Glenn Strange(1899-1973)
- Artiste
- Équipe de supervision musicale
- Bande-son
Glenn Strange est né le 16 août 1899 à Nouveau-Mexique, États-Unis. Il était acteur. Il est connu pour Gunsmoke (1955), Deux nigauds contre Frankenstein (1948) et The Adventures of the Spirit (1963). Il était marié à Minnie Thompson Strange et Flora Eola Hooper. Il est mort le 20 septembre 1973 en Californie, États-Unis.
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
Artiste
Équipe de supervision musicale
Bande-son
- Gunsmoke8,1Série télévisée
- performer: "Oh! Susanna", "Red River Valley"
- performer: "Do-Si-Do Indian File" (non crédité)
- 1965–1967
- 1946
- 1946
- 1946
- 1945
- 1944
- 1940
- 1940
- 1939
- 1937
- Hittin' the Trail4,7
- performer: "The Vagabond Song" (aka "The Renegade Song")
- writer: "The Vagabond Song" (aka "The Renegade Song") (non crédité)
- 1937
- 1935
- 1935
- 1935
- 1935
- Autres noms
- Glen 'Peewee' Strange
- Taille
- 1,93 m
- Date de naissance
- Date de décès
- 20 septembre 1973
- Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(cancer du poumon)
- ConjointsMinnie Thompson Strange1937 - 20 septembre 1973 (son décès, 1 enfant)
- ParentsSarah Eliza Byrd
- ProchesRex Allen(Cousin)
- Autres œuvresUnsold pilot: Appeared in a pilot for a western series to be called Trigger Tales (2018).
- Annonces publicitaires
- AnecdotesWorking on a film at Universal, he noticed that the makeup man, department head Jack P. Pierce, kept looking at his face. Pierce asked Strange if he would stay after work, for an extra $25.00, for a makeup test which might lead to another acting job. Pierce covered the mirrors and applied the makeup. When the mirrors were uncovered, Strange claimed that "I look like Boris Karloff". Pierce thought that Strange's face had the right characteristics for the Frankensein monster makeup. Strange took over the role in La Maison de Frankenstein (1944).
- Citations[on Yakima Canutt] I never, in all the time I worked with Yak, I never saw a guy get hurt if they did what Yak told them to do. They tell me Yak got hurt one time over at MGM, a mule fell back on him-on La fièvre du pétrole (1940). That was just a freak accident thing, but I'm talking about things he would rig up. For instance, he'd hook a four-up to a wagon, then come down a road and you'd see him bend 'em, he had a way of pulling the kingpin which let the horses loose and he'd go with the horses and the wagon would just pick itself up and wrap itself around a tree. The guy somehow had a knack for rigging the thing where he got just the effect he wanted. He'd jump from the stagecoach boot to the first team, then the second team, then go underneath and crawl back up on the coach again. He's a perfectionist when it comes to figuring out a stunt and how to get the maximum out of it. Still, it's safe for everybody involved in it, if they do what he tells them to do.
- Marque commercialeTowering height
- Surnoms
- Pee Wee
- Glen Strange
- The Arizona Wranglers
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