Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Stewart’s war service influenced movie

Actor’s first film after returning from WWII was ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’

- NINA METZ CHICAGO TRIBUNE

The 1946 James Stewart classic “It’s a Wonderful Life” was the first movie Stewart made when he returned home after serving as a pilot in World War II, an experience that left him adrift and not without psychologi­cal fallout.

Author Robert Matzen writes about this postwar period in the actor’s career in the new nonfiction book, “Mission: Jimmy Stewart and the Fight for Europe,” and said that during the course of his research, he spoke with “the guys that flew with him, who told me about the fact that he went flak-happy on a couple of occasions — which means, shell shock, battle fatigue, what we now know as PTSD. He wasn’t afraid of bombs or bullets. He was afraid of making a mistake and causing someone to die. That was his endless stress, and that’s what ended up grounding him.”

Which is to say that much of George Bailey’s angst was, to some extent, Stewart’s own. Before agreeing to do the film with director Frank Capra (recently back from the war himself), he considered quitting acting altogether.

“It’s a Wonderful Life” helped set him back on a path in Hollywood.

The following is an edited conversati­on with Matzen about Stewart and “It’s a Wonderful Life.”

Q. When did Stewart return stateside after the war?

A. He flew his final mission at the end of February 1945 and he was grounded because of his PTSD issues and then he came back at the end of August.

He returned to Indiana, Pa., where his parents lived and he’s home for a week or 10 days and realizes, “I have to go back and face Hollywood. I’ve been away for five years, other people are taking my roles.” There’s a whole new generation of leading men that are younger or more vital, and he didn’t know where he fit anymore.

Q. Why wasn’t he getting job offers?

A. He came back looking like hell. There’s a beforeand-after photo in the book that shows him in 1942 looking all youthful, and then in 1944 looking like hell. And now there were stars like Gregory Peck who were getting roles he might have gotten.

But it was only a couple of months until Capra called with this idea of “It’s a Wonderful Life.”

The back story here is that Stewart, very publicly, when he got back from the war was asked, “If you’re going to make a picture now, what do you want to make?” And he said, “A comedy, I have to make a comedy. The world has seen too much trauma and horror and suffering.”

So when Capra calls, Stewart gets his agent, Lew Wasserman, and they sit down with Capra, who tries to tell them the story, telling him about this role and how only Stewart can do it and it’s about a guy who wants to commit suicide. And Stewart’s like, “Well, wait a minute. That’s not what I want to do.”

Capra had a diary where he jotted down notes about how that went, and the meeting went so bad that Stewart got up and walked out. He just couldn’t even wrap his head around, “You want me to do what?” Stewart was not happy with the idea and was not open to it — until, I guess, Wasserman must have said, “You’ve got no other offers.”

Q. Was Stewart also on edge because he was still working through some of his PTSD?

A. Oh, absolutely. At this point, he had just started to eat again. He always had a high metabolism and always had trouble digesting food, and during the war it got worse and worse. He himself said that the only thing he subsisted on was peanut butter and ice cream. He just hadn’t been able keep food down. Now he’s starting to gain weight. But he’s still having nightmares and the shakes and the sweats. He’s got some hearing loss now, from the sound of the bombers on those seven-, eight-hour missions. So now you have an actor who, it’s not easy for him to hear his cues.

Q. He wasn’t of the Method actor generation, but it sounds like he was, intentiona­lly or not, drawing from his life in that performanc­e, especially those scenes that reveal how untethered or frantic George Bailey is feeling.

A. It was a personal and profession­al risk, playing that role. While he was making that film, he was questionin­g the superficia­lity of Hollywood and acting in general, and Lionel Barrymore (who plays Mr. Potter) said to him, “So, are you saying it’s more worthwhile to drop bombs on people than to entertain them?” And that really hit Stewart and was one of the things that turned him around and made him think, “OK, I do have an important role and there are things to be done.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? James Stewart starred with Donna Reed in Frank Capra’s 1946 holiday classic, “It’s a Wonderful Life.” The film has aired on television during the holiday season for decades.
ASSOCIATED PRESS James Stewart starred with Donna Reed in Frank Capra’s 1946 holiday classic, “It’s a Wonderful Life.” The film has aired on television during the holiday season for decades.

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