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Edward Everett Horton
Birthday:
18 March 1886
Birth Name:
Edward Everett Horton Jr.
Height:
183 cm
Biography
I have my own little kingdom. I do the scavenger parts no one else wants and I get well paid for it.
I have my own little kingdom. I do the scavenger parts no one else wants and I get well paid for it.
[on Douglas Sirk] He was delightful and ambitious and so well-informed.
[on Douglas Sirk] He was delightful and ambitious and so well-informed.
[on Rita Hayworth] She was so sweet and hard-working. She asked me to watch her work out her dance routines and go over her lines with her. I'd tell her little things and she'd whisper, "Don't tell the director, please." She was so modest and affectionate.
[on Rita Hayworth] She was so sweet and hard-working. She asked me to watch her work out her dance routines and go over her lines with her. I'd tell her little things and she'd whisper, "Don't tell the director, please." She was so modest and affectionate.
[at the suggestion of retirement, c. 1966, aged 80] Dear Lord! I would go right out of my mind.
[at the suggestion of retirement, c. 1966, aged 80] Dear Lord! I would go right out of my mind.
Edward Everett Horton
It seemed like Edward Everett Horton appeared in just about every Hollywood comedy made in the 1930s. He was always the perfect counterpart to the great gentlemen and protagonists of the films. Horton was born in Brooklyn, New York City, to Isabella S. (Diack) and Edward Everett Horton, a compositor for the NY Times. His maternal grandparents were Scottish and his father was of English and German ancestry. Like many of his contemporaries, Horton came to the movies from the theatre, where he debuted in 1906. He made his film debut in 1922. Unlike many of his silent-film colleagues, however, Horton had no problems in adapting to the sound, despite--or perhaps because of--his crackling voice. From 1932 to 1938 he worked often with Ernst Lubitsch, and later with Frank Capra. He has appeared in more than 120 films, in addition to a large body of work on TV, among which was the befuddled Hekawi medicine man Roaring Chicken on the western comedy F Troop (1965).
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