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Western Character actor in over fifty films including Cat Ballou, Red Badge of Courage, Distant Drums. Supporting actor nominee in 1952 for Big Sky. TV roles on Disney's Swamp Fox and Bonanza, Gunsmoke, The Virginian, Perry Mason and Andy Griffith Show. |
Arthur
Hunnicutt
Movies & TV
Gravelly
Date of birth : 17 February 1910
Gravelly, Arkansas, USA
Date of death : 26 September 1979
Woodland Hills, California, USA
One of the youngest "old codgers" in show business, Arthur Hunnicutt left college when funds ran out and joined an acting troupe in Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. His first important New York engagement was in the Theatre Guild's production of Love's Old Sweet Song. Hunnicutt entered films in 1942, specializing in grizzled western sidekicks even though he was only in his early 30s. When Percy Kilbride retired from the "Ma and Pa Kettle" series in 1955, Hunnicutt, still a youngster in comparison to Kilbride's sixtysomething co-star Marjorie Main, filled the gap in The Kettles in the Ozarks (1955). And when director Howard Hawks needed someone to play a Walter Brennan-type role when Brennan wasn't available for The Big Sky (1952) and El Dorado (1967), Hunnicutt was the man of the hour (his work in Big Sky won him an Oscar nomination). Arthur Hunnicutt was last seen in 1975's The Moonrunners, at long playing someone closer to his own age.
Lean, tall American character actor known for playing
humorously wise rural roles. He attended Arkansas State Teachers College in his
native state, but was forced to drop out in his third year due to lack of funds.
He joined a theatre company in Massachusetts, then migrated to New York, where
he began to find acting roles on Broadway and on tour. He played in numerous
productions, including the leading role in Tobacco Road, a part his rangy
country persona was made for. He took a few roles in small films in the early
1940s, then returned to stage work. In 1949, he came back to Hollywood
permanently and began a long career as a reliable supporting player. His
wonderfully written and vibrantly played role in the Howard Hawks Western The
Big Sky (1952) won him acclaim and an Oscar nomination for Supporting Actor. He
continued playing similar characters, almost always sympathetic, for remainder
of his career. He was stricken with cancer of the tongue and died in 1979.