John Dierkes(1905-1975)
- Actor
- Additional Crew
Tall and gaunt American character actor prominent in a number of
classic American films. A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, he attended Brown
University and subsequently went to work as an economist for the United
States Department of State. In 1941, he joined the American Red Cross
and served in Great Britain during the war. There he met director
John Huston, who took a liking to Dierkes and recommended that he try
Hollywood after the war. Instead, Dierkes went to work for the U.S.
Treasury Department, which, coincidentally, sent him to Hollywood to
function as technical adviser on the film To the Ends of the Earth (1948). 'Orson Welles' cast
him as Ross in his adaptation of Macbeth (1948). Dierkes returned to the
Treasury Department, but two years later, Huston called on him to play
The Tall Soldier in The Red Badge of Courage (1951). Dierkes took a leave of absence from his
job, a leave which lasted for the rest of Dierkes's life. His quiet
dignity and distinctive appearance led him to dozens of roles in film
and on television. In John Wayne's The Alamo (1960), Dierkes plays a Scot, "Jocko
Robertson", named after Dierkes's own maternal grandfather. He died in
1975, and was survived by his wife, two sons, and two daughters.