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  1. Billy Halop (February 11, 1920 - November 9, 1976) was an American actor.He was born in Jamaica, Queens.He was in many movies like, Dead End where he played a gang leader. He played the cab driver, "Mr. Munson" on the television situation comedy, All in the Family.

  2. Dead End (1937) -- (Movie Clip) The Mark Of The Squealer The gang (Billy Halop, Bobby Jordan, Huntz Hall, Leo Gorcey, Gabriel Dell) showing off for Baby Face (Humphrey Bogart), would-be architect Dave (Joel McCrea) panics as well-to-do Kay (Wendy Barrie) tries to visit, with director William Wyler’s famous cockroach shot, in Dead End, 1937.

  3. Biography by AllMovie [+] The original leader of the original "Dead End Kids," American actor Billy Halop came from a theatrical family; his mother was a dancer and his sister Florence was a busy radio actress. After several years as a well-paid radio juvenile, Billy was cast as Tommy Gordon in the Broadway production of Sidney Kingsley's Dead ...

  4. Billy Halop. See Also. Dead End Kids. CREDITS. Broadway. Dead End (Oct 28, 1935 - Jun 12, 1937) Performer: Billy Halop [Tommy] Play Drama Original.

  5. Maintained by: Find a Grave. Added: Apr 16, 1999. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 5162. Source citation. Actor. Fondly remembered for his participation in the Dead End Kid film series. His movies include Dead End (1937), and Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), which starred James Cagney. He later served in the US Army as a Sergeant stationed in the ...

  6. William "Billy" Halop (February 11, 1920 – November 9, 1976) appeared as Bert Munson a taxicab company owner/driver friend of Archie Bunker on All In The Family. Billy was also a former teen actor, appearing as one of the Dead End Kids, in the so titled Hollywood film series of the mid 1930's-early 1940's. He came from a Jewish[1] theatrical family: his mother was a dancer, and his sister ...

  7. Billy Halop's show business career started on radio in the 1920s and carried over to stage work on Broadway. There, in 1937, he and other teenage cast members of the stage hit "Dead End" were brought to Hollywood by Samuel Goldwyn for the film version of the play, which was a tremendous hit.

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