<p>Of all the screen juveniles groomed for stardom by Warner Brothers in the 1930s few were touted as highly by Hal Wallis and Jack Warner as Ross Alexander. Strikingly handsome with a sensuality that appealed to women (and men) of all ages and possessed of a Puck-like good humor that endeared him to columnists co-stars and virtually everyone else in the Hollywood film community Ross quickly became the golden boy of scene-stealers at Warners after appearing in <em>Flirtation Walk</em> with Dick Powell Ruby Keeler and Pat O&rsquo;Brien and <em>Gentlemen Are Born</em> with Franchot Tone Jean Muir and Ann Dvorak. Like many of the actors in Hollywood at that time Ross was recruited from Broadway where he played high-spirited juveniles in <em>Let Us Be Gay</em> starring Charlotte Granville Francine Larrimore and Warren William; <em>That&rsquo;s Gratitude</em> with Frank Craven Thelma Marsh and George Barbier; and <em>After Tomorrow</em> with Donald Meek and Barbara Robbins&mdash;all produced by song-writer producer-director John Golden who &ldquo;discovered&rdquo; Ross performing with Antoinette Perry (the &ldquo;Tony&rdquo; of Broadway theatre awards) in the long-run flop <em>The Ladder</em>.</p><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; While Alexander&rsquo;s career at Warner&rsquo;s was in the ascendant in films like <em>A Midsummer Night&rsquo;s Dream</em> <em>Captain Blood</em> and <em>Shipmates Forever</em> his marriage to actress (and New Jersey socialite) Aleta Freel had disintegrated leading to Aleta&rsquo;s suicide in December 1935. Ross&rsquo;s best friend Henry Fonda believed that Alexander never recovered from his wife&rsquo;s death even though he continued to appear onscreen in well-regarded roles until his own suicide in January 1937. According to contemporary reports after Alexander&rsquo;s death Warner Brothers purged his home of any and everything he might have written&mdash;poems letters script-notes the works&mdash;in order to protect the studio from scandals related to Alexander&rsquo;s closeted homosexuality and other idiosyncrasies including his alleged obsessive infatuation with Bette Davis. Surprisingly in the 80 years that have passed since Alexander&rsquo;s death no full-length study of the actor so beloved but so quickly forgotten by Warner Brothers had existed until <em>Ross Alexander: The life and death of a contract player</em> an investigation of Broadway and Hollywood during the 1920s and 1930s from Prohibition through the Great Depression and the Production Code with previously unpublished documents and nearly 100 illustrations.</p>
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