- Going to the doctor with respiratory trouble and back pain, he was diagnosed with liver cancer which had spread to his lungs. He was told he had no more than six months to live. Hoping to prolong his life with chemotherapy, he died eight weeks after first checking into the hospital and only four weeks after his condition was made public.
- The father of three, actor Timothy Hutton (born on Aug. 16, 1960) and daughters Heidi Hutton (born in 1959) and Vanity Fair Deputy Editor Rebecca Punch Hutton (born on Sep. 28, 1971).
- Timothy Hutton wore Jim Hutton's hat from Ellery Queen (1975) in Ordinary People (1980) and A Nero Wolfe Mystery (2001). He dedicated his Best Supporting Actor Academy Award from "Ordinary People" to his father, who died four months before filming on "Ordinary People" began and five weeks after seeing his son's first leading role Friendly Fire (1979) from his hospital bed.
- When asked, Cary Grant cited Hutton as the actor who would follow in his footsteps as a comic leading man.
- Milton Berle delivered his eulogy.
- During the early 1960s, he was seen as a new James Stewart. Very tall, gangly, and with a certain absent-minded lilt to his readings of the lines, Hutton seemed to have the abilities to take up where Jimmy Stewart had left off in comedy.
- Timothy Hutton appeared with his father twice, once as a five-year-old child in an uncredited screen role in Never Too Late (1965), and once on stage as a teenager in the touring company of "Harvey".
- Hutton had an on-again, off-again relationship with actress Yvette Vickers for 15 years, often rumored to be engaged and/or living together by tabloids. Vickers claimed he refused to marry her because of his inability to remain faithful to women. Between both of their second marriages, they rekindled their romances. From the time of his death up to her 2010 death, the troubled Vickers (who suffered substance abuse and paranoid delusions) claimed the equally troubled Hutton had been the one and only love of her life and soul-mate and described him as "a typical Irish Catholic male; hard-drinking, chauvinistic, funny as hell, but with the insecurities of a child." Vickers was discovered by neighbor Susan Savage in April 2011 in a mummified state, suggesting she had died a year earlier.
- Was known as a prankster (some mean-spirited) and troublemaker who admitted to "delighting in deflating the egos of higher-ups." In college he stole Syracuse's bulldozer and plowed the blue tulip bed in front of the library (while drunk) the night before the moving up ceremony where he was one of the honorees as class vice-president and was immediately expelled, although argued that his co-conspirator was let off because he was captain of the football team. At Niagara College he claimed to have drained a pond as a prank and was expelled once again for dropping his pants during an awards dinner on a $12 bet, where he was being honored by the faculty as president of the Drama Society. He was nearly demoted in rank for putting alum powder in his commanding officer's bowl of stew, among other pranks he pulled while in the military, almost all on higher-ups.
- According to Paula Prentiss in her DVD narrative to Where the Boys Are (1960), they were paired because they were, at the time, Hollywood's tallest contract players, he at 6'5" and she at 5'10".
- Earned money for school by digging ditches on weekends and delivering bananas at night.
- Acted in more than 40 instructional films for the military as a member of Army Special Services, including The Big Attack aka Citizen Soldier as Big Slim (credited as Dana S. Hutton) which aired on network television despite being made for and with soldiers.
- His first and last professional role in the theater was the lead in his favorite play, Harvey.
- Was already a 26-year-old married father of two when he played 20-year-old college student "TV Thompson" in Where the Boys Are (1960).
- Ida Lupino asked Hutton to play the role of the rival headmaster in The Trouble with Angels (1966) in an uncredited cameo. Lupino had heard him described as a younger, taller Jack Lemmon and added in the line describing his character as "like Jack Lemmon, only younger".
- Sam Peckinpah nicknamed Jim Hutton "The Yankee" because of his thick, flat, almost-Midwestern accent. Was friendly with the actor despite firing a gun (with blanks) at him in Major Dundee (1965) because Hutton annoyed him while learning to ride a horse, scaring the horse which bucked him off. Notoriously eccentric, Peckinpah described Hutton as "crazy for no reason" because of his constant womanizing and hard-drinking habits, despite enjoying neither activity.
- Started acting while serving with the U.S. Army in Germany. Founder and actor/director of the first English-speaking theatre in Berlin.
- Considered Walk Don't Run (1966) his best film and best performance.
- Youngest daughter Rebecca Punch Hutton, from his second marriage to Lynni Solomon, named her daughter Ellery after his TV character, Ellery Queen.
- According to producer William Link, Ellery Queen (1975) was created with Hutton in mind after NBC saw his performance in They Call It Murder (1971). Link described him as the most dedicated actor he'd ever worked with. He recalled that Hutton literally moved into his dressing room during the seven-month production, seven days a week. He did this in order to study his script morning and night, and avoid all distractions at home of women and alcohol. But the crew noticed he drank heavily after production wrapped Friday throughout Saturday.
- Jack Lemmon was his favorite actor.
- Director Richard L. Bare attempted to cast Hutton in several TV series, including additional The Twilight Zone (1959) episodes, but he couldn't convince MGM to change his exclusive film contract. While developing the romantic comedy sitcom You're Only Young Once (1962), he felt Hutton was the only working actor right for the role. He asked Hutton to appear in the screen tests with actresses in order to show the studio the dailies and allow him to take the role. They agreed to allow Hutton to appear in the pilot but refused to break his contract to work on a TV series, full-time.
- His first wife made the statement "he told me his wife and family were standing in the way of his career" when seeking a divorce. Despite this, Hutton frequently stayed at her home when visiting the family.
- Performed an impromptu scene in the commissary of MGM to get an audition for Where the Boys Are (1960).
- He and Paula Prentiss were in five movies together: Where the Boys Are (1960), The Honeymoon Machine (1961), Bachelor in Paradise (1961), The Horizontal Lieutenant (1962), and Looking for Love (1964).
- Lived with Susan Oliver throughout 1963, but they refused to marry after his divorce and parted when she began focusing on her career as a pilot.
- He was against the Vietnam War.
- Claimed to run three miles every day with a pedometer and drank a daily smoothie of three eggs yolks, wheat germ, honey, almonds, and raw milk he prepared the night before to ferment and ate at least one steak every day.
- Close friend of Merlin Olsen.
- Was the first person to win the New York State Oratorical high school competition two years in a row.
- Although he resembled actor Robert Hutton, they were not related.
- He was a lifelong liberal Democrat.
- Parents divorced in 1964.
- Sister Heidi born in 1960.
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