James
Dean
was
raised
on
a
farm
by
his
aunt
and
uncle
in
Fairmount
Indiana.
He
received
rave
reviews
for
his
work
as
the
blackmailing
Arab
boy
in
the
New
York
production
of
Gide's
"The
Immoralist
"
good
enough
to
earn
him
a
trip
to
Hollywood.
His
early
film
efforts
were
strictly
bit
parts:
a
sailor
in
the
Dean
Martin
and
Jerry
Lewis
overly
frantic
musical
comedy
Sailor
Beware
(1952);
a
GI
in
Samuel
Fuller's
moody
study
of
a
platoon
in
the
Korean
War
Fixed
Bayonets!
(1951)
;
a
youth
in
the
Piper
Laurie-Rock
Hudson
comedy
Has
Anybody
Seen
My
Gal?
(1952).
He
had
major
roles
in
only
three
movies.
In
the
Elia
Kazan
production
of
John
Steinbeck's
East
of
Eden
(1955)
he
played
Caleb
the
"bad"
brother
who
couldn't
force
affection
from
his
stiff-necked
father.
His
true
starring
role
the
one
which
fixed
his
image
forever
in
American
culture
was
that
of
the
brooding
red-jacketed
teenager
Jim
Stark
in
Nicholas
Ray's
Rebel
Without
a
Cause
(1955).
George
Stevens'
filming
of
Edna
Ferber's
Giant
(1956)
in
which
he
played
the
non-conforming
cowhand
Jett
Rink
was
just
coming
to
a
close
when
Dean
driving
his
Porsche
Spyder
collided
with
another
car
in
Cholame
California.
He
had
received
a
speeding
ticket
just
two
hours
before.
His
very
brief
career
violent
death
and
highly
publicized
funeral
transformed
him
into
a
cult
object
of
apparently
timeless
fascination.