Christopher Jones

Christopher Jones

actor

Christopher Jones was born on Aug 18, 1941 in USA. Christopher Jones's big-screen debut came with The Legend of Jesse James - Season 1 directed by James B. Clark in 1965, strarring - A Burying for Rosey. Christopher Jones is known for Ryan's Daughter directed by David Lean, Robert Mitchum stars as Charles and Trevor Howard as Father Collins. Christopher Jones has got 2 awards and 1 nominations so far. The most recent award Christopher Jones achieved is Laurel Awards. The upcoming new movie Christopher Jones plays is Mad Dogs which will be released on Jul 23, 1997.

Christopher Jones was a brief cult star of the late '60s counterculture era and a would-be rebel successor to James Dean had he wanted it. Born William Franklin Jones amid rather impoverished surroundings to a grocery clerk in Jackson, Tennessee, in 1941, his artist mother had to be institutionalized when Chris was 4. She died in a mental facility in 1960, and this was always to haunt him. He shifted back and forth between homes and orphanages and was placed in Boys Town at one point to straighten out his life.Chris joined the service as a young adult but went AWOL just two days later. After serving out his time on Governor's Island for this infraction, he moved to New York and studied painting, meeting a motley crew of actors and artists. Friends were startled by his moody nature and uncanny resemblance to the troubled Dean and he was encouraged to audition for the Actors Studio. He was accepted and eventually won the Broadway role of Pancho in "The Night of the Iguana" in 1961. Chris wound up marrying acting coach Lee Strasberg's daughter, Susan Strasberg, in 1965, but his erratic behavior would send her packing after three years and two children.Chris's brooding good looks and undeniable charisma led him straight to Hollywood and, following a few TV episodic parts, earned the title film role of Chubasco le rebelle (1968) co-starring then-wife Susan. He then earned cult stardom in Les troupes de la colère (1968) as Max Frost, a rock star who becomes president. This popular satire, in turn, led another movie satire as the college boy Lothario in the interracial sex triangle Comment séduire un play-boy (1968) and such distinguished international projects as Le miroir aux espions (1970), Jardines de España (1957) and La Fille de Ryan (1970). But the trappings of success quickly got to him.Numerous entanglements with the Hollywood "in crowd" eventually took their toll, including those with Pamela Courson (Jim Morrison's girlfriend at the time), the ill-fated Sharon Tate, one-time co-star Pia Degermark, and Olivia Hussey. Not only did his volatile relationships with directors also leave him depressed, but his personal life remained in constant turmoil. Morrison's early drug-related death and Tate's particularly brutal murder hit him particularly hard and led to a breakdown.Chris split the Hollywood scene altogether to regain himself but instead ended up a victim of the Sunset Strip drug culture for a time. He eventually cleaned up his act and two subsequent relationships led to five more children. He also turned to painting and sculpting as creative outlets and lived the Southern California beach scene. Little was heard until decades later when Quentin Tarantino offered him a part in Pulp Fiction (1994). The now reclusive and eccentric Jones turned down a role in that, but later decided to take on a cameo part in friend Larry Bishop's crime comedy-drama Mad Dogs (1996) a couple of years later. This proved to be his only return to acting. Chris died of gall bladder cancer in 2014 at age 72.

  • Birthday

    Aug 18, 1941
  • Place of Birth

    Jackson, Tennessee, USA

Known For

Awards

2 wins & 1 nominations

Laurel Awards
1971
Star of Tomorrow, Male
Winner - Golden Laurel
Ryan's Daughter (1970)
1968
Male New Face
Winner - Golden Laurel

Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies
TV Shows