Stock theater and Broadway (1923–1930) '' – the 1930 Broadway role that saw him scouted for Hollywood Immediately following graduation, Tracy joined a new stock company based in
White Plains, New York, where he was given peripheral roles. Unhappy there, he moved to a company in
Cincinnati, but failed to make an impact. In November 1923, he landed a small part on
Broadway in the comedy
A Royal Fandango, starring
Ethel Barrymore. Reviews for the show were poor and it closed after 25 performances; Tracy later said of the failure, "My ego took an awful beating." When he took a position with a struggling company in New Jersey, Tracy was living on an allowance of 35 cents a day. In January 1924, he played his first leading role with a company in
Winnipeg, but the organization soon closed. Tracy finally achieved some success by joining forces with the notable stock manager William H. Wright in the spring of 1924. It proved a popular draw and their productions were favorably received. One of these performances brought Tracy to the attention of a Broadway producer, who offered him the lead in a new play.
The Sheepman previewed in October 1925, but it received poor reviews and closed after its trial run in
Connecticut. Dejected, Tracy was forced back to Wright and the stock circuit. In the fall of 1926, Tracy was offered his third shot at Broadway: a role in a new
George M. Cohan play called
Yellow. Tracy swore that if the play failed to be a hit he would leave stock and work in a "regular" business instead. Tracy was nervous about working with Cohan, one of the most important figures in American theater,
Yellow opened on September 21; reviews were mixed but it ran for 135 performances. It was the beginning of an important collaboration for Tracy: "I'd have quit the stage completely," he later commented, "if it hadn't been for George M. Cohan." Cohan wrote a part specifically for Tracy in his next play,
The Baby Cyclone. It opened on Broadway in September 1927 and was a hit. Tracy followed this success with another Cohan play,
Whispering Friends, and in 1929 took over from
Clark Gable in
Conflict, a Broadway drama. Other roles followed, but it was the lead in
Dread, written by
Pulitzer Prize-winning dramatist
Owen Davis that gave Tracy high hopes for success. The story of a man's descent into madness,
Dread previewed in Brooklyn to an excellent reception, but on the next day—October 29—the
New York stock market crashed. Unable to obtain funding,
Dread did not open on Broadway. Following this disappointment, Tracy again considered leaving the theater and returning to Milwaukee for a more stable life. In January 1930, Tracy was approached about a new play called
The Last Mile. Looking to cast the lead role of a murderer on
death row, producer
Herman Shumlin met with Tracy, and later recounted: "beneath the surface, here was a man of passion, violence, sensitivity and desperation: no ordinary man, and just the man for the part."
The Last Mile opened on Broadway in February, where Tracy's performance was met by a standing ovation that lasted 14 curtain calls. The
Commonweal described him as "one of our best and most versatile young actors". The play was a hit with critics, and ran for 289 performances.
Fox (1930–1935) in
Disorderly Conduct (1932), Tracy's seventh film In 1930, Broadway was being scouted to find actors to work in the new medium of
sound films.
Up the River (1930) marked the film debut of both Tracy and
Humphrey Bogart. After seeing the
rushes, Fox immediately offered Tracy a long-term contract. Knowing that he needed the money for his family, with his young son deaf and recovering from
polio, Tracy signed with Fox and moved to California. He appeared on the stage only once more in his life.
Winfield Sheehan, the head of Fox, committed to making Tracy a bankable commodity. The studio promoted the actor, releasing ads for his second film
Quick Millions (1931) with the headline "A New Star Shines". Three films were made in quick succession, all of which were unsuccessful at the box office. Tracy found himself
typecast in
comedies, usually playing a crook or a con man. The mold was broken with his seventh picture,
Disorderly Conduct (1932), and it was the first of his films since
Up the River to return a profit. In mid-1932, after nine pictures, Tracy remained virtually unknown to the public. He considered leaving Fox once his contract was up for renewal, but a raise in his weekly salary to $1,500 convinced him to stay. He continued to appear in unpopular films, with
Me and My Gal (1932) setting an all-time low attendance record for the
Roxy Theatre in New York City. He was loaned to
Warner Bros. for
20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932), a prison drama co-starring
Bette Davis. Tracy was hopeful that it would be his break-out role, but despite good reviews, this failed to materialize. in ''
Man's Castle'' (1933). Critics began to notice Tracy with
The Power and the Glory (1933). The story of a man's rise to prosperity had a screenplay by
Preston Sturges and Tracy's performance as railroad tycoon Tom Garner received uniformly strong reviews.
William Wilkerson of
The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "This sterling performer has finally been given an opportunity to show an ability that has been boxed in by gangster roles ... [the film] has introduced Mr. Tracy as one of the screen's best performers".
Mordaunt Hall of
The New York Times stated: "No more convincing performance has been given on the screen than Spencer Tracy's impersonation of Tom Garner."
Shanghai Madness (1933), meanwhile, revealed Tracy to have a previously unseen sex appeal and served to advance his standing.
The Show-Off (1934), for which he was lent to
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, proved popular, but his subsequent outings continued to be unsuccessful. Tracy drank heavily during his years with Fox and gained a reputation as an alcoholic. Tracy was removed from the Fox payroll while he recovered in a hospital, and then sued for $125,000 for delaying the production. He completed only two more pictures with the studio. The details on how Tracy's relationship with Fox ended are unclear: later in life Tracy maintained that he was fired for his drunken behavior, but the Fox records do not support such an account. He was still under contract with the studio when MGM expressed their interest in the actor. They were in need of a new male star, and contacted Tracy on April 2, 1935, offering him a seven-year deal.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (1935–1955) Growing reputation 's
Fury (1936), his first major hit In the 1930s, MGM was the most respected movie production studio in Hollywood. When Tracy arrived there, he was all but unknown. Biographer
James Curtis writes: "Tracy was scarcely a blip on the box office barometer in 1935, a critics' darling and little more". He was, however, well known for being a troublemaker. Producer
Irving Thalberg was nevertheless enthusiastic about working with the actor, telling journalist
Louella Parsons: "Spencer Tracy will become one of MGM's most valuable stars." Curtis notes that the studio managed Tracy with care, a welcome change from the ineptitude and apathy he had known while at Fox, which was like "a shot of adrenaline" for the actor. which included the feature film debut of
James Stewart. Thalberg then began a strategy of pairing Tracy with the studio's top actresses:
Whipsaw (1935) co-starred
Myrna Loy and was a commercial success.
Riffraff (1936) put Tracy opposite
Jean Harlow. Both films were, however, designed and promoted to showcase their leading ladies, thus continuing Tracy's reputation as a secondary star.
Fury (1936) was the first film to prove that Tracy could make a success on his own merit. Directed by
Fritz Lang, Tracy played an innocent man who swears revenge after narrowly escaping death by a
lynch mob. The film and performance received excellent reviews. It made a profit of $1.3 million worldwide. Curtis writes: "audiences who, just a year earlier, had no clear handle on him, were suddenly turning out to see him. It was a transition that was nothing short of miraculous ... [and showed] a willingness on the part of the public to embrace a leading man who was not textbook handsome nor bigger than life." Tracy was highly praised for his performance and received his first
Academy Award nomination despite having only 17 minutes of screen time.
San Francisco became the highest-grossing film of 1936. Donald Deschner, in his book on Tracy, credits
Fury and
San Francisco as the "two films that changed his career and gave him the status of a major star". By this point, Tracy entered a period of self-imposed sobriety and MGM expressed pleasure with Tracy's professionalism. His public reputation continued to grow with
Libeled Lady (also 1936), a
screwball comedy that cast him with
William Powell, Loy and Harlow. According to Curtis, "Powell, Harlow and Loy were among the biggest draws in the industry, and equal billing in such a powerhouse company could only serve to advance Tracy's standing".
Libeled Lady was his third hit picture in the space of six months.
Oscar wins Tracy appeared in four films released in 1937.
They Gave Him a Gun, a crime-drama, went largely unnoticed, but
Captains Courageous was one of the major film events of the year. and resented having his hair curled, but the role was a hit with audiences and Tracy won the
Academy Award for Best Actor.
Captains Courageous was followed by
Big City with
Luise Rainer and
Mannequin with
Joan Crawford, the latter of which performed well at the box office. With two years of hit movies and industry recognition, Tracy became a star in the United States. A 1937 poll of 20 million people to find the "King and Queen of Hollywood" ranked Tracy sixth among males. Tracy was reunited with Clark Gable and Myrna Loy for
Test Pilot (1938). The film was another enormous commercial and critical success, permanently cementing the notion of Gable and Tracy as a team in the public imagination. in
Captains Courageous (1937) Based on the positive response he had received in
San Francisco, MGM again cast Tracy as a priest in
Boys Town (also 1938). Portraying
Edward J. Flanagan, a Catholic priest and founder of
Boys Town in Nebraska, was a role Tracy took seriously: "I'm so anxious to do a good job as Father Flanagan that it worries me, keeps me awake at night." Tracy received strong reviews for his performance, and the movie grossed $4 million worldwide. Tracy won the
Academy Award for Best Actor, becoming the first actor to win two consecutive Oscars in the Best Actor category. He was humble about the recognition, saying in his acceptance speech: "I honestly do not feel that I can accept this award ... I can accept it only as it was meant to be for a great man—Father Flanagan". Although he did keep his Oscar statuette, a second statuette was struck and immediately sent to Flanagan. Tracy was listed as the fifth biggest box office star of 1938. Tracy was absent from screens for almost a year before returning to Fox on loan and appearing as
Henry M. Stanley in
Stanley and Livingstone (1939) with
Nancy Kelly. Curtis maintains that Tracy's non-visibility did little to affect his standing with the public or exhibitors. In October 1939, a
Fortune magazine survey of the nation's favorite movie actors listed Tracy in first place.
Established star MGM capitalized on Tracy's popularity, casting him in four movies for 1940.
I Take This Woman with
Hedy Lamarr was a critical and commercial failure, but the historical drama
Northwest Passage—Tracy's first film in
Technicolor—proved popular.
Boom Town was the third and final Gable-Tracy picture, also starring
Claudette Colbert and
Hedy Lamarr, making it one of the most anticipated films of the year. The film opened to the biggest crowd since
Gone With the Wind. Tracy signed a new contract with MGM in April 1941, which paid $5,000 a week and limited him to three pictures a year (Tracy had previously expressed a need to reduce his workload). The contract also stated for the first time that his billing was to be "that of a star". Contrary to popular belief, the contract did not include a clause that he receive top billing, but from this point onward, every film Tracy appeared in featured his name first, with the exception of his "guest appearance" in
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944). Tracy returned to his Oscar-winning role of Father Flanagan for the sequel
Men of Boys Town (1941). It was followed by Tracy's only venture into the horror genre; an adaptation of
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (also 1941), co-starring
Ingrid Bergman and
Lana Turner. Tracy was unhappy with the film and disliked the heavy makeup he needed to portray Hyde. Critical response to the film was mixed and brought Tracy the only negative reviews of his career. Theodore Strauss of
The New York Times wrote that "Mr. Tracy's portrait of Hyde is not so much evil incarnate as it is the ham rampant." The film was financially successful, however, taking in more than $2 million at the box office. for
Woman of the Year (1942), the first of nine pictures Tracy made with
Katharine Hepburn Tracy was set to star in a film version of
The Yearling for 1942, but several on-set difficulties and bad weather on location forced MGM to shelve the production. With the end of that project, he became available for the new
Katharine Hepburn film,
Woman of the Year (1942). Hepburn greatly admired Tracy, calling him "the best movie actor there was". She had wanted him for her comeback vehicle,
The Philadelphia Story (1940). Hepburn was delighted that Tracy was available for
Woman of the Year, saying "I was just damned grateful he was willing to work with me." The romantic comedy performed well at the box office and received strong reviews. William Boehnel wrote in the
New York World-Telegram, "To begin with, it has Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy in the leading roles. This in itself would be enough to make any film memorable. But when you get Tracy and Hepburn turning in brilliant performances to boot, you've got something to cheer about." MGM did not hesitate to repeat the teaming of Tracy and Hepburn and cast them in the dark mystery
Keeper of the Flame (1943). Despite a weak critical reception the film out-grossed
Woman of the Year confirming the strength of their partnership. Tracy's next three appearances were all war-based.
A Guy Named Joe (1943) with
Irene Dunne surpassed
San Francisco to become his highest-grossing film to date.
The Seventh Cross (1944), a suspense film about an escape from a
Nazi concentration camp, met with critical acclaim. It was followed by the aviation film
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944). On the strength of these three releases, the annual
Quigley poll revealed Tracy was MGM's biggest money-making star of 1944, His only film the following year was his third with Hepburn,
Without Love (1945), a light romantic comedy that performed well at the box office despite muted enthusiasm from critics.
Stage and screen '' (1947) In 1945, Tracy returned to the stage for the first time in 15 years. He had been through a dark patch personally—culminating with a hospital stay—and Hepburn felt that a play would help restore his focus. Tracy told a journalist in April, "I'm coming back to Broadway to see if I can still act." It was a difficult production; director
Garson Kanin later wrote: "In the ten days prior to the New York opening all the important relationships had deteriorated. Spencer was tense and unbending, could not, or would not, take direction". Tracy considered leaving the show before it even opened on Broadway, and lasted there just six weeks before announcing his intention to close the show. It closed on January 19, 1946 after 81 performances. Tracy later explained to a friend: "I couldn't say those goddamn lines over and over and over again every night ... At least every day is a new day for me in films ... But this thing—every day, every day, over and over again." Tracy was absent from screens in 1946, the first year since his motion picture debut that there was no Spencer Tracy release. He followed it later that year with
Cass Timberlane, in which he played a judge. It was a commercial success, but Curtis notes that co-star Lana Turner overshadowed Tracy in most of the reviews. A fifth film with Hepburn,
Frank Capra's political drama
State of the Union, was released in 1948. Tracy played a presidential candidate in the movie, which was warmly received. He then appeared in
Edward, My Son (1949) with
Deborah Kerr. Tracy disliked the role, and told director
George Cukor, "It's rather disconcerting to me to find how easily I play a heel." Upon its release,
The New Yorker wrote of the "hopeless miscasting of Mr. Tracy". The film became Tracy's biggest money-loser at MGM. Tracy finished off the 1940s with
Malaya (1949), an adventure film with
James Stewart, and ''
Adam's Rib'' (also 1949), a comedy with Tracy and Hepburn playing married lawyers who oppose each other in court. Tracy and Hepburn's friends,
Garson Kanin and
Ruth Gordon, wrote the parts specifically for the two leads. The film received strong reviews and became the highest-grossing Tracy-Hepburn picture to date. Film critic
Bosley Crowther wrote, "Mr. Tracy and Miss Hepburn are the stellar performers in this show and their perfect compatibility in comic capers is delightful to see."
Final MGM years in a promotional image for
Father of the Bride (1950). The comedic role of Stanley Banks was one of Tracy's nine Oscar-nominated performances. Tracy received his first
Academy Award nomination in 12 years for playing the role of Stanley Banks in
Father of the Bride (1950), a comedy in which he plays a father struggling to manage the preparations for the wedding of his daughter (
Elizabeth Taylor). "It's the second strong comedy in a row for Spencer Tracy, doing the title role, and he socks it",
Variety commented. The film was the biggest commercial success of Tracy's career to date, earning $6 million worldwide. ''
Father's Little Dividend'' was released ten months later, in April 1951, and performed well at the box office. On the strength of the two movies, Tracy polled as one of the nation's top stars once more. Tracy followed it with
Plymouth Adventure (also 1952), a historical drama set aboard the
Mayflower, co-starring
Gene Tierney. It met with poor critical and box office response and posted a loss of $1.8 million for MGM. Tracy returned to the role of a concerned father in
The Actress (1953). Producer
Lawrence Weingarten recalled: "That film ... got more [acclaim] from the critics than any film I ever made in all the years, and we didn't make enough to pay for the ushers in the theatre." For his performance in
The Actress, Tracy won the
Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama and was nominated for the
BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. MGM lent Tracy to Fox for the well-received Western film
Broken Lance, his only film released in 1954. In 1955, Tracy turned down
William Wyler's
The Desperate Hours because he refused to take second-billing to
Humphrey Bogart. Instead, Tracy appeared as a one-armed protagonist who faces the hostility of a small desert town in
Bad Day at Black Rock (1955), a film directed by
John Sturges. For his work, Tracy received a fifth
Academy Award nomination and won
Best Actor at the
Cannes Film Festival. Tracy had personally been unhappy with the picture and threatened to leave during production. This behavior became a regular occurrence for Tracy, who was increasingly lethargic and cynical. He began production on
Tribute to a Bad Man in the summer of 1955, but pulled out when he claimed that the shooting location in the
Colorado mountains gave him
altitude sickness. The problems caused by the picture fractured Tracy's relationship with MGM. In June 1955, he was one of the two remaining stars of the studio's peak years (the other being
Robert Taylor), but with his contract up for renewal, Tracy opted to freelance for the first time in his movie career.
Independent player (1956–1967) Tracy's first post-MGM appearance was in
The Mountain (1956), released by
Paramount Pictures. The film co-starred
Robert Wagner, who played his much younger brother (Wagner had earlier played his son in
Broken Lance). The location filming in the
French Alps proved a difficult experience, and he threatened to leave the project. He received his second
BAFTA nomination for his performance. Tracy and Hepburn then paired together for the eighth time in the office-based comedy
Desk Set (1957), released by Twentieth Century-Fox. Again, he had to be convinced to stay with the film, one which met with a weak response. 's
The Last Hurrah (1958) Tracy appeared in
The Old Man and the Sea (1958), a project that had been in development for five years. An adaptation of
Ernest Hemingway's
novella of the same title, Hemingway's agent,
Leland Hayward, had previously written to the author: "Of all Hollywood people, the one that comes the closest to me in quality, in personality and voice, in personal dignity and ability, is Spencer Tracy." Tracy was delighted to be offered the role. Hemingway thus reported that Tracy was a "terrible liability to the picture", and had to be reassured that the star was being carefully photographed to disguise his weight problem. Appearing alone on screen for most of the film, Tracy considered
The Old Man and the Sea the toughest part he ever played. In reviewing the performance,
Jack Moffitt of
The Hollywood Reporter said it was "so intimate and revealing of universal human experience that, to me, it almost transcended acting and became reality". Tracy received
Academy Award and
Golden Globe nominations for his work. After abandoning two projects, including a proposed remake of
The Blue Angel with
Marilyn Monroe, Tracy's next feature was
The Last Hurrah (1958). It reunited him with his debut director, John Ford, after 28 years and his childhood friend Pat O'Brien. Tracy took a year to commit to the project, in which he played an Irish-American mayor seeking re-election. The movie was favorably reviewed, but not commercially successful. At the end of 1958, the
National Board of Review named Tracy the year's
Best Actor. He nevertheless began to ponder retirement, with Curtis writing that he was "chronically tired, unhappy, ill, and uninterested in work".
Stanley Kramer partnership '' (1960), the first of four films Tracy made with
Stanley Kramer, depicted the
Scopes "Monkey Trial" of 1925. Tracy did not appear on the screen again until the release of
Inherit the Wind (1960), a film based on the 1925
Scopes "Monkey Trial" which debated the right to teach evolution in schools. Director
Stanley Kramer sought Tracy for the role of lawyer Henry Drummond (based on
Clarence Darrow), from the outset. Starring opposite Tracy was
Fredric March, a pairing
Variety described as "a stroke of casting genius ... Both men are spellbinders in the most laudatory sense of the word." The film garnered Tracy some of the strongest reviews of his career and he was nominated for an
Academy Award,
BAFTA Award and
Golden Globe Award for the performance, although it was not a commercial hit. In the volcano disaster movie ''
The Devil at 4 O'Clock'' (1961), Tracy played a priest for the fourth time in his career. His co-star,
Frank Sinatra, ceded top-billing to guarantee Tracy for the picture. Continuing his pattern of indecisiveness, Tracy briefly pulled out of the production before recommitting.
Inherit the Wind began an enduring collaboration between Stanley Kramer and Tracy—Kramer directed Tracy's three final films.
Judgment at Nuremberg, released in December 1961, was their second feature together. The film depicts the
Judges' Trial, the trial of Nazi judges for their role in the
Holocaust.
Abby Mann wrote the role of Judge Haywood with Tracy in mind; Tracy called it the best script he had ever read. At the end of the film, Tracy delivered a 13-minute monologue. He recorded it in one take and received a round of applause from the cast and crew. Upon seeing the film, Mann wrote to Tracy: "Every writer ought to have the experience of having Spencer Tracy do his lines. There is nothing in the world quite like it." The film met with positive reviews and a large audience; Tracy received an eighth
Academy Award nomination for his performance. '' (1967). Tracy died 17 days after filming was completed. Tracy turned down roles in ''
Long Day's Journey into Night (1962) and The Leopard'' (1963), and had to pull out of MGM's all-star
How the West Was Won (1962) when it clashed with
Judgment at Nuremberg. He was, however, able to record the film's narration track. Tracy was in very poor health by this time, and working became a challenge. In 1962, he took the role of Captain T. G. Culpeper in Kramer's comedy ''
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World'' (1963), a small but key part that he was able to complete in nine non-consecutive days, but which he himself considered one of the lowest points in his acting career. The film was released in November 1963. Tracy's name topped the list of performers, and the comedy became the third highest-grossing film of the year. As his health worsened, he had to cancel commitments to
Cheyenne Autumn (1964) and
The Cincinnati Kid (1965). Film offers continued to come, but Tracy did not work again until 1967 when he took the starring role in Kramer's ''
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner'' (1967), Tracy's ninth and final film with Hepburn. ''Guess Who's Coming to Dinner'' explored the topic of
interracial marriage, with Tracy playing a liberal-minded newspaper publisher whose values are challenged when his daughter wishes to marry a black man, played by
Sidney Poitier. Tracy appeared happy to be working again, but he told journalists visiting the set that the movie would be his last for he would permanently retire after filming due to his health problems. To commence filming, Tracy had to be insured for the high premium of $71,000 if he died during filming; Hepburn and Kramer both put their salaries in
escrow until Tracy completed his scenes. In poor health, Tracy could work for only two or three hours each day. He completed his last scene on May 24, 1967. Tracy died 17 days later from a heart attack on June 10. The film was released in December 1967, and although reviews were mixed, Curtis notes that "Tracy's performance was singled out for praise in nearly every instance." Brendan Gill of
The New Yorker wrote that Tracy gave "a faultless and, under the circumstances, heartbreaking performance". He received a posthumous
Academy Award nomination—his ninth—along with a
Golden Globe nomination and won the
BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. ==Personal life==