Steve Cochran

Gender: Male
Born: 25th May 1917
Died: 15th June 1965
Nationality: United States of America
Movies: Carnival Story, Highway 301, Private Hell 36, The Chase, The Deadly Companions, White Heat, Il grido, The Beat Generation, Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison, A Song Is Born, Storm Warning, Come Next Spring, The Damned Don't Cry!, I, Mobster, The Big Operator, Jim Thorpe -- All-American, Copacabana, Tell Me in the Sunlight, Dallas, The Best Years of Our Lives, Mozambique, Back to God's Country, The Tanks are Coming, The Kid from Brooklyn

Steve Cochran (May 25, 1917 - June 15, 1965) was an American film, television, and stage actor, the son of a California lumberman. He graduated from the University of Wyoming in 1939. After a stint working as a cowpuncher, Cochran developed his acting skills in local theatre and gradually progressed onto Broadway, film, and television.

From 1949 to 1952, he worked for Warner Brothers (mostly supporting roles, often playing boxers and gangsters) and appeared in many films including The Chase (1946), The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), Copacabana (1947), A Song Is Born (1948), Highway 301 (1950), The Damned Don't Cry! (1950), and Inside the Walls of Folsom Prison (1951), which inspired Johnny Cash to write his song "Folsom Prison Blues".

One of his most memorable roles was as psychotic mobster James Cagney’s deceitful, power-hungry henchman, Big Ed Somers, in the gangster classic White Heat (1949). In 1953, Cochran formed his own production company, Robert Alexander Productions, where he won critical acclaim for two of his performances in his company's films. Cochran played a disgraced, alcoholic itinerant farmer struggling to regain the love of his family in Come Next Spring (1956),

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Internet Movie Database