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・ Charlie Byrd at the Village Vanguard
・ Charlie Byrne (Australian footballer)
・ Charlie Byrne (baseball)
・ Charlie Cady
・ Charlie Cairoli
・ Charlie Caldwell
・ Charlie Calladine
・ Charlie Callander
・ Charlie Callas
・ Charlie Cameron (footballer, born 1874)
・ Charlie Cameron (footballer, born 1886)
・ Charlie Cameron (footballer, born 1994)
・ Charlie Campbell
・ Charlie Canet
・ Charlie Cannon
Charlie Cantor
・ Charlie Capozzoli
・ Charlie Cardinal
・ Charlie Cardona
・ Charlie Carlson
・ Charlie Carman
・ Charlie Carr
・ Charlie Carr (activist)
・ Charlie Carter
・ Charlie Carter (cricketer)
・ Charlie Carver
・ Charlie Case
・ Charlie Case (baseball)
・ Charlie Casely-Hayford
・ Charlie Catlett


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Charlie Cantor : ウィキペディア英語版
Charlie Cantor

Charles "Charlie" Cantor (September 4, 1898–September 11, 1966) was an American radio actor. Cantor was known for his frequent appearances on radio, sometimes, totaling 40 shows a week, during the 1930s, '40s and 1950s. Cantor also appeared in nearly 30 television shows between 1951 and 1965.
Cantor's most notable roles on radio were those of Socrates Mulligan on the "Allen's Alley" segments of ''The Fred Allen Show'', Clifton Finnegan on ''Duffy's Tavern'' and as Logan Jerkfinkel on ''The Jack Benny Program''. Cantor also was the second of three actors to portray Abie Levy's father Solomon Levy on ''Abie's Irish Rose''.
Contrary to popular belief, Cantor was not related to comedian Eddie Cantor. However, his brother was actor Nat Cantor.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Charles Cantor Biography )
==Radio==
Cantor first stepped onto the radio scene in 1921 as an actor for a local program at WHN in New York City. From there, Cantor's radio career took off. Between the 1930s and the 1950s, Cantor was a feature guest on anywhere between 20 and 40 radio programs a week, most of them comedy shows. Some of his radio guest star appearances included ''The Shadow'', ''Dick Tracy'', ''The Life of Riley'', ''The Baby Snooks Show'' and ''The Kate Smith Hour''.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Charlie Cantor )
Cantor became popular with radio audiences in 1940 when he joined the cast of ''The Fred Allen Show''. Cantor, along with Alan Reed and John Brown, joined the cast of the new ''Texaco Star Theater''. When "Allen's Alley", a segment in which star Fred Allen would stroll through an imaginary neighborhood conversing with imaginary neighbors, was first introduced in 1942, Cantor soon joined the list of Allen's "neighbors". Cantor portrayed the dim-witted Socrates Mulligan on the Alley. Mulligan's other "neighbors" included Mrs. Pansy Nussbaum (Minerva Pious), pompous poets Falstaff Openshaw (Alan Reed), Humphrey Titter and Thorndyle Swinburne, Titus Moody (Parker Fennelly), Ajax Cassidy (Peter Donald), and boisterous southern senator Beuregard Claghorn (announcer Kenny Delmar).〔Sher, p. 77〕 Cantor remained with the program until its end in 1949.
Shortly after the premiere of ''Texaco Star Theater'', Cantor joined the cast of ''Duffy's Tavern''. ''Duffy's Tavern'' premiered in 1941 with Ed Gardner in the title role of Archie, the head bartender and his then wife Shirley Booth as Miss. Duffy. Cantor was Clifton Finnegan on the program. Finnegan was one of ''Duffy's'' main patrons and most frequently heard customers.
The next year, Cantor joined the cast of ''Abie's Irish Rose'', replacing Alfred White in the role of Solomon Levy. Sol Levy was a widower who owned his own business in the Bronx and is Abie Levy's father.〔Terrance, p. 7〕 The program itself depicted the story of a Jewish man who marries an Irish woman despite family objections. Cantor was soon replaced by his "Allen's Alley" co-star Alan Reed. The program ended in 1944.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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