- Nacimiento
- Defunción3 de mayo de 2011 · Santa Mónica, California, Estados Unidos (causa no comunicada)
- Nombre de nacimientoJohn George Cooper Jr.
- Alias
- America's Boy
- Altura1.75 m
- Jackie Cooper nació el 15 de septiembre de 1922 en Los Ángeles, California, EE.UU.. Fue un actor y director, conocido por Superman: el film (1978), Superman II (1980) y Superman III (1983). Estuvo casado con Barbara Rae Kraus, Hildy Parks y June Harris. Murió el 3 de mayo de 2011 en Santa Mónica, California, EE.UU..
- CónyugesBarbara Rae Kraus(29 de abril de 1954 - 30 de mayo de 2009) (su muerte, 3 niños)Hildy Parks(18 de marzo de 1950 - 16 de febrero de 1954) (divorciado)June Harris(11 de diciembre de 1944 - 5 de noviembre de 1949) (divorciado, 1 niño)
- NiñosRussell CooperJulie CooperCristina Cooper
- PadresCharles John BigelowMabel Frances PolitoJohn George Cooper Sr.
- FamiliaresNorman Taurog(Aunt or Uncle)Jack Leonard(Aunt or Uncle)Julie Leonard(Niece or Nephew)
- Claimed in his autobiography that, while directing some of the first season episodes of M.A.S.H. (1972), the only two actors there who weren't a pain to work with were Larry Linville and Wayne Rogers.
- When his first son was to be signed to a long-term contract with MGM, Cooper's studio at the height of his fame as a child, he intervened and persuaded his ex-wife (the boy's mother) to decline: "It's no way for a kid to grow up." Adamantly opposed to children acting to the exclusion of a normal upbringing, based on his own life experiences. None of Cooper's four children were performers.
- Interred with full honors in Arlington National Cemetery on November 22, 2011.
- Walked away from the industry in 1989 during his wife's brief illness, and never returned: "I'm sixty-seven, and worked sixty-four years." Had enjoyed retirement ever since, and refused to participate in industry retrospectives which dwelt too wistfully on the so-called good old days.
- As of 2010, he holds two Oscar records: Youngest performer nominated in a leading role (this record has stood for 79 years); and oldest nomination (1931) in any and all Academy categories for an individual still living.
- [In 1976] Sometimes I'll wake up in the middle of the night and I'll hear a voice that sounds familiar . . . my wife has fallen asleep with the tube on, and I'll finally start recognizing the dialogue, look up, and Jesus Christ, it's me at 14, or 12, or 9, or whatever. Sometimes I'll sit there and watch it and I can tell myself what's coming next . . . I remember the dialogue, the scene and the set very well, and then there'll be a part of the picture I never remembered at all. Because there were times as a kid, as a teenager especially, when I'd be terribly occupied with what I was doing--with my boat, or on a circuit of rodeos and horseshoes, or with my car--very often on some of this stuff when I'd have to go to work. I'd just give the script a cursory glance. I had no training, and I was a quick study, so nobody knew how involved or not involved I was. But I look at that stuff now and I can see I wasn't involved, and I wasn't very good.
- [on Jackie Coogan] Of all the actors, I think Jackie was the most genuine and unsung hero in World War II.
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