Name Leon Belasco Role Musician | Siblings Jacques Belasco | |
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Movies Can‑Can, The Mummy's Hand, Superdad, Yolanda and the Thief, Swing Parade of 1946 Similar People William Beaudine, King Vidor, Walter Lang, Michael Curtiz, Mary Pickford |
1933 shame on you leon belasco orch hi def 78rpm
Leon Belasco (11 October 1902 – 1 June 1988), born Leonid Simeonovich Berladsky, was a Russian-American musician and actor who had a 60-year career in film and television from the 1920s to the 1980s, appearing in more than 100 films.
Contents
- 1933 shame on you leon belasco orch hi def 78rpm
- Leon belasco and his orchestra w dick robertson build a little home 1933
- Musical career
- Film career
- Television career
- Selected filmography
- References

Leon belasco and his orchestra w dick robertson build a little home 1933
Musical career

Born in Odessa, Ukraine, Belasco attended St. Joseph College in Yokohama, Japan, and trained as a musician in Japan and Manchuria. For several years, he appeared as the first violinist with the Tokyo Symphony.
When his family moved to California, Belasco found occasional work in Hollywood. He made his film debut in 1926 in the silent film The Best People. To supplement his income, he played the violin. Later he formed his own band, which mainly performed in hotels in and around New York City. The Andrews Sisters were introduced through his band.
In 1933, Belasco and his orchestra were heard on the Oldsmobile Program on CBS radio.
Film career
During a season break from a hotel engagement, he returned to Hollywood, first appearing in Broadway Serenade and Topper Takes a Trip (1938). He acted in 13 films in 1942, including Holiday Inn, Casablanca, Yankee Doodle Dandy, and Road to Morocco.
He appeared with the Marx Brothers in their last film together, Love Happy (1949). Being able to speak Russian, he was a dialogue director in Norman Jewison's 1966 comedy The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming.
Belasco often played eccentric or befuddled European and ethnic characters. He also played heavier roles in World War II and Cold War espionage dramas. On radio he played a thieving informant in The Man Called X. His best-known television role was as Appopoplous the landlord in My Sister Eileen (1960). His last film was Superdad (1973), and his final television movie was Woman of the Year (1976).
Television career
Beginning in 1953, Belasco appeared in a variety of television shows. These included: Maverick (1961), Twilight Zone (1963), My Favorite Martian,(1965) The Lucy Show (1963), The Beverly Hillbillies (1964-1967), My Three Sons (1966), The Dick Van Dyke Show (1966), The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1966), Little House on the Prairie (1978) and Trapper John, M.D. (1980).
On his death in 1988 in Orange, California, Belasco was cremated and his ashes scattered.