Van Johnson

Originally a Broadway dancer, Johnson achieved his breakthrough playing a rookie bomber pilot in ''A Guy Named Joe'' (1943). Throughout the war years, he became a popular Hollywood star, as the embodiment of the "boy-next-door wholesomeness" playing "the red-haired, freckle-faced soldier, sailor, or bomber pilot who used to live down the street" in such films as ''The Human Comedy'' (also 1943) and ''Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo'' (1944). After World War II, he continued to play similar heartthrob and military characters, equal parts in serious dramas like ''The Caine Mutiny'' (1954), and in light musicals like ''Brigadoon'' (1954).
After the end of his contract with MGM, he transitioned largely into television, though he continued to make regular film appearances in featured and supporting parts, earning an Emmy Award nomination for his performance in the miniseries ''Rich Man, Poor Man''. He continued to maintain a regular presence in musical theatre, most notably as Professor Harold Hill in the West End productions of ''The Music Man'' and Georges in ''La Cage aux Folles'', before retiring from acting in the early 1990s. At the time of his death in 2008, he was one of the last surviving matinee idols of Golden Age of Hollywood. Provided by Wikipedia