
Actor
Jeffrey Lynn
Born 1909 · Auburn, Massachusetts, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jeffrey Lynn (born Ragnar Godfrey Lind; February 16, 1909 – November 24, 1995) was an American stage-screen actor and film producer who worked primarily through the Golden Age of Hollywood establishing himself as one of the premier talents of his time. Throughout his acting career, both on stage and in film, he was typecast as "the attractive, reliable love interest of the heroine," or "the tall, stalwart hero." Born and raised in Massachusetts, he attended Bates College, before working as a teacher. He was tapped to act in his first film in 1938, which convinced him to move to Hollywood, California. His second film–Four Daughters (1938)–propelled him into national fame sparking three sequels: Daughters Courageous (1939), Four Wives (1939) and Four Mothers (1941) with Lynn reprising his role in each of them. He was at the center of the Gone with the Wind (1939) screening controversy; he was noted as the top contender to play Ashley Wilkes, however, the directer eventually chose Leslie Howard instead. Lynn was asked to join James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart in The Roaring Twenties (1939), a gangster noir that garnered him critical praise. His success continued with such films as The Fighting 69th (1940) in which he portrayed poet-soldier Joyce Kilmer opposite Cagney, It All Came True (1940), All This and Heaven Too (1940) and Million Dollar Baby (1941). His movie career was put on hold for World War II draft, where he received a Bronze Star for his service as a in Italy and Austria as a combat intelligence captain. He returned to the screen in 1948 and was in the notably successful, A Letter to Three Wives (1949), which went on to be nominated of best picture in the 1950 prime time Academy Awards. A year later he joined that cast of Home Town Story (1951) billed alongside Marilyn Monroe. His later film career credits include: BUtterfield 8 (1960) along with Elizabeth Taylor and Laurence Harvey, and Tony Rome (1967) with Frank Sinatra. Lynn also began to act on Broadway and was featured in such plays as Any Wednesday (1966) and Dinner at Eight (1967). Later on in his career he found mixed critical success television starring in hit shows such as Robert Montgomery Presents, Your Show of Shows, My Son Jeep (with young Martin Huston), and Lux Video Theatre. He died in November 1995 in Burbank, California from natural causes and was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in the Hollywood Hills. Actor Jeffrey Lynn "Jeff" Goldblum is named in honor of Jeffrey Lynn.
Acting

Murder, She Wrote
Sam Wilson · 1984

The Roaring Twenties
Lloyd Hart · 1939

A Letter to Three Wives
Bradford 'Brad' Bishop · 1949

All This, and Heaven Too
Henry Martyn Field · 1940

BUtterfield 8
Bingham Smith · 1960

Tony Rome
Adam Boyd · 1967

Knots Landing
Mr. Ahern · 1979

Midnight Caller
Ambrose McGee · 1988

What's My Line?
Self - Mystery Guest · 1950

Four Daughters
Felix Deitz · 1938

The Making of a Legend: Gone with the Wind
Self (archive footage) · 1988

The Fighting 69th
Joyce Kilmer · 1940

It All Came True
Tommy Taylor · 1940

The Spiral Staircase
Doctor Parry · 1961

Underground
Kurt Franken · 1941

Out Where the Stars Begin
Makeup Artist · 1938
Lux Video Theatre
Seth Warner · 1950

Four Mothers
Felix Deitz · 1941

Espionage Agent
Lowell Warrington · 1939

Daughters Courageous
John S. 'Johnny' Heming · 1939

Main Street to Broadway
Self (uncredited) · 1953

Law of the Tropics
Jim Conwoy · 1941

A Child is Born
Jed Sutton · 1939

Strange Bargain
Sam Wilson · 1949