- Pat Flaherty (actor)
Infobox actor
name = Pat Flaherty
imagesize = 150px
caption = Pat Flaherty
birthname = Edmund Joseph Flaherty
birthdate =March 8 ,1897
birthplace = Washington, District of Columbia,USA
deathdate =December 2 ,1970 (aged 73)
deathplace = New York City, New York,USA
yearsactive = 1930s—1950s
spouse = Dorothy Fiske
Dorothea X. FugazyPat Flaherty (
March 8 ,1897 –December 2 ,1970 ) was an American actor who primarily played uncredited roles as forces of the law.Biography
Early life
Flaherty was born Edmund Joseph Flaherty in
Washington, D.C. ; the son of Margaret (née Fisher) and Edward Phillip Flaherty. [ [http://bioproj.sabr.org/bioproj.cfm?a=v&v=l&pid=16940&bid=1183 Full Biography of Pat Flaherty (1897-1970)] ] Flaherty had English, Welsh, Scottish, Irish, and Dutch ancestry. [ [http://bioproj.sabr.org/bioproj.cfm?a=v&v=l&pid=16940&bid=1183 Biography of Pat Flaherty] ] [ [http://www.wargs.com/ The Flaherty Ancestry] ] Pat attended theEastern High School , and theDean College inFranklin, Massachusetts , after the baseball, he attended thePrinceton University and graduated on January 26, 1918.Acting career
Flaherty was a former
professional baseball player, Pat Flaherty was seen in quite a few baseball pictures after his 1934 screen debut. Flaherty can be seen in roles both large and small in Death on the Diamond (1934), Pride of the Yankees (1942), It Happened in Flatbush (1942), The Stratton Story (1949, as the Western All-Stars coach), The Jackie Robinson Story (1950) and The Winning Team (1952, as legendary umpire Bill Klem). In 1948's Babe Ruth Story, Flaherty not only essayed the role of Bill Corrigan, but also served as the film's technical advisor. Outside the realm of baseball, he was usually cast in blunt, muscle-bound roles, notably Fredric March's taciturn male nurse "Cuddles" in A Star is Born (1937). One of Pat Flaherty's most unusual assignments was Wheeler and Woolsey's Off Again, On Again (1937), in which, upon finding his wife (Patricia Wilder) in a compromising position with Bert Wheeler, he doesn't pummel the hapless Wheeler as expected, but instead meekly apologizes for his wife's flirtatiousness!.Military career
Flaherty had been involved in
World War II as amilitary personnel fighting againstJapan . On August 6, 1945, theUnited States Army dropped an atomic bomb onHiroshima ,Japan . This was called the "Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki ". In 1918, Pat was missing from spring training because he was aWorld War I pilot with the U.S. Army Aviation Corps in Memphis, Tennessee. In the latter half of 1917, he had attended the School of Military Aeronautics at Princeton University. He graduated from there on January 26, 1918.He was in the military service during the Mexican border war,
World War I ,World War II , and theKorean War , having attained the rank of Major by the time of his final discharge. After his professional athletic career ended, he went into the music publishing business. And after that, he became aHollywood actor, with around 250 films to his credit. He was in many of the baseball classics and other recognizable movies.Personal life
Pat was married twice. His first wife was the former Dorothy Fiske. The couple had one child, Edmund Flaherty, Jr. was born in 1919 and died in 1995, by which time his name had been changed to Edmund Graham. Pat then married Dorothea Fugazy, the daughter of New York boxing promoter
Humbert Fugazy , on January 19, 1929. Fugazy had grand visions of using outdoor venues to draw larger fight crowds (he owned theBrooklyn Horsemen of the first American Football League in 1926). He was the first promoter to gain the exclusive right to use the Polo Grounds and Ebbets Field for boxing matches. Indeed, Fugazy promoted two of Jim Braddock's fights against Norman "Doc" Conrad in Jersey City on December 26, 1926, and against Joe Sekyra in Ebbets Field on August 8, 1928. Dorothea and Pat had two children, Patrick Joseph Flaherty and Frances X. Flaherty Knox, who are still living.Death
Flaherty died on December 4, 1970, in New York City of a heart attack. He was a man of many talents who knew how to live life to the fullest by making many friends. The list of celebrities who considered him a friend is enormous. As just one example, when it came time for his daughter Frances to learn to play golf, it was his friend Smoky Joe Wood who taught her. His Washington Senators teammates enjoyed having him around in spring training, and they missed him when he was shipped out. It was the Senators fans' loss that they were never able to see him pitch for the team during the regular season.
References
External links
*imdb name|id=0280900|name=Pat Flaherty
* [http://www.citwf.com/person178148.htm Pat Flaherty – CITWF]
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