Eugene Pallette

Eugene Pallette

actor, soundtrack

Eugene Pallette was born on Jul 08, 1889 in USA. Eugene Pallette's big-screen debut came with The Birth of a Nation directed by D.W. Griffith in 1915, strarring Union Soldier (uncredited). Eugene Pallette is known for Heaven Can Wait directed by Ernst Lubitsch, Gene Tierney stars as Martha Strabel Van Cleve and Don Ameche as Henry Van Cleve. The most recent award Eugene Pallette achieved is Walk of Fame. The upcoming new movie Eugene Pallette plays is Suspense which will be released on Jun 15, 1946.

This eminently recognizable, bulbous, beetle-browed character actor left Culver Military Academy and began acting in repertory companies before becoming a Hollywood extra and stunt man. Eugene's father had also been a thespian at one time but eventually ended his career as an insurance salesman. In his younger days, Eugene was apparently of the more slender build since he once managed to hold down a job as a jockey! He spent in total six years with touring companies, briefly worked as a streetcar conductor in Portland and finally found his way to motion pictures. By his own account, he began in films on the East Coast around 1910 or 1911, gravitating to Hollywood by 1913 and appeared in some 100 productions each year for the first four years of his tenure. The majority of this prodigious output was undoubtedly made up of one-reel shorts. Eugene initially played leads in silent feature films and was described as relatively athletic by the time he appeared in D.W. Griffith's Naissance d'une nation (1915) and Intolérance (1916). His career was put on hold while he served with the Flying Corps during the First World War, but just a couple of years after his return to films he started to turn into a compulsive gourmand. His vast appetite for food increased his girth manifold and he steadfastly refused to go on a diet. Consequently, he found himself demoted to supporting roles but still managed to make a decent living out of his unusual appearance and his trademark gravelly bullfrog voice. Sometime in the early 20s, he began to dabble in Texas oil and first amassed and then lost a fortune within the space of a year.Eugene remained gainfully employed all through the 20s, 30s, and 40s. He played Aramis to Douglas Fairbankss's D'Artagnan in Les trois mousquetaires (1921) and appeared as a Hal Roach contract player in the classic Laurel & Hardy short La bataille du siècle (1927). In talkies, he was the truculent police sergeant Heath in five installments of the Philo Vance series at Paramount, starring William Powell. When not used as pinstripe-suited authority figures or Runyonesque characters (Nicely-Nicely Johnson in La poupée brisée (1942)), he was always diverting in screwball comedies, notably in Godfrey (1936) and Le couple invisible (1937). A truly versatile, his gallery of characters ranged from garrulous and witty and ingratiating, to brooding loners, from avuncular to cantankerous. Under contract at Warners, he proved to be the very best ever incarnation of Friar Tuck in Les aventures de Robin des Bois (1938) and followed this with another priestly effort as Father Felipe in Le signe de Zorro (1940).Near the end of World War II, Eugene and a business partner acquired a 3500-acre estate and ranch along the Imnaha River in remote Wallowa County, Oregon, complete with a fallout shelter. Allegedly, he lived the life of a semi-recluse for the next four years, anticipating a nuclear attack by stockpiling all manner of essential items in order to become fully self-sufficient. The aforementioned business partner later denied this as a rumor, implying that the ranch was merely a place where Eugene entertained his actor friends (some came to hunt and fish). Whether true or not, Eugene was ultimately forced to sell the property in 1949 due to ill-health (throat cancer, as it turned out). He made his final return to the screen at Poverty Row studio Monogram in Fatalité (1946), rounding out his career with a minor film noir set in the skating rink, starring the 'Ice Maiden' Belita. Eugene died eight years later in Los Angeles at the age of 65.

  • Birthday

    Jul 08, 1889
  • Place of Birth

    Winfield, Kansas, USA

Known For

Awards

1 wins & 0 nominations

Walk of Fame
1960
Motion Picture
Winner - Star on the Walk of Fame

Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies