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・ Walter Carringer
・ Walter Carrington
・ Walter Carroll
・ Walter Carsen Centre
・ Walter Carter
・ Walter Cartier
・ Walter Cartwright
・ Walter Carvalho
・ Walter Casagrande
・ Walter Casaroli
・ Walter Case
・ Walter Case, Jr.
・ Walter Caspari
・ Walter Cassel
・ Walter Castor
Walter Catlett
・ Walter Cave
・ Walter Cawthorn
・ Walter Cazen
・ Walter Centeno
・ Walter Chadwick
・ Walter Chadwick Noyes
・ Walter Chaffe
・ Walter Chalmers
・ Walter Chalmers Smith
・ Walter Chalá
・ Walter Chambers
・ Walter Chandler
・ Walter Chandler (disambiguation)
・ Walter Channing


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Walter Catlett : ウィキペディア英語版
Walter Catlett

Walter Catlett (February 4, 1889 – November 14, 1960) was an American actor. He made a career of playing excitable, officious blowhards.
==Career==
Catlett was born in San Francisco, California. He started out in vaudeville, teaming up with Hobart Cavanaugh at some point,〔 )〕 with a detour for a while in opera, before breaking into acting.
He started on stage in 1906 and made his Broadway debut in either ''The Prince of Pilsen'' (1911) or ''So Long Letty'' (1916). His first film appearance was in 1912, but then he went back to stage and did not return to films until 1929. He performed in operettas and musicals, including ''The Ziegfeld Follies of 1917'', the original production of the Jerome Kern musical ''Sally'' (1920) and the Gershwins' ''Lady Be Good'' (1924). In the last, he introduced the song "Oh, Lady Be Good!"〔
Catlett made a handful of silent film appearances, but his film career did not catch on until the advent of talking pictures allowed moviegoers to experience his full comic repertoire. Three of his most remembered roles were as the stage manager given to distraction by James Cagney in ''Yankee Doodle Dandy'', the local constable who throws the entire cast in jail and winds up there himself in the Howard Hawks' classic screwball comedy ''Bringing Up Baby'', and as Morrow, the drunken poet in the restaurant who "knows when () been a skunk" and takes Longfellow Deeds on a "bender" in ''Mr. Deeds Goes to Town''. ''The New York Times'' film critic Mordaunt Hall wrote that "This clever comedian runs away with the acting laurels" in ''Big City Blues'' (1932). He played John Barsad in the 1935 David O. Selznick production of ''A Tale of Two Cities'' starring Ronald Colman. He also provided the uncredited voice of J. Worthington Foulfellow (a.k.a. Honest John) the Fox in the 1940 Disney animated film ''Pinocchio''. In the 1950s, he appeared in films like Disney's ''Davy Crockett'', ''Friendly Persuasion'' (1956) and ''Beau James''.

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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