Known For:
Acting
Birthday:
September 1, 1889
Place of Birth:
Brooklyn, New York, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jack Norton (September 2, 1882 – October 15, 1958) was an American stage and film character actor who appeared in 184 films between 1934 and 1948, often playing drunks, although in real life he was a teetotaler.
Career
Jack Norton was born in Brooklyn, New York on September 2, 1882.
In his early career he had a vaudeville comedy act with his wife Lillian Healy. Norton made his Broadway debut in 1925 in that year's edition of Earl Carroll's Vanities, and also appeared in Florida Girl, which was produced and staged by Carroll.
Norton's first film work was for a musical short, School for Romance, in 1934, in which a young Betty Grable appeared, but his scenes were deleted. His work survived to reach the screen in his next assignment, The Super Snooper, a comedy short, and in his third film, his first full-length movie, Finishing School, which featured Frances Dee, Billie Burke, Ginger Rogers and Bruce Cabot, Norton played a drunk, setting the pattern for many of his future performances. Although he also played stone sober characters as well, he was best known for his inebriated characterizations, and he improved his work by following genuine drunks around, picking up behavioral tips.
Norton worked continuously and consistently, sometimes appearing in as many as 20 films in one year, although many of his performances went uncredited. One of the few times he was credited as part of the main cast was in 1945 for the film A Guy, a Gal and a Pal In the 1940s, Norton was part of Preston Sturges' unofficial "stock company" of character actors, appearing in five films written and directed by Sturges. He is perhaps best known to modern audiences as A. Pismo Clam, the drunken film director whom W.C. Fields is hired to replace in The Bank Dick (1940).
In 1947, Norton retired from films due to illness, his last appearance being in Alias a Gentlemen, which was released in 1948, although he did make some live television appearances in the early 1950s.
Jack Norton's final appearance would have been in the 1956 episode of The Honeymooners entitled "Unconventional Behavior", but age and infirmity had so overwhelmed him that he was literally written out of the show as it was being filmed, though Jackie Gleason saw to it that Norton was paid fully for the performance he was ready, willing, but unable to give.
Norton died on October 15, 1958 in Saranac Lake, New York at the age of 76. He is buried in Sacred Hearts Cemetery in Southampton, New York on Long Island.
Year | Movie | Role |
---|---|---|
1964 | The Big Parade of Comedy | Actor in 'The Girl from Missouri' (archive footage) (uncredited) |
1953 | I Was a Burlesque Queen | Jim Benson |
1949 | Malice in the Palace | Emir of Schmoe (uncredited) |
1947 | The Sin of Harold Diddlebock | James R. Smoke |
1947 | Variety Girl | Busboy at Brown Derby |
1947 | Linda, Be Good | Jim Benson |
1947 | Hired Husband | Mr. Drinkwater |
1946 | Shadows Over Chinatown | Cosgrove |
1946 | Rhythm and Weep | Mr. Walsh |
1946 | Nocturne | Charlie (uncredited) |
1945 | Flame of Barbary Coast | Byline Conners, Reporter San Francisco Star |
1945 | The Scarlet Clue | Willie Rand |
1945 | Fashion Model | Herbert |
1945 | Man Alive | William T. Lafferty |
1945 | Captain Tugboat Annie | Shiftless |
1945 | Two O'Clock Courage | Drunk at Blue Room Bar (uncredited) |
1945 | Strange Confession | Jack |
1945 | The Naughty Nineties | Drunk at the Gilded Cage (uncredited) |
1945 | A Guy, a Gal and a Pal | Norton |
1944 | Charlie Chan in The Chinese Cat | Hotel Desk Clerk |
1944 | Going My Way | Mr. Lilly (uncredited) |
1944 | Once Upon a Time | Man In Barber Chair (uncredited) |
1944 | The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek | Country Club Man Ordering Champagne (uncredited) |
1944 | Make Your Own Bed | Drunk |
1944 | The Story of Dr. Wassell | 'Janssen' Passenger (uncredited) |
1944 | Hail the Conquering Hero | Second Bandleader (uncredited) |
1944 | The Big Noise | Drunk on Train |
1943 | Taxi, Mister | Reginald Van Nostrum - the Drunk |
1943 | Prairie Chickens | Henry Lewis-Clark III |
1943 | Thank Your Lucky Stars | Customer in Bette Davis Number (uncredited) |
1943 | The Kansan | Saloon Drunk |
1943 | So's Your Uncle | Drunk |
1943 | Crazy House | Drunk |
1943 | The Falcon Strikes Back | Second Hobo (uncredited) |
1943 | It Ain't Hay | Drunk (uncredited) |
1942 | The Palm Beach Story | Second Member Ale and Quail Club |
1942 | The Fleet's In | Kellogg |
1942 | Moonlight in Havana | George |
1942 | Dr. Broadway | Drunk |
1942 | The Spoilers | Mr. Skinner |
1942 | Brooklyn Orchid | Jonathan McFeeder |
1942 | My Favorite Spy | Orchid Room Drunk |
1942 | Dr. Renault's Secret | Mr. Austin |
1941 | No Hands on the Clock | Bartender at The Nugget Room |
1941 | Let's Make Music | Drunk |
1941 | Ride on Vaquero | |
1941 | Pacific Blackout | Drunk |
1941 | Louisiana Purchase | Jester |
1940 | The Villain Still Pursued Her | Drunk |
1940 | The Bank Dick | A. Pismo Clam |
1940 | The Ghost Breakers | Drunk (uncredited) |
1940 | The Way of All Flesh | Barber |
1940 | City of Chance | Mr. Murphy |
1940 | The Farmer's Daughter | Shimmy Conway |
1940 | Opened by Mistake | Al, the Bartender |
1940 | A Night at Earl Carroll's | Alonzo Smith |
1939 | The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt | Charlie Fenton - the Party Drunk (uncredited) |
1939 | News Is Made at Night | Drunk |
1939 | The Roaring Twenties | Drunk at Henderson Club (uncredited) |
1939 | Grand Jury Secrets | Doyle |
1939 | Society Smugglers | Prentis |
1939 | Joe and Ethel Turp Call on the President | Parker |
1938 | Thanks for the Memory | Bert Monroe |
1938 | The Awful Tooth | Dr. Schultz |
1938 | Hold That Kiss | Mallory |
1938 | Meet the Girls | Fletcher |
1938 | Love Is a Headache | Bartender (uncredited) |
1938 | Everybody's Doing It | Harry The Drunk |
1938 | Arsène Lupin Returns | Hotel Manager (uncredited) |
1938 | Jezebel | Drunk (uncredited) |
1937 | Meet the Missus | Mr. Norton |
1937 | The Women Men Marry | Wilhelm Peebles (uncredited) |
1937 | My Dear Miss Aldrich | First Drunk at Red Apple Inn (uncredited) |
1937 | Time Out for Romance | Crapshooter |
1937 | Marked Woman | Drunk |
1936 | Who's Looney Now | Herbert Brown |
1936 | The Preview Murder Mystery | Comedy Director (Uncredited) |
1936 | Down the Ribber | |
1936 | Forgotten Faces | Drunk |
1935 | Sweet Music | Drunk (uncredited) |
1935 | Foolish Hearts | Jimmy |
1935 | Dr. Socrates | Drunk in Park |
1935 | His Night Out | Dr. Singer |
1935 | Calling All Cars | Duke Costello |
1935 | Going Highbrow | Sinclair |
1935 | One More Spring | Drunk |
1935 | Broadway Gondolier | Man on Ship with Pipe |
1935 | Stolen Harmony | Phillips (uncredited) |
1935 | Page Miss Glory | Reporter (uncredited) |
1935 | Ship Cafe | Mr. Randall (uncredited) |
1935 | Don't Bet on Blondes | J. Mortimer 'Mousy' Slade |
1935 | The Gilded Lily | Photographer (uncredited) |
1934 | Fixing a Stew | Pete |
1934 | The Super Snooper | |
1934 | Finishing School | Drunk (uncredited) |
1934 | Counsel on De Fence | |
1934 | Cockeyed Cavaliers | King's Physician |
1934 | One Too Many | |
1934 | Woman Haters | Justice of the Peace (uncredited) |
Year | TV Show | Role |
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