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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › George_ZuccoGeorge Zucco - Wikipedia

    George Zucco (11 January 1886 – 27 May 1960) was a British character actor who appeared in plays and 96 films, mostly American-made, during a career spanning over two decades, from the 1920s to 1951. [1] In his films, he often played a suave villain, a member of nobility, or a mad doctor. [2]

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0958345George Zucco - IMDb

    George Zucco. Actor: Fog Island. At 22, George Zucco decided to begin his stage career in earnest in the Canadian provinces in 1908. In the course of the following decade, he also performed in an American vaudeville tour with his young wife, Frances, in a routine called "The Suffragette."

    • January 1, 1
    • Manchester, England, UK
    • January 1, 1
    • Hollywood, California, USA
    • Canada Beckons
    • Fame For An Elementary Role
    • Zucco and Karloff Go For Some ‘Little Walks’
    • The End Titles Roll
    • George Zucco’s Final Credits

    George Zucco was born in Manchester, England, on 11 January 1886. Like fellow countryman William Henry Pratt, Zucco would end up in Canada to ply his trade against the wildness and vast open spaces. Zucco debuted on the Canadian stage in Winnipeg, Manitoba in 1908 in a stock theater company. Zucco played the circuit of shows similar to what young W...

    George Zucco returned to the United States in 1935. He worked with Gary Cooper and George Raft in Souls at Sea (1937), and had a small part in Jean Harlow’s last film Saratoga (1937). The claim to fame and his best role was that of Professor Moriarty in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1939), opposite Basil Rathboneas Sherlock Holmes and Nigel Br...

    Like Boris Karloff, Zucco took every role he was offered in the forties. This, like dear Boris, made him a ‘working actor,’ but also meant he was in some questionable material. Zucco appeared in B-films and Universal horror films, including The Mummy’s Hand (1940), The Mummy’s Tomb (1942), and ‘Poverty Row’ productions like The Mad Monster (1942), ...

    George Zucco retired due to illness, after a small role in David and Bathsheba (1951). The terrible disease of dementia ended his career in the 1950s, and he died on 27 May 1960, from pneumonia in an assisted-living facility at the age of 74. Zucco had a wife, Stella Francis, whom he married in 1930. They were together till his death. The two had a...

    The legacy of George Zucco is the fact that he was a ‘working actor,’ which few could say at his level. Yes, there were some moments best confined to lovable cardboard sets of the Ed Wood style that would also claim aged Bela Lugosi. Zucco, like Karloff, Lugosi and Rathbone, came from the stage that was a source for actors (unlike today). The skill...

    • Terry Sherwood
  3. George Zucco was a prolific horror actor seen in Universal horror films like The Mummy's Hand, The Mummy's Tomb, The Mad Monster and House of Frankenstein.

  4. George Zucco (11 January 1886 – 27 May 1960) was an English character actor who appeared, almost always in supporting roles, in 96 films during a career spanning two decades, from 1931 to 1951. In his horror films, he often played a suave villain or a mad doctor.

  5. British actor George Zucco began his career during the transition from silent films to pictures with sound. After honing his craft as a vaudeville actor in the 1910s, Zucco made his screen debut in the 1931 film "The Dreyfus Case," which chronicled the conviction of French officer Alfred Dreyfus...

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  7. His quirkiest horror role was as a gas station attendant who doubled as a kidnapper and voodoo drum-thumper in Monogram's incredible Voodoo Man (1944). When not scaring the daylights out of his audience, Zucco could be found playing roles requiring quiet whimsy, notably the detective in Lured (1947) and the judge in Let's Dance (1950).

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