Rip Bruce Bennet aka Herman Brix.
Obituary
Bruce Bennett
Athlete chosen by the author to play Tarzan
Ronald Bergan
Tuesday April 17, 2007
The Guardian
Bruce Bennett, who has died aged 100, was, as Herman Brix, an Olympic shot-putter and screen Tarzan, and, as Bennett, he was a stolid, lanky supporting actor of the 1940s and 1950s.
Born in Tacoma, Washington, Brix was the son of the owner of a couple of logging camps and the young Herman built up his physique carrying logs. Seven years after winning a shot put silver medal at the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics , the 6ft 2in Brix was picked by Edgar Rice Burroughs to star in the author's The New Adventures of Tarzan.
But MGM, whose own Tarzan series starred another Olympic champ, swimmer Johnny Weissmuller, blocked it out of most theatres and the Brix film, while it was the only talking picture until the 1960s to present the character accurately as a sophisticated polyglot English nobleman, also featured pathetic battles with stuffed lions, and lifeless acting.
Brix had already appeared as Hercules, a college rower, in the Jimmy Durante comedy Student Tour (1935), and went on to become the hero of cherishable 12-episode kiddie matinee serials in which wooden acting hardly mattered. In Shadow of Chinatown (1936), Brix battled mad Oriental scientist Bela Lugosi; in Hawk of the Wilderness (1938), he was a "white savage" reared by natives who saves his people from a witchdoctor; in The Fighting Devil Dogs (1938) he was a marine tracking down a master criminal, and in Daredevils of the Red Circle (1939), he was a circus performer hunting a dangerous lunatic.
He then took acting lessons, changed his name to Bruce Bennett, signed with Columbia and returned to the screen in 1940 in a suit and hat. That year he made four B pictures - two with Boris Karloff, The Man With Nine Lives and Before I Hang - and as the lead in The Secret Seven, he was a former crook who forms a secret society of forensic scientists. Bennett was the handsome but dour hero of further competent B pictures, including three movies in which he tracked down Nazi agents: Underground Agent and Sabotage Squad (both 1942), and U-Boat Prisoner (1944). In 1945, Bennett moved on to Warner Bros where he appeared in more prestigious films in good supporting roles.
Bennett brought dignity to the role of Joan Crawford's first husband in Mildred Pierce (1945), restraining himself from punching his successor, no-good playboy Zachary Scott. There followed three pictures in which he lent dullish support to three of Warners other "sacred monsters": Bette Davis in A Stolen Life (1946), Ida Lupino in The Man I Love (1947) and Ann Sheridan in Nora Prentiss (1947). He was again lumbered with thankless "other man" roles in Dark Passage (1947), starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, and in the western Silver River (1948) where Errol Flynn in love with Bennett's wife (Ann Sheridan), sends him out on a fatal mission. But Bennett was good as a doggerel-spouting robber in Raoul Walsh's Cheyenne (1947), and as the wandering Texan prospector in John Huston's The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948).
Freelancing during the next decade, he was Joan Crawford's lawyer in Sudden Fear (1952), warning her against her husband Jack Palance, and, looking elegant in the saddle featured in westerns like The Younger Brothers (1949), The Last Outpost (1951), where he played Ronald Reagan's brother, and Three Violent People (1957).
Towards the end of his film career Bennett returned to the kind of stories that Herman Brix had handled in the 1930s. In The Alligator People (1959), he portrayed a doctor who operates on scaly-skinned Lon Chaney Jr, cutting off the reptile man's tail to get him into a pair of trousers. Bennett then co-wrote The Fiend of Dope Island (1961), starring as a dictatorial self-proclaimed baron of a Caribbean island, living off blackmarket arms and marijuana. After retiring from films, Bennett became a sales manager of a vending machine company, and went into real estate.
Bennett's wife died in 2000. He is survived by two children.
¬? Bruce Bennett (Herman Brix), film actor, born May 19 1906; died February 24 2007