Humphrey Deforest Bogart, English name Humphrey Bogart is a well-known American actor. Born in the United States on December 25, 1899, he died of illness on January 14, 1957. Humphrey Bogart was a flagship American actor who retained a legendary status in the global and film world decades after his death. In 1999, the American Film Institute named him the greatest actor in the 100 years since the birth of cinema. His 1942 performance in Casablanca earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Actor, a film that is still considered a timeless classic to this day, and his character Rick is an eternal idol of the American people. He also won the Academy Award for Best Actor in 1951 for The Queen of Africa.

From 1933 onwards, he sometimes shared a house with Randolph Scott, and there was much speculation about their relationship, with Scott often jokingly calling himself Grant's "wife" and many studio owners threatening not to ask them to film if they didn't live apart. Grant filmed the 1957 film "The Pride and the Passion" and fell madly in love with rival actress Sophia Loren despite having his wife, Betsy Drake, but Roland soon fell in love with producer Carlo Ponti and ignored him. The following year' "Houseboat" (Houseboat) the two worked together again, he still did not spare, chased after her, Roland had no choice but to go to the director to complain. Grant himself was obsessed with the relationship and later often called it the most devoted love of his life. Warner bought the rights to Petrified Forest and put Bogart in the film. This time when Bogart returns to Hollywood, he wants to be a star. Throughout the second half of the 30s, Humphrey Bogart made himself one of the most beloved actors. During this time, he made some classic films, such as William Wilder's The End of Death, Dirty Face Angel with James Cagne, Victory of Darkness with Betty Davis, and another robber film with James Cagne, The Roaring 20s. Humphrey Bogart has become one of Hollywood's crowned princes. In 1940, Bogart and Errol Fleming co-starred in Warner Bros.'s Western, Virginia City. To promote the film to the public, Warner arranged a public trip from Hollywood all the way east to Virginia City, where the film premiered. Bogart was a shy and introverted man who was reluctant to participate, but he completed the journey anyway. Like the film itself, the trip was a huge success. In 1941, Warner gave Bogart a role he didn't initially like, but the production company insisted that he play it. Bogart showed his most outstanding performance since the film, playing private detective Sam Spade in the classic detective film The Eagle of Malta. What he dreamed of was born. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Bogart played a role in a series of promotional films filmed by Warner. There are a lot of really good movies, like The Man of Power and Crossing the Pacific. Then in 1943, Warner put Bogart in a role in a movie he didn't like. Bogart felt that this was an overly boisterous love story and wanted to escape the role, and Warner once again insisted that he play the role. The film tells the story of an American bar owner who is caught up in a conspiracy that takes place during the war. The location of the story is in the North African city of Casablanca. In this classic film, Bogart played Rick, whose excellent acting skills established him as an idol in the film. Ingrid Bergman played him in the film. The film won the Academy Award for Best Picture in 1943 and to this day it remains one of the most beloved films in the history of cinema. Throughout World War II, as a patriot, Bogart attended rallies many times and traveled long distances to perform condolence performances in American troops around the world. Although the screen image he plays is a rough villain, his personality is diametrically opposed. He was polite, humble, and always maintained a true gentlemanly demeanor. By the mid-1940s, he had become the brightest star in the world. Although Bogart's career was in full swing, his personal life went downhill. By 1944, his third marriage had collapsed due to his wife's mischievous behavior. His wife was often furious, and whenever this happened, she kept attacking Bogart. Bogart, who is fearless on the screen, is very afraid of his wife's volcanic eruption. Bogart's desperate drinking didn't help. He was 45 years old at the time, and despite his career success, he believed that he would never find happiness again in his personal life. It was then that he met Lauren Bacall. It was in 1945 that 19-year-old Lauren Barcall played Bogart in the film To Or Not, based on Hemingway's novel.
"They're drinking my blood, but I'm making this bad movie" (1936-1940)
As expected, the film version of Petrified Forest was a success, and Bogart's performance was also affirmed by critics and audiences, following the first success on the screen, bogart was positioned as a supporting villain in the next few years. From 1936 to 1940, Bogart made an average of one play every two months, and in four years, he played a total of 12 roles and was sent to electric chairs, requiring more than 800 years of service. Not only that, but "Warner" was rather limited in filming, with Bogart often wearing his own clothes to work, and even his puppy was featured in the film High Sierra. For the boss Jack Warner, as long as the film makes money and the actors have a salary, no one should complain. In 1939, Bogart played a mad scientist in the film The Return of Doctor X, saying, "If it were Jack Warner's blood... I wouldn't mind so much. What's uncomfortable is that they're drinking my blood and I'm making this crap. Subject to the studio system during the Hollywood boom, the number of stars was limited, and Warner had no interest in raising Bogart into a star. James Cagney and Edward G. Robinson were Warner's first choices at the time, and the better roles were assigned to Paul Muni and George Raft, with Bogart picking out the rest. Bogart is killed again and again in the film by Cargney or Robinson, and on the screen, Bogart barely watches his own films and rarely attends the premiere of the film. In 1999, Bogart's son said in a television interview that his father was sensitive by nature, harsh, a lifelong antipathy to hypocrisy, disgusted with the bad films he participated in to make a living, he vigorously defended the pedantic idealism in his personality, left the stable life of New York to come to Los Angeles, and could only rely on small cleverness to make a living, his life was very gray, so he drank heavily, wanted to avoid those second-rate people and things. In August 1938, Bogart married for the third time, the bride was the actress Mayo Methot. The marriage brought only a brief moment of happiness to the two. When she was sober, Mayo Methot was a kind person, but she had severe paranoia as soon as she got drunk. She suspects Bogart of infidelity, and the verbal incompatibility escalates into a physical conflict, with Mayo Methot picking up what she has at hand and sometimes fighting back, and the two are soon called "the battling Bogarts" by the press.
Humphrey Bogart Attends Andavo Preparatory School. In July 1918, Bogart, a high school graduate, joined the U.S. Navy. Although he received military training during his service, he never actually carried out a mission. After retiring from the army, he went to a theater as a handyman. During his time in the theater, he became interested in acting and learned about theater.
Starring in a movie poster in 1930, Humphrey Bogart starred in his film debut, The Devil and the Woman. In 1931, he participated in the feature film "Bad Sisters". In 1932, he co-starred with Joan Brownell and Anne Shirley in the romance film "Three Couples".
In 1934, he starred in the play "Invited to Kill", and his interpretation of the villain role in the play received the attention of Broadway producer Arthur Hopkins, which also gave him the opportunity to star in the movie "Fossil Forest"; in the same year, he participated in the romance film "Midnight".
On June 6, 1936, he starred in the thriller Bullets and Ballots, which was released in the United States; in the same year, he played the angry fugitive Duke Mantan in the crime film Fossil Forest, which was a turning point in Humphrey Bogart's acting career and defined his image position on the screen.
In 1937, he played Frank Taylor, a serious mechanic in the crime film "The Dark Legion"; on August 3, the feature film "St. Quiddin Prison" starring Ann Sheridan was released in the United States; in the same year, he played policeman David in the crime film "Tears in the Cave".
On June 15, 1938, he participated in the romantic film "Men Are Stupid" was released in the United States; in the same year, he played the cruel and jealous robber Rock Valentino in the crime film "Becoming a Thief"; on November 24, the feature film "The Hero of the World" starring with Ann Sheridan and James Jakney was released in the United States.
In 1939, he co-starred with Betty Davis in the romance film "Qing He Thin Life", which was nominated for the 12th Academy Award for Best Film; on November 23, the suspense film "The Return of Dr. X" was released in the United States, in which he played the experiences of a crazy doctor after the resurrection of the dead; in the same year, he starred in the gangster film "Blood of the Private".
In 1940, he starred in the Western film "Blood Battle of Victoria"; later, he starred in the hardcore action film "Truck Fighter", in which he played a witty and brave truck driver; in the same year, in the comedy film "Brothers Och", he played Jack, a gangster member who competed with John Sadu for territory.
In 1941, he changed his path to play sam Spade, an unethical and unsympathetic private investigator in the suspense film The Eagle of Malta; the film was considered by critics to be the epitome of film noir; in the same year, he played a prisoner who had completed his sentence in the thriller "Sleepy Skyscrapers" starring Ida Lupino.
In 1942, he played a role in a series of promotional films produced by Warner; on September 4, he starred in the war film "Crossing the Pacific" in the United States; in the same year, his partner Ingrid Bergman starred in the romance film "Casablanca", which received more attention for playing the cynical and spontaneous bar owner Rick Brian; the film not only won the 16th Academy Award for Best Picture, but also was selected as one of the "Top 100 Films of the Century" by the American Film Institute; and was named "The Times" in the United Kingdom. On the list of the 100 Greatest Films in Film History, the film ranked first.
In 1943, he starred in the war film "Submarine Warfare of the 73rd Fleet" with Raymond Massey and Alice Adrian; on October 14, he starred in the adventure film "The Sahara" in the United States, in which he played the adventurous Captain George Gunn; in the same year, he was selected as one of the top ten hollywood actors of the year.
Humphrey Bogart was nominated for best actor at the 16th Academy Awards in 1944 for the romantic film Casablanca; on February 16, he starred in the adventure film "The Way of Marseille" in the United States; in the same year, he co-starred with Lauren Baicall in the romance film "The Man of the Lake", in which he played a yacht owner with a good life.
In 1945, he starred in the thriller "Wife Killing Doubts". In 1946, he played a private detective who fell in love with the rich family Kalman in the suspense film "Long Night Dream" (aka "Sleepy").
On January 2, 1947, he starred in the suspense film "Blood Sea Vengeance" in the United States; later, starred in the crime film "Nightmare", in which he broke through the previous screen image and played the mentally ill painter Jeffrey Carlo; in the same year, in the thriller "Escape from Prison", he played his wife-killer Fan Wensheng Pyri who escaped from St Quentin Prison.
In 1948, he played a penniless tramp in the adventure film "Blood Sands"; in the same year, he co-starred with Lauren Baicall in the thriller "Gestapo", in which he played the tenacious World War II veteran Kanfuli Poga. On October 26, 1949, the thriller "Tokyo Storm", starring Alexander Knox and Hayakawa Yukisu, was released in the United States.
In 1950, he starred in the suspense film "Blue Blood", playing the seemingly cynical but actually quite affectionate playwright Dixon Steele; in the same year, he starred in the romance film "Sprayed Love", in which he co-starred with Eleanor Parker in a love story.
In 1951, he starred in the action film "The Dead City of Cyloch"; in the same year, he co-starred with Catherine Hepburn in the romance film "The Queen of Africa", in which he played Charlie Arneuk, a mine mechanic who had been displaced to Africa due to unemployment; he won the 24th Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance style in the film that was neither cold nor cold.
In 1952, santana film company was founded; in the same year, he starred in the feature film "The Great Wall of Iron Blood". In 1953, he played the cynical medic Wibb in the war film "Angels of the Battlefield"; on March 12, he starred in the adventure film "Victory over the Devil" in the United States; in the same year, he was nominated for best foreign actor at the 6th British Academy of Film and Television Arts Awards for the romance film "The Queen of Africa".
In 1954, he collaborated with Audrey Hepburn for the first time, co-starring in the romance film "Dragon Phoenix Match", playing the dedicated businessman Linus in the film; on September 29, the suspense film "Barefoot Angel" was released in the United States; in the same year, he starred in the war film "Rebel Kane", in which he played the neurotic captain Quaig, and was nominated for the 27th Academy Award for Best Actor for this film.
In 1955, he starred in the comedy film "We Are Not Angels"; in the same year, he starred in the thriller "Critical Moment". In 1956, in the film noir "Boxing Ring Black Curtain", he created a romantic hero who struggled with injustice, which was also his last film. [2]
Humphrey DeForest Bogart (25 December 1899 – 14 January 1957) was an American actor who retained a legendary status in the global and film world decades after his death. His 1942 performance in North African Spy led to an Oscar nomination for Best Actor, which is still considered a timeless classic to this day, and his role as Rick is an eternal American icon. He also won the 24th Academy Award for Best Actor in 1952 for The Queen of Africa. In 1999, the American Film Academy named him the greatest actor in the 100-year history of cinema. Major works: 1940 Siege of The Sea 1941 All Through the Night 1941 The Maltese Falcon 1942 Across the Pacific 1942 North African Spy/Casablanca 1942 The Big Shot 1943 Action in the North Atlantic 1943 Sahara 1944 Passage to Marseille 1946 The Big Sleep 1947 The Treasure of the Sierra Madre) 1951 The African Queen 1954 Sabrina 1954 The Caine Mutiny 1954 The Barefoot Contessa
Humphrey Bogart