Stars remember screen legend Dean
Friends and former co-stars of James Dean shared bittersweet memories of the late screen legend on what would have been his 74th birthday, in a tribute that begins a year-long celebration leading to his 75th.
Dean, whose fame skyrocketed following his starring role in Rebel Without A Cause, died in 1955 at just 24 when his Porsche Spyder collided with another car in the central California town of Cholame.
In Los Angeles, West Wing star Martin Sheen, said Deanâs performance in East of Eden, which he first saw as a young boy the year Dean died, inspired him to become an actor.
âAll of his movies had a profound effect on my life, in my work and all of my generation,â Sheen said.
âHe transcended cinema acting. It was no longer acting, it was human behaviour.â
Jane Withers, who co-starred with Dean in Giant, said working with the sometimes-aloof actor was the highlight of her career, but she had to get past his attitude early on.
âHe acted like a little kid and when someone acts like a kid, I treat them like one,â Withers said. âI didnât put up with any guff, and because of it, we had a very warm relationship.â
Deanâs aloofness was a product of his desire to remain focused on his work, suggested Earl Holliman, who was also in Giant.
âJimmy was a guy who didnât care what people thought of him,â Holliman said. âHe said that wasnât important. What was important was what was on the screen.â
Martin Landau, who got to know Dean in the early 1950s when Dean moved to New York City from his native Marion, Indiana, to become an actor, recalled meeting him at an open casting call.
âWe got along immediately,â Landau said. âWe would talk about life, career, our values. He was my closest friend.â
Landau dismissed the view that Deanâs rebellious nature was destined to drive him to an early grave.
âWe had talked about growing older,â Landau said. âHe used to worry that he looked like a kid when he became an actor.â
But photographer Phil Stern, who captured a famous shot of Dean with a turtleneck covering half his face, disagreed.
âDean was very prescient because he structured his career in such a way that he passed away â which I believe was inevitable â in a way that precluded the possibility of people seeing him as a pot-bellied, bald man,â Stern said.
Despite his brief Hollywood career, Deanâs image as rebel antihero still resonates with marketers.
Warner Brothers plans to release Giant, Rebel and East Of Eden on DVD this year. And Deanâs image will adorn two NASCAR racing cars this summer.
Stage plays based on Deanâs films will also be staged in several US cities and the actorâs home town plans to amp up its annual festival commemorating the star, which typically draws up to 60,000 people.
âI invite you to our area,â Marion mayor Wayne Seybold said, âwhere cool was born.â


