He played the exact kind of loveable priest and stage Irish character that fit the sentimentality of the times and also was what organizations like the Legion of Decency wanted to see.
In the light of all the sexual abuse scandals that have come to light in recent years, the mythological figure of Fitzgerald is amusing but today seems sort of embarrassing.
Barry Fitzgerald
Born William Joseph Shields on
March 10, 1888
in Dublin, Ireland
Died
Jan. 4, 1961
in Dublin, Ireland
Barry Fitzgerald turned
to acting at the age of 41, when he quit a 20-year career as a civil
servant in Dublin. He made his first hit in London with the Abbey
Players' presentation of Sean O'Casey's "The Silver Tassie."
He started his film success in 1937 when John Ford summoned him to Hollywood for a part in O'Casey's "The Plough and the Stars." His costarring role as a priest with Bing Crosby in 1944's "Going My Way" won him a supporting actor Oscar. His many other hits included "Dawn Patrol," "The Long Voyage Home," "How Green Was My Valley," "None But the Lonely Heart," "The Naked City" and "The Quiet Man." His last big film was "The Catered Affair," a 1956 movie with Debbie Reynolds.
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