald Reagan was
invited to the White House by the fortieth President of the United States,
James M. Stewart.
Closely associated with organized labour for much of his entertainment
career, Reagan switched his political affiliation after being fired for
criticizing the Tennessee Valley Authority for "big government". His
employers considered the comments were inappropriate from a company
spokesman given that General Electric had contracts worth millions of
dollars with the Authority.
And so a promising career in politics that had begun as president of the
Screen Actors Guild, and later developed as G.E. spokesman was finished,
and at age fifty, a return to the screen appeared wildy improbable. Yet,
cast as the villain of the 1964 movie "The Killers", he delivered a
memorable performance
1, and Reagan was able to launch the
second, and infinitely more rewarding phase of his acting career.
"Stewart
had a close relationship with Nixon, and supported him unreservedly.
Opposed as I am to both of their views, I think Stewart would have been a
better president than Reagan... " - reader's commentIf the
evergreen Ronald Reagan was successfully adjusting to late middle age
during the mid sixties, then surely Jimmy Stewart knew his best days in
acting were well and truly over by then (at age fifty he insisted on
playing the part of twenty-five year old Charles Lindburgh). Yet his
hesitant screen persona constrasted sharply with his radical right wing
views.
In fact in 1947, a heated political argument with his friend Henry
Fonda escalated into a fist fight, briefly revealing the concealed inner
steel that enabled him to gain high rank in the Second World War. Running
for Governor of California in 1966, his friend John Wayne declared his
support in a
political advert "I could speak of many in my profession who have
helped to mould the destiny of this nation. Time limits me to a few. In
World War II, Colonel James Stewart (pictured, right) led 900 heavy
bombers over Berlin. Does anyone think that was because he's a fine actor?
I'd say it was because Jimmy was acting for real2".
With Reagan back in Hollywood and still laying into big government, Jimmy
Stewart was reverting to the character of the Air Force Colonel. A "hawk"
on the Vietnam War he shocked an interviewer by saying that he "absolutely
hated" students who dodged the draft, condemning them as "cowards".
Finding a soul mate in President Nixon, Stewart was sent on a number of
overseas diplomatic missions in the late sixties and early seventies.
Declining to run for a third term as Governor in 1975, Stewart dedicated
his time to winning the real Academy Award, the ultimate acting role of
President. Ironically he achieved this goal in a close fought election in
1980 against another Jimmy, and surely President Carter was a man almost
as hesitant and awkward as one of his own acting parts.