I’m reading Steve McQueen’s biography, and the author mentioned how most of the heroes were working-class… Humphrey Bogart, Jimmy Cagney, John Wayne, Marlon Brando, Clint Eastwood, Steve McQueen himself and others…
I can’t think of any in my lifetime (almost 40 years)…
I’m assuming that the OP means that the characters the heroes played were working class.
That’s about half nonsense. Actors played all sorts of roles. True, some actors did become associated with working class roles and some with upper class roles. Cary Grant wasn’t believable as working class, even though he came from a tough background; Humphrey Bogart, the child of a doctor and an artist, was. Make-believe works in strange ways.
The other consideration is that America was basically a working class nation until after World War II. Additionally, the talkies appeared during the Depression when the working man was being beaten down, making the class a good subject for drama. It would have been hard to avoid playing some of those roles. Even so, Hollywood made a zillion movies about the glittering upper classes in the 30s, often featuring actors who came out of poverty.
The trend postwar was toward more middle class characters. Rich playboys disappeared; bad boys took their place. Brando wasn’t working class in real life; he liked slumming and pretending what he wasn’t. But the movies moved away from that world as the country prospered and different types of stories connected with audiences.
I’d have to have a lot more context for what the cited author actually said to know what he really intended.
So just took the time to look through my limited video library and came up with Tom Hanks in The Green Mile, he seems to play a lot of “working class” roles, Bruce Willis again in Unbreakable and Gary Sinise and Rob Lowe in The Stand. Thats just what I could find on the shelf in my living room.
To pick two famous examples: I doubt Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca) was lower socioeconomically than John McClane (Bruce Willis in Die Hard) if you account for increases in education and living standards between 1942 and 1988.
And there were plenty of upper crust leading men back then. Cary Grant hardly ever portrayed anyone below middle-class.
Here’s the IMDB list of the 100 top stars of 2018. Of the male stars, I would count Josh Brolin, Tom Hardy, Dwayne Johnson, Chris Pratt, and Sam Rockwell as all frequently playing “working class” types. (I don’t count Burt Reynolds because his working class roles were a long time ago.)
The thing is, now so many of the roles are in comic book or fantasy movies you can’t really call the character “working class.”
Rick Blaine is almost the equivalent of Stan Kroenke, an American who owns a club overseas. Sure, Kroenke’s club is called Arsenal and not Stan’s but still…
He uses his adman drinking skills to keep from being killed by spies: they pour a quart of bourbon into him, and put him in the driver’s seat of a stolen car on a winding road over the sea. Only hard drinkers could survive that.
You also need to take into account that many more films are made about people of color and that they are often working class. If those movie’s stars aren’t familiar to you or you don’t consider those actors stars, that might also say something about the change in our society over the past half century.