Lyle Talbot


Actor
Lyle Talbot

About

Birth Place
Brainard, Nebraska, USA
Born
February 08, 1902
Died
March 03, 1996

Biography

This reliable second lead played gangsters, best friends, neighbors and the occasional romantic hero in countless films and TV shows from 1932 through the 1980s. Talbot's colorful childhood was like something from a melodrama: born on a riverboat, he was abducted by his grandmother after his mother's early death. By his teen years, Talbot was a sideshow magician, and by the late 20s was ...

Photos & Videos

No More Orchids - Movie Posters
Three on a Match - Scene Stills
Varieties on Parade - Publicity Still

Family & Companions

Marguerite Ethel Cramer
Wife
Married 1937, divorced 1939.
Abagail Adams
Wife
Actress, dancer. Married 1942; divorced; commited suicide 2/13/55 at age 32.
Margaret Talbot
Wife
Married 1950; fourth wife; died in early 1990s.

Notes

On playing character roles: "Well--it bothered me at first. I had always played leads in stock, and I couldn't understand why they didn't let me do them in pictures. Now, I don't mind anymore. I feel that I've become essentially a character actor. And as long as they keep on giving me nice meaty parts--even though they don't carry through the whole picture--I'm satisfied. As a matter of fact, I'd rather jog along this way than become one of those overnight stars whose years in pictures are numbered. I've seen too much unhappiness on this account--right here on my home lot".--Lyle Talbot, quoted in 1935 news clipping

On studio contract work in the 1930s: "They had to guarantee you a certain amount of work, but that was never a problem. We generally worked 12 hours a day, six days a week. I can remember often working on two or three pictures at a time. I rode a bicycle between sound stages, carrying two or three scripts in the front basket for pictures I was working on, and two or three in the rear basket for upcoming pictures".--Lyle Talbot, quoted in THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, 2/19/84

Biography

This reliable second lead played gangsters, best friends, neighbors and the occasional romantic hero in countless films and TV shows from 1932 through the 1980s. Talbot's colorful childhood was like something from a melodrama: born on a riverboat, he was abducted by his grandmother after his mother's early death. By his teen years, Talbot was a sideshow magician, and by the late 20s was running The Lyle Talbot Players in Nebraska. When talking pictures became popular, Talbot headed West. The handsome, husky actor with stage training and a broad grin quickly found work.

In the two-year period 1932-34, Talbot made an amazing 28 films, mostly for Warner Brothers and First National. He supported or co-starred with such luminaries as Carole Lombard ("No More Orchids" 1932), Bette Davis ("Three on a Match" 1932, "Fog Over Frisco" 1934 and several others), Ginger Rogers ("The Thirteenth Guest" 1932, "A Shriek in the Night" 1933), Barbara Stanwyck ("The Purchase Price," 1932 "Ladies They Talk About" 1933, "A Lost Lady" 1934), Shirley Temple ("Our Little Girl" 1935), Marion Davies ("Page Miss Glory" 1935), Mae West ("Go West, Young Man" 1936), Susan Hayward ("With a Song in My Heart" 1952), and Marilyn Monroe ("There's No Business Like Show Business" 1954). Joan Blondell, Ann Dvorak and Loretta Young were frequent co-stars, alternately romanced and menaced by Talbot; he even co-starred with The Three Stooges, in 1951's "Gold Raiders."

By the mid-1930s (when he became a founding member of Screen Actors Guild), it was obvious that Talbot would not become a star. His SAG involvement angered some studio heads, but the actor never wanted for employment. He freelanced for both major studios and poverty row houses, making such forgettable fare as "Trapped by Television" (1936), "Mexican Spitfire's Elephant" (1942), "Batman and Robin" (1949), and several films with the notorious director/writer Ed Wood, Jr.: "Glen or Glenda?" and "Crossroad Avenger" (both 1953), "Jailbait" (1954) and "Plan Nine from Outer Space" (1956). Among Talbot's few high-budget films at this point in his career was his last, "Sunrise at Campobello" (1960).

Talbot entered the TV industry early, playing "The Lone Ranger"'s banker on the ABC series (1949-65). He also had continuing roles as an irritating neighbor on "The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet" (ABC, 1952-66), Bob Cummings' Army buddy on "Love That Bob" (NBC, CBS, 1955-59) and roles on "Commando Cody" (NBC, 1955), "Leave It To Beaver" (CBS, ABC, 1957-63), "Pursuit" (CBS, 1958-59) and "Ben Jerrod" (NBC, 1963). He continued working on TV through the 1980s, guesting on such shows as "Alfred Hitchcock Presents," "Charlie's Angels," "Who's the Boss?" and his swan song, as Stephanie's grandfather on "Newhart."

Talbot never gave up his love of the stage, and as early as the mid-30s took time off from films to appear in shows. Talbot was on Broadway from 1938-40 in "Separate Rooms," and later appeared in regional productions of "South Pacific" and "The Odd Couple" (both 1968-69), "The Little Foxes" (1970), and "Camelot" (1973). In 1972, he directed his TV co-stars Ozzie and Harriet Nelson in "The Marriage-Go-Round" in Florida. Talbot was retired professionally, but still active socially and working on his memoirs when he died at 94 in 1996.

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

The Haunted World of Edward D. Wood Jr. (1995)
Himself
Sunrise at Campobello (1960)
Mr. Brimmer
City of Fear (1959)
Chief Jensen
Plan 9 from Outer Space (1959)
General [Roberts]
The Hot Angel (1958)
Van Richards
The Notorious Mr. Monks (1958)
Prosecuting attorney
High School Confidential! (1958)
William Remington Kane
The Great Man (1957)
Harry Connors
Calling Homicide (1956)
Tony Fuller
The Mesa Of Lost Women (1956)
Sudden Danger (1955)
Harry Woodruff
Jail Busters (1955)
Sy Bowman
The Desperado (1954)
Judge
The Steel Cage (1954)
Square
There's No Business Like Show Business (1954)
Stage manager
Captain Kidd and the Slave Girl (1954)
Pace
Tobor the Great (1954)
Admiral
Jail Bait (1954)
Inspector Johns
Wings of the Hawk (1953)
Jones
Down Among the Sheltering Palms (1953)
Maj. Gerald Curwin
Tumbleweed (1953)
Weber
Glen or Glenda? (1953)
Inspector [Warren]
Clipped Wings (1953)
Capt. Blair
Mesa of Lost Women (1953)
Narrator
Star of Texas (1953)
Telegraph operator
White Lightning (1953)
Rocky Gilbraltar
Trail Blazers (1953)
Deputy Sheriff McLain
Crossroad Avenger (1953)
Bart
Texas City (1952)
Capt. Hamilton
Desperadoes' Outpost (1952)
Walter Fleming
Sea Tiger (1952)
Williams
African Treasure (1952)
Roy de Haven, also known as Pat Gilroy
The Old West (1952)
Doc Lockwood
Untamed Women (1952)
Col. Loring
With a Song in My Heart (1952)
Radio director
Outlaw Women (1952)
Judge Roger Dixon
Kansas Territory (1952)
Sam Collins
Wyoming Roundup (1952)
Feudin' Fools (1952)
Big Jim
Montana Incident (1952)
Mooney
Fury of the Congo (1951)
Grant
Fingerprints Don't Lie (1951)
Lt. Grayson
Jungle Manhunt (1951)
Dr. Mitchell Heller
Mask of the Dragon (1951)
Lt. "Mack" McLaughlin
The Du Pont Story (1951)
Eugene du Pont
Hurricane Island (1951)
Physician
Purple Heart Diary (1951)
Maj. Green
Blue Blood (1951)
Teasdale
Man from Sonora (1951)
Sheriff Frank Casey
Gold Raiders (1951)
Taggart
Varieties on Parade (1951)
Abilene Trail (1951)
Doc Martin
The Scarf (1951)
Detective
Colorado Ambush (1951)
Sheriff Editor Lowery
The Daltons' Women (1951)
Banker Jim Thorne
Revenue Agent (1951)
Augustus "Gus" King
Texas Lawmen (1951)
Doctor
Oklahoma Justice (1951)
Doctor
One Too Many (1951)
Mr. Boyer
Johnny One-Eye (1950)
Champagne for Caesar (1950)
Executive no. 2
The Jackpot (1950)
Fred Burns
Cherokee Uprising (1950)
Deputy Marshal Jones
Big Timber (1950)
First logger
Everybody's Dancin' (1950)
Contractor
Federal Man (1950)
Johnson
Lucky Losers (1950)
Bruce McDermott
Border Rangers (1950)
Capt. McLane
Atom Man vs. Superman (1950)
Joe Palooka in the Big Fight (1949)
Lt. Muldoon
The Mutineers (1949)
Captain Jim Duncan
The Sky Dragon (1949)
Andy Barrett
Ringside (1949)
Radio announcer
Mississippi Rhythm (1949)
O'Neill
Highway 13 (1949)
Detective
Quick on the Trigger (1949)
Garvey Yager
Fighting Fools (1949)
Blinky Harris
Batman and Robin (1949)
Joe Palooka in Winner Take All (1948)
Henderson
Shep Comes Home (1948)
Doctor
Thunder in the Pines (1948)
Nick Roulade
Parole, Inc. (1948)
Police commissioner [Hughes]
Devil's Cargo (1948)
Johnny Morello
Appointment with Murder (1948)
Fred Muller
The Vicious Circle (1948)
Miller
Danger Street (1947)
Charles Johnson
The Vigilante (1947)
Strange Impersonation (1946)
Inspector Malloy
Gun Town (1946)
Lucky Dorgan
Murder Is My Business (1946)
Duell Renslow
North of the Border (1946)
Sergeant Jack Craig
Song of Arizona (1946)
King Blaine
Chick Carter, Detective (1946)
Up in Arms (1944)
Sgt. Gelsey
The Falcon Out West (1944)
Tex Irwin
Gambler's Choice (1944)
Yellow Gloves Weldon
Sensations of 1945 (1944)
Randall
Dixie Jamboree (1944)
Anthony "Tony" Sardell
Trail to Gunsight (1944)
Bill Hollister
Are These Our Parents (1944)
George Kent
One Body Too Many (1944)
Jim Davis
The Meanest Man in the World (1943)
Bill Potts
A Night for Crime (1943)
Joe [Powell]
Man of Courage (1943)
George Dickson
Mexican Spitfire's Elephant (1942)
Reddy Madison
They Raid by Night (1942)
Capt. Robert Owen
She's in the Army (1942)
Capt. Steve Russell
Parole Fixer (1940)
Ross Waring
He Married His Wife (1940)
Paul Hunter
Second Fiddle (1939)
Willie Hogger
They Asked for It (1939)
Marty Collins
Miracle on Main Street (1939)
Dick [Porter]
Torture Ship (1939)
Lieutenant Bob Bennett
Forged Passport (1939)
Jack Scott
Gateway (1938)
Henry [Porter]
The Arkansas Traveler (1938)
Matt Collins
One Wild Night (1938)
Singer Martin
I Stand Accused (1938)
Charles Eastman
Call of the Yukon (1938)
Hugo Henderson
Change of Heart (1938)
Phillip Reeves
Second Honeymoon (1937)
Bob Benton
Three Legionnaires (1937)
Private Jimmy [Barton]
Westbound Limited (1937)
Dave [Tolliver, alias Bob Kirk]
What Price Vengeance (1937)
"Dynamite" Hogan/Tom Connors
Affairs of Cappy Ricks (1937)
Bill Peck
Go West Young Man (1936)
Francis X. Harrigan
The Singing Kid (1936)
Robert Carey
Trapped by Television (1936)
Fred Dennis
Murder by an Aristocrat (1936)
Dr. Allen Carick
Boulder Dam (1936)
Lacy
Mind Your Own Business (1936)
Crane
The Law in Her Hands (1936)
Frank Gordon
Page Miss Glory (1935)
Slattery
Chinatown Squad (1935)
Ted Lacey
Red Hot Tires (1935)
Wallace Storm
It Happened in New York (1935)
Charlie Barnes
While the Patient Slept (1935)
Ross [Lonergan]
Broadway Hostess (1935)
[Ted] Lucky [Lorimer]
Oil for the Lamps of China (1935)
Jim
The Case of the Lucky Legs (1935)
Dr. [Bob] Doray
Our Little Girl (1935)
Rolfe Brent
Return of the Terror (1934)
Dr. [Leonard] Goodman
Registered Nurse (1934)
Dr. [Greg] Connolly
Murder in the Clouds (1934)
Three Star Bob Halsey
One Night of Love (1934)
Bill Houston
The Dragon Murder Case (1934)
[Dale] Leland
Mandalay (1934)
Dr. [Gregory] Burton
Heat Lightning (1934)
Jeff
A Lost Lady (1934)
Neil Herbert
Fog over Frisco (1934)
Spencer [Carlton]
The Life of Jimmy Dolan (1933)
Doc [Woods]
College Coach (1933)
Buck [Herbert P.] Weaver
Havana Widows (1933)
Bob Jones
Mary Stevens, M.D. (1933)
Don [Andrews]
A Shriek in the Night (1933)
Ted Rand
Ladies They Talk About (1933)
Don
She Had to Say Yes (1933)
Daniel [Drew]
Girl Missing (1933)
Raymond Fox
Parachute Jumper (1933)
Three on a Match (1932)
Michael Loftus
Stranger in Town (1932)
Brice
Unholy Love (1932)
Jerry Gregory
Love Is a Racket (1932)
Eddie Shaw
Klondike (1932)
Dr. Robert Cromwell
The Thirteenth Guest (1932)
Phil Winston
The Purchase Price (1932)
Eddie Fields
20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932)
Bud Sauders
No More Orchids (1932)
Tony [Gage]
Big City Blues (1932)
Sully

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

The Haunted World of Edward D. Wood Jr. (1995)
Other

Cast (Special)

Inside The Dream Factory (1995)
World Without Walls: Beryl Markham's African Memoir (1986)
Narration
Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
Howdy (1970)

Cast (Short)

A Dream Comes True The Making of an Unusual Motion Picture (1935)
Himself
And She Learned About Dames (1934)
Himself
The 42nd. Street Special (1933)
Himself
The Clyde Mystery (1931)

Life Events

1902

Mother died when he was an infant; he was kidnapped by his grandmother, who renamed and raised him

1919

First show business job, assisting tent show magician in Omaha

1928

Formed Lyle Talbot Players in Nebraska

1931

Moved to California to test for talkies

1932

Film debut, "Love is a Racket"

1933

Critically injured in motorcar accident

1935

Was one of the founding members of Screen Actors Guild (membership card Number 21)

1938

Critically burned in fire, rescuing a friend

1938

Appeared on Broadway in "Separate Rooms"

1942

Enlisted as non-commissioned officer

1960

Final feature, "Sunrise at Campobello"

1995

Final film appearance, documentary "The Haunted World of Edward D. Wood, Jr"

Photo Collections

No More Orchids - Movie Posters
No More Orchids - Movie Posters
Three on a Match - Scene Stills
Here are some scene stills from Warner Bros' Three on a Match (1932), starring Joan Blondell, Bette Davis, and Ann Dvorak.
Varieties on Parade - Publicity Still
Here is a publicity still featuring some of the cast of Varieties on Parade (1951), a variety stage show-on-film from Lippert Pictures.

Videos

Movie Clip

Trailer

Purchase Price, The (1932) -- (Original Trailer) A night-club singer (Barbara Stanwyck) on the lam becomes a Wyoming farmer's mail-order bride in The Purchase Price (1932).
Ladies They Talk About - (Original Trailer) A lady bank robber (Barbara Stanwyck) becomes the cell block boss after she's sent to prison in this racy pre-code drama.
Parachute Jumper - (Original Trailer) A drug smuggler victimizes three friends (Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Bette Davis, Frank McHugh) trying to get jobs during the Great Depression.
Mary Stevens, M.D. - (Original Trailer) Kay Francis shocked pre-code audiences playing an doctor who is also an unwed mother in Mary Stevens, M.D. (1933).
With A Song In My Heart - (Original Trailer) Singer Jane Froman (Susan Hayward) comes back after a plane crash in the biopic With A Song In My Heart (1952).
Feudin' Fools - (Original Trailer) The Bowery Boys get caught in a hillbilly feud when one of them inherits a Kentucky farm in Feudin' Fools (1952).
Three on a Match - (Original Trailer) A woman's childhood friends try to rescue her from gangsters in Three on a Match (1932) starring Bette Davis and Joan Blondell.
College Coach, The - (Original Trailer) Pat O'Brien may end up giving Ann Dvorak for the Gipper as The College Coach (1933) co-starring Dick Powell.
Broadway Hostess - (Original Trailer) Small-town girl Winifred Shaw becomes a star but it's tears among the footlights for the Broadway Hostess (1935).
Big City Blues - (Original Trailer) A country boy goes to town and meets Joan Blondell and a young Humphrey Bogart. So why has he got the Big City Blues (1932)?
While the Patient Slept - (Original Trailer) A nurse investigates murder at a mysterious mansion in While The Patient Slept (1935) starring Aline MacMahon and Lyle Talbot.
High School Confidential - (Original Trailer) Russ Tamblyn goes undercover as a student to bust a narco ring in High School Confidential (1958) with Mamie Van Doren and Jerry Lee Lewis.

Family

Mary Hollywood Talbot
Grandmother
Kidnapped Lyle after his mother died, renamed him; maternal grandmother.
Stephen Talbot
Son
Documentary filmmaker. Survived him; producer-writer on PBS series "Frontline".
David Talbot
Son
Journalist. Survived him.
Cynthia Talbot
Daughter
Doctor. Survived him.
Margaret Talbot
Daughter
Editor. Survived him; editor at NEW REPUBLIC.

Companions

Marguerite Ethel Cramer
Wife
Married 1937, divorced 1939.
Abagail Adams
Wife
Actress, dancer. Married 1942; divorced; commited suicide 2/13/55 at age 32.
Margaret Talbot
Wife
Married 1950; fourth wife; died in early 1990s.

Bibliography

Notes

On playing character roles: "Well--it bothered me at first. I had always played leads in stock, and I couldn't understand why they didn't let me do them in pictures. Now, I don't mind anymore. I feel that I've become essentially a character actor. And as long as they keep on giving me nice meaty parts--even though they don't carry through the whole picture--I'm satisfied. As a matter of fact, I'd rather jog along this way than become one of those overnight stars whose years in pictures are numbered. I've seen too much unhappiness on this account--right here on my home lot".--Lyle Talbot, quoted in 1935 news clipping

On studio contract work in the 1930s: "They had to guarantee you a certain amount of work, but that was never a problem. We generally worked 12 hours a day, six days a week. I can remember often working on two or three pictures at a time. I rode a bicycle between sound stages, carrying two or three scripts in the front basket for pictures I was working on, and two or three in the rear basket for upcoming pictures".--Lyle Talbot, quoted in THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, 2/19/84

"I never turned down a job. Not one. Ever".--Lyle Talbot, quoted in THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, 2/19/84