Showing posts with label Ward Bond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ward Bond. Show all posts

Friday, July 9, 2010

Young Mr. Lincoln (1939)

I don't think Henry Fonda could ever have been classified a bit actor.  In his first film, The Farmer Takes a Wife (1935), he gets second billing to Janet Gaynor.  In 1939 he was just 34 years old and played Abraham Lincoln in Young Mr. Lincoln, a fictionalized account of the president's early life. 

Let's look for other famous names in the cast.  Milburn Stone played Stephen Douglas long before he became the doctor in "Gunsmoke."  He was 35 years old while working on Lincoln, and this was almost his fiftieth role in movies.

Edwin Maxwell, who was Freedonia's Secretary of War in the Marx Brother's Duck Soup (1933), was in his 74th film here.  In 1929 he started acting in film, and in ten years appeared in 110 films.

Jack Kelly was 12 years old playing a boy here.  Of course he would become Bart Maverick much later on TV.  Dickie Jones was the same age as Kelly, and his most famous roles were as a child actor.  (Here we go again...back to Destry Rides Again!)

George Chandler had an uncredited part in this, his 165th film.  I fondly remember him as Uncle Petrie in "Lassie" on TV.  He has 444 roles listed on IMDb, and is remembered mostly for all the TV he did.  I should blog about him in the future.

Let's not forget Ward Bond (again) and Donald Meek, who had a long career as a character actor in comedies with Mae West and W. C. Fields, Laurel and Hardy, Penny Singleton, William Powell and others, plus his wonderful role in Stagecoach as Peacock the whiskey salesman, and parts in so many other films.  It's a shame we lost him in 1946 at age 68.  Another future blog topic.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

The Maltese Falcon

The Maltese Falcon from 1941, is the very essence of the term, "Classic Film."  It was John Huston's directorial debut, and marks the approximate mid point of Humphrey Bogart's career.  The main characters are all superb; Peter Lorre, Mary Astor, Elisha Cook, Jr., Ward Bond, and Sidney Greenstreet. 

It is hard to believe that this was Sidney Greenstreet's first film, and that he only appeared in film for eight years, making 22 of them.  He is best remembered for The Maltese Falcon and Casablanca (1942), two classics that would be welcome on any actor's resume.

Ward Bond was well into his career by 1941 with over 200 movie roles, many uncredited, before making Falcon.  He became Burt the cop in It's a Wonderful Life, but it was his second to last gig on TV's "Wagon Train" that he is probably most remembered for.

I may put Elisha Cook, Jr. in that bit/character actor category, though.  He made over 200 appearances on movie and TV screens, starting in 1930.  He was a piano player in Sergeant York in 1941, worked with Laurel and Hardy in A-Haunting We Will Go in 1942, joined Bogart again in The Big Sleep in 1946, and made two other films with John Huston.

I don't know if I remember him, or just can imagine him, in the original TV series, "Adventures of Superman" with George Reeves.  He just seems to fit!  John Hamilton, who played Perry White in "Superman," was also in The Maltese Falcon.

"Superman" was less than half way through Cook's 58 year career, and it was the last role Hamilton played in his.  I do remember Cook in the original "Star Trek" series as a guest star in 1967.

Cook continued making movies and TV shows until 1988.  Some were hits and some were not.  One I have not seen was when he reprised his role as Wilmer Cook in a 1975 comedy called The Black Bird, starring George Segal as Sam Spade's son.  I may skip that one.  If you like the 70's, look for him in Electra Glide in Blue instead.

I must mention Walter Huston appearing in Falcon, directed by his son.  Of course he is not a bit actor, but he was one in this film!  He played an uncredited police captain.  The trouble with a classic like The Maltese Falcon is that there were no bit actors and no unimportant parts.  That's what makes it a classic.