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Donald O'Connor
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SINGIN' IN THE RAIN
Having grown up in a theatrical family with whom he played vaudeville
as a child, Donald O'Connor made his film debut at the age of eleven in
the late 1930s and played a variety of juvenile roles (primarily for
Universal) throughout the 1940s before making a name for himself as an
A-list dancer and comedian in the 1950s. Though his film career
faded quickly at the end of the decade with the decline of the studio
system, O'Connor is best remembered for his six comedies opposite
"Francis, the Talking Mule" as well as his movie musical appearances in
which he wowed audiences with his tremendously energetic and acrobatic
dance numbers. |
Donald O'Connor launched his Hollywood career in the late 1930s playing several
straight-acting "boy" roles in a variety of films at
Paramount. He appeared
as Pat Falconer (Fred MacMurray) at age
10 in MEN WITH WINGS, as Bing Crosby's kid
brother in SING, YOU SINNERS, and as Huckleberry Finn opposite Billy Cook in TOM
SAWYER, DETECTIVE (all 1938). He also played Beau (Gary
Cooper) at age 12 in BEAU GESTE (1939).
Music Clip from BEAU GESTE:
"Battle"
(clip) by
Alfred Newman (a
.MP3 file).
(For help opening the multimedia files, visit the plug-ins page.) |
During World War II, O'Connor moved to
Universal where he starred
in several juvenile musical comedies such as WHEN JOHNNY COMES MARCHING HOME
AGAIN (1942) with Peggy Ryan, Allan Jones and Gloria Jean (all with O'Connor at
right). |
In 1949,
Universal cast O'Connor as Peter Stirling, a soldier who takes up with a
talking mule in FRANCIS. The comedy proved so successful, it spawned a
string of sequels, and when O'Connor finally declined to keep making them, the
films' director continued the idea with a TV series called "Mister Ed." |
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