
Husky Olympian and Actor Herman Brix Passes Away At 100
February 28, 2007 | Track & Field
Feb. 28, 2007
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Herman Brix, an Olympic shot-putting medalist-turned-actor who played Tarzan in a 1935 movie, has died. He was 100.
Brix, who used the name Bruce Bennett for many of his movies, died of complications from a broken hip on Saturday at Santa Monica-UCLA Medical Center, his son Christopher said.
Brix, who was born in Tacoma, Wash., on May 19, 1906, was a track star at the University of Washington, where he also played football and was in the 1926 Rose Bowl game.
In 1928, he won the Olympic silver medal for the shot put.
After moving to Los Angeles the next year, he became friends with actor Douglas Fairbanks, who arranged a screen test.
He is said to have been a leading candidate to play Tarzan for MGM but he was sidelined by a broken shoulder he suffered while filming a football movie. The injury also caused him to fail to qualify for the 1932 Olympic trials.
Olympic swimmer Johnny Weismuller got the Tarzan role in the 1932 movie and went on to appear in a string of sequels.
However, "Tarzan" author Edgar Rice Burroughs picked Brix to star in another Tarzan movie two years later, the independently-produced movie "The New Adventures of Tarzan."
Brix went on to appear in more than a dozen movies but he was concerned that his Tarzan appearance had typecast him in action roles. He began working under the name of Bruce Bennett.
Under that name, he appeared in dozens of movies. In 1948's "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre," he played a prospector who encounters Humphrey Bogart's character and later is killed by bandits.
He also did TV guest appearances in series such as "The Virginian" and "Perry Mason."
Brix, who had an economics degree, went into business in the 1960s. He was West Coast sales manager for a Los Angeles vending machine company and had a successful real estate career before he retired in the mid-1980s.
Besides his son, Brix is survived by a daughter, Christina Katich, three grandchildren and two-great-grandchildren.
Services were to be private.