- Eugene Pallette
Infobox actor
bgcolour =
name = Eugene Pallette
imagesize =
caption =
birthname =
birthdate = birth date|1889|07|8
location =Winfield, Kansas , USA
deathdate = death date and age|1954|09|3|1889|07|8 (cancer)
deathplace =Los Angeles, California ,USA
occupation = Actor
spouse = Marjorie Cagnacc (1932-1954) (his death)
Phyllis Gordon (?-?) (divorced)Eugene Pallette (
July 8 1889 –September 3 1954 ) was an Americanactor who appeared in over 240 films.Biography
Career
Born in
Winfield, Kansas , Pallette became a silent screen actor beginning in 1912. He quickly advanced to featured status, appearing in many westerns. He worked withD.W. Griffith on such famous films as "The Birth of a Nation " (1915) and "Intolerance " (1916). At this time, he had a slim, athletic figure, a far cry from the portly build that would gain him fame later in his career.After gaining a substantial amount of weight, Pallette's status as a recognizable
character actor rose. In 1927, Pallette signed as a regular forHal Roach Studios , and was a reliable comic foil in several earlyLaurel and Hardy films before the advent oftalkies . In later years, Pallette's weight may have topped out at 300 pounds.Sound proved to be the second major career boost for Pallette. His inimitable rasping gravel voice (described as "half an octave below anyone else in the cast") made him one of
Hollywood 's most sought-after character actors in the 1930s and 1940s.The typical Pallette role was the comically exasperated head of the family (as in "
My Man Godfrey " and "The Lady Eve "), the cynical backroom sharpy (as in "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington "), or the gruff detective. However, Pallette's best known role may be asFriar Tuck in "The Adventures of Robin Hood ".BBC commentatorDana Gioia gave this extensive description of Pallette's onscreen appeal:: "Pallette could anchor a scene just by walking downstairs. When he enters Preston Sturges's The Lady Eve (1941), trotting down to breakfast singing a merry ballad, he embodies all the small human hopes that screwball comedy exists to shatter.... The mature Pallette character is a creature of provocative contradictions—tough-minded but indulgent, earthy but epicurean, relaxed but excitable. His grit and gravel voice sounds simultaneously tough and comic. Even his corpulence is two-sided. In his best films Pallette made his fatness seem like a sign of moderation and common sense. As Friar Tuck in The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938) or Fray Felipe in The Mark of Zorro (1940), he shows that a fat priest is no heartless zealot but understands the sins of the flesh. Playing a tubby millionaire like the beer baron in The Lady Eve or Alexander Bullock in My Man Godfrey (1936), Pallette uses his girth to create a common touch. Stuffed into a tuxedo that seems perpetually near bursting, he seems more down-to-earth than the stylish high society types who surround him. Even Pallette's villains, like the corrupt and cynical politico Chick McCann in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, are immensely likeable. Pushed too far, Pallette confidently uses his weight for physical force. When Bullock finally evicts the free-loading Carlo (Mischa Auer) in My Man Godfrey, we are not so much surprised as reassured by Pallette's manly strength. In battle his sword-wielding Friar Tuck is a glory to behold. Pallette may have gained weight, but he never lost his underlying virility."In increasingly ill health by his late fifties, Pallette made fewer and fewer movies, and for lesser studios. His final film, "Suspense", was released in 1946. He died in
Los Angeles fromcancer . He is interred at Green Lawn Cemetery inGrenola, Kansas with an unmarked grave.elected filmography
* "
The Birth of a Nation " (1915) withLillian Gish andRaoul Walsh
* "The Highbinders " (1915)
* "The Story of a Story " (1915)
* "The Spell of the Poppy " (1915)
* "Intolerance" (1916) withLillian Gish andConstance Talmadge
* "Tarzan of the Apes" (1918) withElmo Lincoln andGordon Griffith
* "The Three Musketeers" (1921) withDouglas Fairbanks
* "The Ten Commandments" (1923) withRichard Dix
* "North of Hudson Bay " (1923) withTom Mix
* "The Wolf Man" (1924) with John Gilbert andNorma Shearer
* "Stupid, But Brave " (1924), directed by Fatty Arbuckle
* "Mantrap" (1926) withClara Bow andFord Sterling
* "Should Men Walk Home? " (1927) withMabel Normand andOliver Hardy
* "Fluttering Hearts " (1927) withCharley Chase andOliver Hardy
* "Sugar Daddies " (1927) withLaurel and Hardy
* "The Second Hundred Years" (1927) withLaurel and Hardy
* "The Battle of the Century " (1927) withStan Laurel andOliver Hardy
* "Lights of New York" (1928)
* "The Canary Murder Case" (1929)
* "The Virginian" (1929) withGary Cooper andWalter Huston
* "The Love Parade " (1929) withMaurice Chevalier andJeanette MacDonald
* "Follow Thru " (1930) withCharles 'Buddy' Rogers andNancy Carroll
* "Fighting Caravans " (1931) withGary Cooper andLili Damita
* "The Stolen Jools " aka "The Slippery Pearls" (1931) with an all-star cast
* "Girls About Town" (1931)
* "Shanghai Express" (1932) withMarlene Dietrich andAnna May Wong
* "Dancers in the Dark " (1932) withMiriam Hopkins andGeorge Raft
* "Wild Girl " (1932) withCharles Farrell ,Joan Bennett , andRalph Bellamy
* "Hell Below " (1933) with Robert Montgomery,Walter Huston , andJimmy Durante
* "The Kennel Murder Case " (1933) withWilliam Powell andMary Astor
* "I've Got Your Number " (1934)
* "Caravan" (1934) withCharles Boyer andLoretta Young
* "Bordertown" (1935) withPaul Muni andBette Davis
* "The Ghost Goes West " (1935) withRobert Donat
* "Steamboat Round the Bend " (1935) withWill Rogers
* "The Golden Arrow " (1936) with Bette Davis andGeorge Brent
* "My Man Godfrey " (1936) withWilliam Powell andCarole Lombard
* "Stowaway" (1936) withShirley Temple and Robert Young
* "Topper" (1937) withConstance Bennett andCary Grant
* "One Hundred Men and a Girl " (1937) withDeanna Durbin andAdolphe Menjou
* "The Adventures of Robin Hood" (1938) withErrol Flynn andBasil Rathbone
* "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington " (1939) with James Stewart andJean Arthur
* "Young Tom Edison " (1940) withMickey Rooney
* "The Mark of Zorro" (1940) withTyrone Power andBasil Rathbone
* "The Lady Eve " (1941) withHenry Fonda andBarbara Stanwyck
* "The Bride Came C.O.D. " (1941) withJames Cagney andBette Davis
* "The Male Animal " (1942) withHenry Fonda andOlivia de Havilland
* "Tales of Manhattan " (1942) with an all-star cast
* "Slightly Dangerous " (1943) withLana Turner and Robert Young
* "Heaven Can Wait" (1943) withGene Tierney andDon Ameche
* "The Gang's All Here" (1943) withAlice Faye andCarmen Miranda
* "Pin Up Girl " (1944) withBetty Grable ,Martha Raye andJoe E. Brown
* "The Cheaters " (1945) withBillie Burke External links
*
* [http://tedstrong.com/eugenepallette-obit.shtml Obituary]Persondata
NAME= Pallette, Eugene
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION= Actor
DATE OF BIRTH= 1889-07-8
PLACE OF BIRTH=Winfield, Kansas , USA
DATE OF DEATH= 1954-09-3 (cancer)
PLACE OF DEATH=Los Angeles, California ,USA
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