In the 1951 Alfred Hitchcock classic Strangers on a Train , Farley Granger should have kept his nose in his racket case.
But his tennis-playing nice guy (named Guy, incidentally) didn't, and so he ended up the pawn in a "you commit my murder and I'll commit yours" scheme devised by Robert Walker 's daddy-resenting madman.
Granger, a leading man in the early 1950s who penned the candid 2008 memoir Include Me Out: My Life From Goldwyn to Broadway , died Monday of natural causes in New York...
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