- Frankie Thomas
Infobox actor
name = Frankie Thomas
imagesize = 190px
caption = Studio portrait, circa 1935
birthdate = birth date|1921|4|9|mf=y
location =New York City, New York , USA
deathdate = death date and age|2006|5|11|1921|4|9|mf=y
deathplace =Los Angeles ,California , USA
birthname = Frank M. Thomas, Jr.
othername = Frankie Thomas, Jr.
Frank M. Thomas, Jr.
spouse =Virginia Thomas Frank M. Thomas, Jr. (
April 9 ,1921 -May 11 ,2006 ) was an Americanactor who played both lead and supporting roles on Broadway, in films, in post-World War II radio , and in earlytelevision .Thomas was born in
New York City to actorsFrank M. Thomas andMona Bruns . His uncle, Calvin Thomas, was also actor.Fact|date=June 2008 Thomas was only 11 when he accompanied his mother to a casting office, where he stood in the background while his mother asked about possible openings in new Broadway shows. The agent replied, "I have nothing that suits you, Mona, but I can use the boy." Thomas wound up in a small part in "Carry Nation" (1932), where Jimmy Stewart was cast as a constable. He went on to appear in six other Broadway plays between 1932 and 1936, including "Little Ol' Boy " withBurgess Meredith , "Thunder on the Left", "Wednesday's Child ", "The First Legion", "Remember the Day", in which he appeared with his father, and "Seen But Not Heard".In "Wednesday's Child" he played the role of Bobby Phillips, the longest stage part ever written for a child performer. Thomas also developed a life-long fascination with the character of
Sherlock Holmes during this period, when he sawWilliam Gillette perform the part during his farewell tour.When "Wednesday's Child" was filmed in 1934, Thomas and his parents travelled to Hollywood where both parents found character parts in films, while Thomas again essayed the role of BobbyPhillips for the cameras. The next year Thomas played the role of Nello Daas in the film adaptation of the novel, "
A Dog of Flanders ", byOuida . However, subsequently Thomas missed out on a couple of key juvenile starring roles, and eventually wound up in the serial "Tim Tyler's Luck" in 1937, based on the comic strip byLyman Young . The role was a step down for Thomas,but, according to him in later years, one of the greatest experiences of his life, and the source of many of the stories he subsequently told with great gusto. He often said that for him, the serial was the equivalent of attending college, because he got to meet so many notable silent-film stars who were in the large cast, and hear long, detailed accounts of their careers. When not kept busy in Hollywood, Thomas had been returning to Broadway; the serial also marked the end of his Broadway appearances for five years.Thomas's last "A" film was "Boys' Town" (1938) with
Spencer Tracy andMickey Rooney . Thomas was far down in the cast as Freddy Fuller, Boys' Town's mayor, and was not asked to appear in the sequel, "Men of Boys' Town" (1941). From then on until he left Hollywood in 1942, Thomas was confined to "B" films such as "Little Tough Guys in Society" and "Nancy Drew , Detective" (both 1938), "Nancy Drew , Reporter", "Code of the Streets", "Nancy Drew , Troubleshooter", "The Angels Wash Their Faces ", "Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase", "On Dress Parade " and "Invisible Stripes" (all 1939). In 1941 he appeared in small parts in "Flying Cadets" and "One Foot in Heaven". His last film roles were again small parts in "Always in My Heart" and "The Major and the Minor" (1942) where he played a military school cadet who flirts with the character played byGinger Rogers .His last appearance on Broadway was in "Your Loving Son" which closed after two performances in April of 1941.
With the US entry into
World War II , he joined theUS Navy in 1942 and was assigned to the work with theUnited States Coast Guard . Thomas served asthird officer on patrols in the Atlantic, and was discharged inPhiladelphia in 1944. Following the war, he and his parents lived inManhattan and all three found work in the hundreds of radio daily and weekly series originating in the studios of the four major radio networks in New York. By 1948 all three Thomases were moving into early television. In 1949 Thomas worked on two pioneering TVsoap operas , "A Woman to Remember " and "One Man's Family ".In the fall of 1950 he became the idol of millions of children when he played the starring role in "
Tom Corbett, Space Cadet ", beginning onCBS and transferring to ABC in January of 1951. The series continued its three-a-week 15-minute broadcasts until the spring of 1952.Kinescope s were rebroadcast onNBC in the summer of 1951, with live introductions by Thomas as Tom Corbett. During the spring of 1952 the TV cast of "Tom Corbett" also performed a two-a-week 30-minute broadcast on ABC radio. That autumn the TV series reappeared on DuMont, alternating every Saturday with "Secret Files ofCaptain Video " for 30 minutes, going off the air again in May 1954. Thomas then took a role on a soap opera, "First Love", but in December 1954, "Tom Corbett" blasted off on NBC, running until June, 1955. By this time Tom's interplanetary rivalsCaptain Video and Commander Buzz Corry of Space Patrol had been off the air for several months. None of the series was ever revived, though there was considerable talk of doing so in the Fall of 1957 in the aftermath ofSputnik ."Tom Corbett" had the distinction of appearing on all four Golden-Age TV networks, and during the summer of 1951 actually ran on two different networks simultaneously. Like the majority of child stars, Thomas never made the transition to adult roles. Despite the fact that Thomas was 34 years old at the end, the Tom Corbett character was supposedly a teenager attending Space Academy, training to become an officer of the Solar Guard.
In 1956, Thomas and his now-retired parents returned to California, where he appeared in a few of the surviving radio series and wrote soap-opera scripts. With characteristic energy, he turned his hobby of bridge into a career, becoming the editor of several bridge-related periodicals, and one-time president of the "American Bridge Teachers' Association". He also wrote several books on bridge. In the late 1970s he began to write and publish novels and short-story collections featuring
Sherlock Holmes .During the last decade of his life he relished appearing as a celebrity guest at conventions devoted to old-time radio, the Golden Age of Hollywood, and the Golden Age of Television.In the last five years of his life he often appeared at conventionss wearing his original Tom Corbett dress uniform, which he still fit into quite well.
Thomas also traveled the country to compete in bridge tournaments and instruct others in the game's strategies.
Frankie Thomas died at a
Sherman Oaks ,California hospital of respiratory failure, following a stroke, at the age of 85. At his request, he was buried in his uniform from "Tom Corbett, Space Cadet". He lies beside his parents at Forest Lawn Cemetery in the Hollywood Hills.Bibliography
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*References
*
*External links
*
*
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.