John Hodiak


John Hodiak was an American actor who worked in radio, stage and film.

Early life

Hodiak was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the son of Walter Hodiak and Anna Pogorzelec. He was of Ukrainian and Polish descent. Hodiak grew up in Hamtramck, Michigan.

Acting career

Hodiak had his first theatrical experience at age 11, acting in Ukrainian and Russian plays at the Ukrainian Catholic Church. From the moment he first appeared on the stage, he resolved to become an actor. Hodiak was not even swayed when as a third baseman on his local high school baseball team, he was offered a contract with a St. Louis Cardinals farm club. He turned the offer down.

Radio

When Hodiak first tried out for a radio acting job, he was turned down because of his accent. He became a caddie at a Detroit golf course, then worked at a Chevrolet automobile factory – and practiced his diction. When he conquered the diction hurdle, he became a radio actor and moved to Chicago. There Hodiak created the role of the comic strip character Li'l Abner on radio.
Hodiak also had the role of McCullough in the radio soap opera Girl Alone.

Hollywood

Hodiak arrived in Hollywood in 1942 and signed a motion picture contract with MGM. He refused to change his name, saying, "I like my name. It sounds like I look."
Hodiak was cast in a few small parts at MGM, including A Stranger in Town, I Dood It and Swing Shift Maisie.

Stardom

Hodiak then caught the eye of director Alfred Hitchcock and, on loan to 20th Century Fox, was featured in Lifeboat opposite Tallulah Bankhead.
MGM was impressed and cast him in the third lead in Song of Russia supporting Robert Taylor and Susan Peters. He was Ann Sothern's love interest in Maisie Goes to Reno and competed with James Craig for Lana Turner in Marriage Is a Private Affair.
20th Century Fox borrowed Hodiak again to play the title role in Sunday Dinner for a Soldier, opposite Anne Baxter whom he married in real life. Fox kept him on to play Maj. Joppolo in A Bell for Adano opposite Gene Tierney.
Back at MGM, Hodiak was in The Harvey Girls, second billed as Judy Garland's love interest.
Fox gave him his first proper star part in Somewhere in the Night, directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz. Hodiak played opposite Lucille Ball in MGM's Two Smart People, which lost money. So too did the thriller The Arnelo Affair.

Supporting actor

Hodiak went to Paramount for Desert Fury, playing third lead to Burt Lancaster and Lizabeth Scott. He starred in Love from a Stranger for Eagle Lion, then supported Lana Turner and Clark Gable in Homecoming. He supported Gable again in Command Decision. The two Gable films were hits but Hodiak was voted "box office poison" by exhibitors at the end of 1948.
Hodiak was down the cast list for The Bribe. He was second billed in MGM's war film Battleground a huge success. Also popular was Malaya where Hodiak supported James Stewart and Spencer Tracy.
Hodiak was a love rival for Robert Taylor in Ambush, a popular Western. MGM gave him another lead role, co-starring with Hedy Lamarr in A Lady Without Passport, but it lost money. He was third billed in The Miniver Story, the flop sequel to Mrs. Miniver, and fourth lead in Night into Morning, an unsuccessful comedy.
Hodiak supported Spencer Tracy in The People Against O'Hara and Clark Gable in Across the Wide Missouri. He was second billed to Walter Pidgeon in The Sellout.

Broadway and B movies

In 1952, Hodiak went to New York City and made his Broadway debut in The Chase by Horton Foote and directed by José Ferrer. The play was a failure, but its star received fantastic critical notices.
Hodiak went over to Allied Artists to star in a low budget Korean War film, Battle Zone. At Columbia he starred in two Westerns, Ambush at Tomahawk Gap and Conquest of Cochise and a Korean War film, Mission Over Korea. He did another Korean War film for Allied Artists, Dragonfly Squadron.
He then originated the role of Lieutenant Maryk in Paul Gregory's production of the play The Caine Mutiny Court Martial by Herman Wouk adapted from his novel The Caine Mutiny. The play – also starring Henry Fonda and Lloyd Nolan – ran for two years and Hodiak's portrayal brought him nationwide acclaim.
When the show closed after its U.S. tour, Hodiak began work on Trial at MGM, billed fourth as the prosecuting attorney. When it wrapped, he played Major Ward Thomas in On the Threshold of Space at 20th Century Fox.

Personal life

Hodiak and actress Anne Baxter married on July 7, 1946, and divorced on January 27, 1953. They had one daughter, Katrina Hodiak, who became an actress.

Death

At age 41, Hodiak suffered a fatal heart attack at his parents' home in Tarzana, California. He was acting in On the Threshold of Space; it was later decided that his performance was far enough along to release the movie. He is interred in Block 303, Crypt D-1, of the main mausoleum at Calvary Cemetery, East Los Angeles.
He left an estate of $25,000.

Legacy

Hodiak has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6101 Hollywood Boulevard, for his work in radio.

Filmography

A few of Hodiak's many radio appearances:
YearProgramEpisode/source
1948Hallmark Playhouse"The Desert Shall Rejoice"
1952Suspense"The Big Heist"
1953Suspense"Gold of the Adomar"
1953Suspense"The Mountain"