Jack Cassidy

Actor

Popular As John Joseph Edward Cassidy

Birthday March 5, 1927

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace New York City, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1976, West Hollywood, California, U.S. (49 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 5' 10" (1.78 m)

#7039 Most Popular

1927

John Joseph Edward Cassidy (March 5, 1927– December 12, 1976) was an American actor, singer and theatre director.

He received multiple Tony Award nominations and a win, as well as a Grammy Award, for his work on the Broadway production of the musical She Loves Me.

He also received two Primetime Emmy Award nominations.

He was the father of teen idols David Cassidy and Shaun Cassidy.

Cassidy was born in New York City, the son of Charlotte (née Koehler) and William Cassidy.

He was the youngest of five children.

His father, an engineer at the Long Island Rail Road, was of Irish descent and his mother was of German ancestry.

Cassidy achieved success as a musical performer on Broadway.

He appeared in Alive and Kicking, Wish You Were Here, Shangri-La, Maggie Flynn, Fade Out – Fade In, It's a Bird...It's a Plane...It's Superman, and She Loves Me, for which he won a Tony Award.

1948

His first marriage in 1948 was to actress Evelyn Ward.

Together they had a son, David, who later became a teen idol.

1956

They divorced in 1956 and in the same year Cassidy married singer and actress Shirley Jones.

Cassidy and Jones had three sons, Shaun, Patrick, and Ryan.

Cassidy's eldest son David later starred with Jones in the musical sitcom The Partridge Family.

1967

He also received Emmy Award nominations for his television performances in the 1967-68 CBS Television Network series He & She and The Andersonville Trial.

Cassidy had played a similar buffoonish character in the 1967–1968 sitcom He & She, but he turned down the role, feeling that it was not right for him; the part went to Ted Knight.

1970

The role of the vain, shallow, buffoon-like newsman Ted Baxter on TV's The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1970–1977) was reportedly written with Cassidy in mind.

Son Shaun also became a teen idol in the late 1970s, starring in The Hardy Boys series, and producing four top-40 records.

1971

Cassidy also appeared three times as a murderer on Columbo in the episodes "Murder By the Book" (1971, directed by the not-yet-famous Steven Spielberg, with teleplay by a young Steven Bochco), "Publish or Perish" (1974), and "Now You See Him..." (1976).

He co-starred with Ronnie Schell in a television revival of Hellzapoppin'.

Cassidy also co-starred as an informer in the movie The Eiger Sanction with Clint Eastwood and provided the voice of Bob Cratchit for the pioneering animated television special Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol.

His frequent professional persona was an urbane, witty, confident egotist with a dramatic flair, much in the manner of Broadway actor Frank Fay.

Cassidy perfected this character to the extent that he was cast as John Barrymore in the feature film W.C. Fields and Me.

Cassidy later appeared as a guest star in a 1971 episode as Ted's highly competitive and equally egotistical brother Hal.

Cassidy was married twice.

1973

On television, he became a frequent guest star, appearing in such programs as The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, Gunsmoke, Bewitched, Get Smart, That Girl, Hawaii Five-O, Cannon, Match Game, McCloud, and Barnaby Jones for an episode titled "Murder in the Doll's House" (1973).

1974

In 1974, his neighbors were shocked to see him fully naked, watering his front lawn in the middle of the afternoon.

Cassidy's second wife, Shirley Jones, described a similar incident when she found him sitting naked in a corner of their house, reading a book.

Jones said to him that they had to get ready to do a show, and he calmly looked up and said, "I know now that I'm Christ".

In December 1974, Cassidy was hospitalized in a psychiatric facility for 48 hours.

At that time, Jones found out that he had been previously diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

David Cassidy said his father was bisexual, citing personal accounts and reports, both anecdotal and published, of his father's same-sex affairs, something neither he nor his siblings knew until after their father's death.

1975

Jones and Cassidy divorced in 1975.

Cassidy has 12 grandchildren: Caitlin, Jake, Juliet, Caleb, Roan, Lila, and Mairin Cassidy by son Shaun; Cole and Jack by son Patrick; Meghan Mae by son Ryan Cassidy; Katie Cassidy and Beau by son David.

1976

On December 11, 1976, Cassidy invited his ex-wife, Shirley Jones, to his home, an apartment in West Hollywood, California, for drinks, but she declined.

In the early morning of December 12, 1976, Cassidy lit a cigarette and fell asleep on his Naugahyde couch.

1994

In his 1994 autobiography, C'Mon, Get Happy, Cassidy's eldest son David wrote that he became increasingly concerned about his father in the last years of his life.

The elder Cassidy, who suffered from bipolar disorder and alcoholism, was displaying increasingly erratic behavior.

2013

In her 2013 memoir, Shirley Jones wrote that Cassidy had many same-sex affairs, including one with Cole Porter.

2017

His grandson, Jack, was a contestant on the singing competition television show The Voice in 2017.