2. William DeWolf Hopper Jr. was born in 1915 to actors DeWolf and Hedda Hopper. His father became a theatre producer and his mother became a famous Hollywood gossip columnist. For William's film roles in the 1930s and 1940s, he was listed as DeWolf Hopper--if he got a credit at all.
3. In her 1962 book The Whole Truth and Nothing But, Hedda Hopper wrote about her son: "When he went off to war, he'd already attained stature as an actor. On his return--with a medal for valor which I've never seen--not one soul in the motion picture industry offered him a job. Hell would have frozen over before I'd have asked anyone for help for a member of my family. So Bill went to work selling automobiles for "Madman" Muntz. One day he woke up to the fact that he was an actor, got himself a part with Bill Wellman in The High and the Mighty--and asked Wellman not to tell anybody who his mother was."
5. William Hopper and Raymond Burr each acted in films opposite Natalie Wood prior to Perry Mason. Hopper played Natalie Wood's father in Rebel Without a Cause (1955). Burr starred as a psychopath who held Wood's character captive in A Cry in the Night (1956).
With Patty McCormick in The Bad Seed. |
7. William Hopper retired from acting after Perry Mason ended its run--though he had a small unbilled part as a judge in Myra Breckinridge (1970). He died of pneumonia after experiencing a stroke in 1970; he was 55. He was survived by his second wife Jeanette Ward and daughter Joan from his first marriage.
Thank you for this article. Perry fans salute you.
ReplyDeleteProducer Arthur Marks on his friend, William Hopper: "He was a big kid. He was a wonderful, wonderful man. I loved him dearly."
I've come to realize lately how many movies he was in. I see him and yell, There's Paul!
ReplyDelete"The Bad Seed"
DeleteUhhh...
ReplyDeleteThat book that Hedda Hopper wrote, The Whole Truth And Nothing But, came out in 1962, four years before her death -
- as opposed to 2017, or fifty-one years after her death (which would have been a helluva trick ...)
I fixed that typo. Thanks, Mike.
DeleteVery interesting! I always enjoy seeing William Hopper, whether it be in a film or as Paul Drake. He could have made a good Perry, but then it makes one wonder who would have been cast as Paul in his place.
ReplyDeleteWilliam Hopper would have been a terrific Perry Mason, but – as others have pointed out – who would be Paul Drake?
ReplyDeleteI seen the screen test and he was adequate as Perry but nobody could do that role more justice than Raymond Burr. Hopper was th4 only Drake that's for sure like Burr and Hale it's unfathomable seeing anyone else in his role. Casting magic like that is rare as heck now.
DeleteI ABSOLUTELY love Perry Mason. Every one of these actors brought pure magic to their characters, to see anyone else replace them is unimaginable, pure and true Hollywood magic in it's purest sense. I grew up watching Perry Mason and fell in love law.
ReplyDeleteI'm a true fan of Perry Mason and am in love with Paul 💓
ReplyDeleteI watch now on MeTv every week night
What happened to his eye? Why does no one know?
ReplyDeleteI just watched an episode earlier today from 1961 and thought Hopper looked incredibly puffy. His lids were heavy and hooded, despite all the pancake makeup.
ReplyDeleteI was shocked to learn he was only 46 at the time. Looked more like 60. It's not surprising he died 9 years later, no doubt from that heavy drinking he did after the war, not to mention the constant smoking.
Kind of fascinating when you realize the entire cast smoked. Talman and Hopper died very young, while Burr and Hale lived long lives -- especially Hale...