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The Montecristodog show

  • Bobby Jordan

    19 MAY 2023 · A look at another Dead End Kid.
    12m 14s
  • Episode 4 - Huntz Hall

    18 MAY 2023 · A look around the life of Huntz Hall.
    13m 12s
  • Episode 3-Leo Gorcey. Part 2

    17 MAY 2023 · A look at Gorcey and the Bowery boys. What are your favorite Bowery Boys episodes? My take on this is Blues Buster and Crashing Las Vegas. Bowery Boys will never go away. The comedy team of Gorcey and Huntz will live on thru generations to come.
    12m 49s
  • A look At Leo Gorcey

    16 MAY 2023 · A look at Leo Gorcey and his life. During the 1930s, Leo Gorcey's father worked in theater and film, often living separately from the family. In 1935, upon his return, Bernard Gorcey and Leo's younger brother David convinced Leo to audition for a minor role in the play Dead End. Leo, who had recently lost his job as a plumber's apprentice, aspired to follow in his father's footsteps. In the play, Gorcey and his brother were cast as East 53rd Place Gang members, later known as the "2nd Avenue Boys." When another actor left the production, Gorcey, originally the understudy, was promoted to the role of Spit. He developed a stage persona of a quarrelsome guttersnipe who relished causing trouble. In 1937, Samuel Goldwyn adapted the famous play Dead End into a film, and Gorcey and the other actors were brought to Hollywood. Over the next two decades, Gorcey became one of the busiest actors in Hollywood, starring in seven Dead End Kids films from 1937 to 1939, 21 East Side Kids films from 1940 to 1945, and 41 Bowery Boys films from 1946 to 1955. Article courtesy of https://www.montecristodog.blogspot.com
    14m 26s
  • Billy Halop

    15 MAY 2023 · A look at Billy Halop Billy Halop began acting on Broadway as Tommy Gordon in Sidney Kingsley's Dead End in 1935. When Samuel Goldwyn produced the film version of the play in 1937, Halop and the rest of the Dead End Kids were brought to Hollywood to reprise their roles. Halop played the character of Tommy, a gang leader, in a series of films featuring the Dead End Kids, later renamed the Little Tough Guys. He also appeared alongside James Cagney in Angels with Dirty Faces (1938). He played the character of Harry Flashman, a bully who spoke with an English accent, in the 1940 film Tom Brown's School Days, opposite Cedric Hardwicke and Freddie Bartholomew. Halop claimed that he was paid more than the other Dead End Kids, which caused tensions within the group, and that he grew tired of the name "Dead End Kids." After serving in the US Army Signal Corps during World War II, Halop found that he was too old for the types of roles that had made him famous. He even starred in a low-budget imitation of the East Side Kids called Gas House Kids (1946) when he was just 26 years old. Unfortunately, his career began to decline due to a lack of film work, marital problems, and alcoholism. Billy Halop experienced a career resurgence in the 1970s with his role as Bert Munson, a cab driver and close friend of Archie Bunker on the popular television series, All in the Family. He appeared in ten episodes between 1971 and 1975, including the famous "Sammy's Visit" episode from the second season in 1972, which featured Sammy Davis, Jr.
    11m 46s
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Author Caleb A Santos
Categories Entertainment News
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