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IMDbPro

Joseph Calleia(1897-1975)

  • Actor
  • Writer
  • Soundtrack
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Joseph Calleia
Puerto Rican ex-con tries to go straight, but is tempted back to his old life by his former gang.
Play trailer1:55
Cry Tough (1959)
11 Videos
85 Photos
His full name was Joseph Alexander Caesar Herstall Vincent Calleja - but he was better known as Joseph or Joe Calleia, one of Hollywood's most recognized bad guys. But Calleia's roots and talents ran much deeper than character actor. He was Maltese, born on that barren but historically important island of Malta between Italy and Africa in the Mediterranean. The Maltese culture was a crossroads of peoples (partially Arabic) but as intrepid fisherman, navigators, and warriors-as they proved to the 16th century Turks - it was a proud one. But it could not hold Calleia, who, blessed with a good singing voice and a talent for composing, joined a harmonica band that left for the Continent in 1914. This was a Europe feeling the initial blows of World War I, and Calleia's band toured the length and breadth of it in music halls and cafes. He went to Paris and eventually came to London to perform some concert singing engagements. And from there the lure of the New World brought him to New York by 1926.

It was a natural enough transition for a talented singing performer to acting. Calleia did his first play on Broadway in an original drama suitably called "Broadway" for a long run from late 1926 early 1928. This was the first of seven plays he did into early 1935. He took a double role as actor and stage manager for the 1930-31 run of "Grand Hotel". He received good reviews (once called him a "bright light" on Broadway) and later recalled that his treading the boards were his best years as an actor. By 1931 he had yet another course to steer. Hollywood had noticed him, for his constrained intensity as an actor was matched by a singular visage - heavy-lidded eyes and dark features that gave him a disquieting and menacing appearance. Yet the sometime telltale lilt in his voice betrayed the fine singer. He had just enough accent to make him Latin or Greek or Middle Eastern - or indigenous sorts. Of course, his look meant early heavy roles as he went under contract to MGM, doing his first two films in that year of 1931.

By 1935 his looks landed him the role of Sonny Black, a mob boss with many facets, and with a characteristic clenched-teeth delivery, Calleia acquitted himself in fine fashion. Through the 1930s he was pretty much typed-cast as a mobster-with variations. Always with the lean and hungry look, he was a club owner in After the Thin Man (1936) and played a government cop in the atmospheric Algiers (1938). He even had time to help write a screenplay for the film Robin Hood of El Dorado (1936) with veteran Warner Baxter. Calleia ended the decade with roles at opposite ends of the character acting spectrum-somewhat center stage as a priest in the sometimes heavy-handed Full Confession (1939) and most memorable as Vasquez, the brought-to-justice criminal on the ill-fated DC-3 that crash lands in headhunter-infested Amazon highlands in Five Came Back (1939). This is a classic adventure drama -- remade with Rod Steiger -- with a great supporting cast that included everyone's favorite wisecracking redhead, Lucille Ball.

Into the 1940s, Calleia was cast in more ethnic roles - particularly as Hispanics of various sorts. But his roles were memorable nonetheless, as El Sordo in For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943) and Rodriguez in The Cross of Lorraine (1943). But two roles stand out. His Buldeo in the Alexander Korda classic production of The Jungle Book (1942) was a personal favorite, a double role, as trouble-making villager and the selfsame man now old and wise telling the story to the village children as narrator. The makeup is so good-and Calleia enjoyed character makeup-that most viewers are surprised when the old man reveals his identity. More mainstream Hollywood was his intriguing role as Detective Obregon in Gilda (1946). He's the good guy-right? - but he comes off so sly with his sidelong looks and the way he bates the principals - Glenn Ford and Rita Hayworth - that you just don't know. In the end he has the task, like the chorus in a Shakespearean play, to explain and summarize-perhaps not the best means of getting to the point - but that was the director's choice. His secondary parts receded a bit into the later 1940s and further into the 1950s with Calleia typed to retrace former roles but giving them new nuance just the same. He has little more than a cameo as Indian chief Cuyloga-Native American chiefs being the lot of no few elder actors in 1950s Hollywood - in the otherwise worthwhile Disney adaptation of The Light in the Forest (1958). Calleia ventured into the TV briefly about that time.

But also from that year was another of his favorite roles. Without doubt Touch of Evil (1958) is one of the strangest of Orson Welles later efforts as director/star. It borders on the uneven but is so off-the-wall that one cannot help watching and thoroughly enjoying all the antics of Welles still brilliant film techniques: shadow and light, wild camera angles, gringos playing Mexicans-Charlton Heston is a wow and stained darker than necessary-and over-the-top performances with veteran dramatis personae like Marlene Dietrich, Akim Tamiroff, Calleia, of course, and Welles himself looking like a police captain from skid row and using that funny character voice of his that pops up in his films as an aside. Calleia, with white hair, is tired old cop Sergeant Menzies, long associate of Welles' seedy character. Doing what he has always done, covering up and running interference, in the end Menzies has to face the truth about his crooked captain. Calleia enjoyed the role as going so against his usual type - showing a man harried by his past and haunted by dirty secrets - vulnerable - and very human. It's a great part.

By 1963 Calleia walked away - or, that is - sailed away from Hollywood. He returned to his native Malta for a well deserved retirement. The Maltese had followed the career of their native son, and he had made several visits during his film career. Not surprisingly his biggest fan club was right at home. He was a kind and generous man and very appreciative of his fans wherever they were - quick to read all their letters and quick to send autographed pictures. It was strictly tongue-in-cheek when he supposedly quipped: "Everyone recognizes my face, but no one knows my name." After his passing, the government of the island state of Malta issued two commemorative stamps (1997) to honor him. A bust was erected before the house in which he was born as a further memorial to this Maltese VIP who had made good.
BornAugust 4, 1897
DiedOctober 31, 1975(78)
BornAugust 4, 1897
DiedOctober 31, 1975(78)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • Awards
    • 1 win total

Photos85

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Known for

Charlton Heston, Orson Welles, and Janet Leigh in Touch of Evil (1958)
Touch of Evil
7.9
  • Police Sergeant Pete Menzies
  • 1958
Charles Boyer and Hedy Lamarr in Algiers (1938)
Algiers
6.6
  • Slimane
  • 1938
Rita Hayworth in Gilda (1946)
Gilda
7.6
  • Det. Maurice Obregon
  • 1946
Sabu in The Jungle Book (1942)
The Jungle Book
6.7
  • Buldeo
  • 1942

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actor



  • Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre (1963)
    Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre
    7.4
    TV Series
    • Cagewa
    • 1963
  • Elizabeth Montgomery and Henry Silva in Johnny Cool (1963)
    Johnny Cool
    6.4
    • Tourist
    • 1963
  • John Wayne, Richard Widmark, and Laurence Harvey in The Alamo (1960)
    The Alamo
    6.8
    • Juan Seguin
    • 1960
  • Linda Cristal and John Saxon in Cry Tough (1959)
    Cry Tough
    5.7
    • Sr. Estrada
    • 1959
  • Guy Williams in Zorro (1957)
    Zorro
    8.2
    TV Series
    • Padre Simeon
    • 1959
  • The Phil Silvers Show (1955)
    The Phil Silvers Show
    8.4
    TV Series
    • Alfredo - Restaurateur
    • 1959
  • Have Gun - Will Travel (1957)
    Have Gun - Will Travel
    8.4
    TV Series
    • Sheriff Sam Truett
    • 1958
  • Wendell Corey, Joanne Dru, Carol Lynley, James MacArthur, and Fess Parker in The Light in the Forest (1958)
    The Light in the Forest
    6.4
    • Chief Cuyloga
    • 1958
  • Charlton Heston, Orson Welles, and Janet Leigh in Touch of Evil (1958)
    Touch of Evil
    7.9
    • Police Sergeant Pete Menzies
    • 1958
  • Anthony Quinn, Anthony Franciosa, and Anna Magnani in Wild Is the Wind (1957)
    Wild Is the Wind
    6.6
    • Alberto
    • 1957
  • Serenade (1956)
    Serenade
    5.7
    • Maestro Marcatello
    • 1956
  • Jane Russell and Cornel Wilde in Hot Blood (1956)
    Hot Blood
    5.6
    • Papa Theodore
    • 1956
  • The Littlest Outlaw (1955)
    The Littlest Outlaw
    6.1
    • Padre
    • 1955
  • Shelley Winters, Rory Calhoun, and Gilbert Roland in The Treasure of Pancho Villa (1955)
    The Treasure of Pancho Villa
    5.6
    • Pablo Morales
    • 1955
  • Jane Russell in Underwater! (1955)
    Underwater!
    5.3
    • Rico Herrera
    • 1955

Writer



  • Warner Baxter in Robin Hood of El Dorado (1936)
    Robin Hood of El Dorado
    5.9
    • screenplay
    • 1936

Soundtrack



  • The Littlest Outlaw (1955)
    The Littlest Outlaw
    6.1
    • performer: "Doroteo (The Automobile Song)"
    • 1955

Videos11

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Trailer 0:57
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Trailer 0:57
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Trailer 1:55
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Official Trailer
Trailer 1:38
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Trailer 2:18
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Trailer 2:16
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Personal details

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  • Alternative name
    • Joe Spurin Calleia
  • Height
    • 5′ 10″ (1.78 m)
  • Born
    • August 4, 1897
    • Notabile, Malta
  • Died
    • October 31, 1975
    • Valletta, Malta(undisclosed)
  • Spouse
    • Eleonore Vassallo1929 - 1968 (her death)
  • Other works
    Stage Play: Broadway. Drama. Written by Philip Dunning and George Abbott. Directed by Philip Dunning and George Abbott. Broadhurst Theatre: 16 Sep 1926- 11 Feb 1928 (603 performances). Cast: Constance Brown, Sylvia Field (as "Billie Moore"), William Foran, Robert Gleckler (as "Steve Crandall"), Thomas E. Jackson (as "Dan McCorn"), Roy R. Lloyd, Millard Mitchell (as "Larry"), Paul Porcasi (as "Nick Verdis"), Ann Preston, Molly Ricardel, Henry Sherwood, Joseph Calleia [credited as Joseph Spurin-Calleia] (as "Joe, a waiter") [Broadway debut], Eloise Stream, Lee Tracy (as "Roy Lane"), Edith Van Cleve, Frank Verigun, Mildred Wall, Clare Woodbury, John Wray (as "Scar" Edwards"). Produced by Jed Harris.
  • Publicity listings
    • 2 Articles

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    During his retirement time in Malta he received a telegram from Francis Ford Coppola, who offered him the part of Don Vito Corleone in The Godfather (1972). As much as Coppola wanted Calleia for the part, Calleia had to refuse because of health reasons.
  • Nickname
    • Joe

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