Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Hal Skelly

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Years active
  
1918-1934

Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Hal Skelly


Other names
  
James Harold Skelley

Role
  
Film actor

Occupation
  
Actor

Siblings
  
Hugh Skelly

Hal Skelly image1findagravecomphotos250photos200916671

Born
  
May 31, 1891 (
1891-05-31
)
Alleghenyville, Pennsylvania, USA

Resting place
  
Mount Calvary CemeteryDavenport, Iowa41°33′48″N 90°33′51″W / 41.56337°N 90.56403°W / 41.56337; -90.56403Coordinates: 41°33′48″N 90°33′51″W / 41.56337°N 90.56403°W / 41.56337; -90.56403

Died
  
June 16, 1934, Cornwall, Connecticut, United States

Movies
  
The Dance of Life, The Struggle, Behind the Make-Up, The Shadow Laughs, Men Are Like That, The Dancing Town

Similar People
  
A Edward Sutherland, John Cromwell, Frank Tuttle, Dorothy Arzner, D W Griffith

Cause of death
  
Train/vehicle accident

The Dance of Life (1929) PRE-CODE HOLLYWOOD


Hal Skelly (May 31, 1891 – June 16, 1934) was an American Broadway and film actor.

Contents

Biography

He was born James Harold Skelley in Alleghenyville, Pennsylvania to James and Martha Skelley. His family moved to Davenport, Iowa when he was four. He had four sisters and three brothers. Skelley was educated at Sacred Heart School in Davenport and St. Bede Academy in Peru, Illinois. He left home at the age of 15 and joined the circus. He acted in his first stage production, The Time, the Place and the Girl, at the LaSalle Theater in Chicago when he was 16. For a short period of time he was a backup first baseman for the Boston Braves and a prizefight manager. For his professional name he shortened his middle name Harold to Hal and dropped the final "e" in Skelley.

Skelly became a veteran of medicine shows, musical comedy, burlesque, Lew Dockstader's minstrels and opera. He joined the A.M. Zinn musical comedy company in San Francisco where his eccentric dancing ability earned him the nickname "Tumbling Harold Skelly". Always enamored with the circus, he spent a year with Barnum & Bailey. Skelly toured China and Japan with a musical comedy troupe, the Raymond Teale Company.

Skelly made his Broadway debut in Fiddler’s Three (1918) and went on to appear in ten other shows on Broadway. In 1927, he played a starring role alongside Barbara Stanwyck, in her first Broadway hit, the musical production Burlesque. Paramount Pictures invited the two to star in the 1929 talkie film version of the show, retitled The Dance of Life because studio executives judged the original title too risqué. Stanwyck turned down the offer, while Skelly accepted, reprising his role as "Skid Johnson". He would make a total of ten films, including the Woman Trap (1929), Behind the Make-Up (1930), and The Shadow Laughs (1933), and was also featured on two movie soundtracks.

Death

Skelly was killed in a train-auto accident in West Cornwall, Connecticut when the truck he was driving was struck by the New York to Pittsfield train of the New Haven Railroad at a crossing.

News reports at the time said he was staying with friends and he was looking for a dog that had run away. His widow, Ann, brought his body back to New York City for the funeral, which was held in the Actor's Chapel at Saint Malachy's Catholic Church in Manhattan. His mother and his brother Hugh accompanied the body back to Davenport for burial at St. Marguerite's Cemetery, now known as Mount Calvary Cemetery.

Broadway

Hal Skelly acted in the following shows on Broadway:

  • Fiddlers Three (1918), as Sam Wigglesbury
  • The Night Boat (1920), as Freddie Ides
  • The Girl in the Spotlight (1920), as Watchem Tripp
  • Orange Blossoms (1922), as Jimmy Flynn
  • Mary Jane McKane (1923–1924), as Joe McGillicudy
  • Betty Lee (1924–1925), as Wallingford Speed
  • Burlesque, (1927–1928), as Skid Johnson
  • Melody (1933), as François Trapadoux
  • Ghost Writer (1933), as Bill Harkins
  • Queer People (1934), as Theodore Anthony White
  • Come What May (1934), as Chet Harrison
  • Hal Skelly acted in the following films:

    Discography

    Hal Shelly is featured on the following recordings:

  • The Dance of Life (1929) featured: "True Blue Lou" / "The Flippity Flop"
  • Men Are Like That (1930) featured: "In the Gloaming" 1877
  • Filmography

    Actor
    1934
    The Chump (Short)
    1933
    The Shadow Laughs as
    Robin Dale
    1933
    Hotel Variety
    1931
    The Struggle as
    Jimmie Wilson
    1930
    The Gob (Short)
    1930
    Men Are Like That as
    J. Aubrey Piper
    1930
    Behind the Make-Up as
    Hap Brown
    1929
    Woman Trap as
    Dan Malone
    1929
    The Dance of Life as
    Ralph 'Skid' Johnson
    1928
    The Dancing Town (Short) as
    Tom Kinch
    Soundtrack
    1930
    Men Are Like That (performer: "In the Gloaming" (1877) - uncredited)
    1929
    The Dance of Life (performer: "True Blue Lou", "The Flippity Flop")
    Archive Footage
    1993
    American Masters (TV Series documentary)
    - D.W. Griffith: Father of Film (1993)

    References

    Hal Skelly Wikipedia