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Percy Kilbride

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Occupation
  
Actor

Years active
  
1928–55


Name
  
Percy Kilbride

Role
  
Character actor

Percy Kilbride image1findagravecomphotos200930635781257294

Full Name
  
Percy William Kilbride

Born
  
July 16, 1888 (
1888-07-16
)

Cause of death
  
Atherosclerosis and terminal pneumonia

Died
  
December 11, 1964, Los Angeles, California, United States

Parents
  
Elizabeth Kilbride, Owen Kilbride

Movies
  
Ma and Pa Kettle, The Egg and I, Ma and Pa Kettle Back on the Fa, Ma and Pa Kettle at Home, Ma and Pa Kettle at Waikiki

Similar People
  
Marjorie Main, Richard Long, Charles Lamont, Meg Randall, Betty MacDonald

Percy kilbride


Percy William Kilbride (July 16, 1888 – December 11, 1964) was an American character actor. He made a career of playing country hicks, most memorably as Pa Kettle in the Ma and Pa Kettle series of feature films.

Contents

Percy Kilbride 93614041jpgv8CC9B313C3F9520

1953 MA AND PA KETTLE ON VACATION - Trailer - Marjorie Main, Percy Kilbride


Early life

Percy Kilbride 105179161jpgv8CDCF299758DCA0

Kilbride was born in San Francisco, California, the son of Elizabeth (née Kelly), a native of Maryland, and Owen Kilbride, a Canadian.

Career

Percy Kilbride Percy Kilbride Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Kilbride began working in the theater at the age of 12 and eventually left to become an actor on Broadway. He first played an 18th-century French dandy in A Tale of Two Cities. His film debut was as Jakey in White Woman (1933), a Pre-Code film starring Carole Lombard. He left Broadway for good in 1942, when Jack Benny insisted that Kilbride reprise his Broadway role in the film version of George Washington Slept Here. According to Benny, Percy Kilbride was the same character offscreen and on: quiet and friendly but principled, refusing to be paid more or less than what he considered a fair salary. Kilbride followed up the Benny film with a featured role in the Olsen and Johnson comedy Crazy House (1943). In 1945, he appeared in The Southerner.

Percy Kilbride Percy Kilbride 1888 1964 Loved Ma and Pa Kettle

In 1947, he and Marjorie Main appeared in The Egg and I, starring Fred MacMurray and Claudette Colbert as a sophisticated couple taking on farm life. Main and Kilbride were featured as folksy neighbors Ma and Pa Kettle, and audience response prompted the popular Ma and Pa Kettle series. Pa Kettle became Kilbride's most famous role: the gentle-spirited Pa seldom raised his voice, and was always ready to help friends—by borrowing from "other" friends, or assigning any kind of labor to his Indian friends Geoduck and Crowbar.

Kilbride began showing symptoms of Alzheimer's disease while filming Ma and Pa Kettle at Home in 1953. He retired after finishing the film; although it was the final film he had worked on, a previous film in the series, Ma and Pa Kettle at Waikiki (filmed in 1952), wasn't released until 1955, after the release of Ma and Pa Kettle at Home in 1954.

Kilbride disliked making the Kettle films. In a 1953 interview, he discussed the monotony of his career due to his portrayal of Pa Kettle:

I had my training on the stage, where I did a variety of roles. That's the fun of being an actor: to meet the challenge of creating new characters. But Pa Kettle is always the same. He can do anything; there is no need to establish any motivation. There's no kick in doing him over and over again. I have had dozens of offers to do television series, but I have turned them all down. I might do one-shot appearances; but I won't let myself get tied down to one character.

Death

On September 17, 1964, Kilbride and his partner, Italian-born actor Ralf Belmont, were struck by a car while walking near their home, at the corner of Yucca and Cherokee Streets, in Hollywood. Belmont died instantly; Kilbride died three months later from atherosclerosis and terminal pneumonia which were caused by head injuries, having undergone brain surgery at the Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles on November 11. He was 76 years old and a veteran of World War I. Kilbride was buried near his hometown, San Francisco, at Golden Gate National Cemetery, in San Bruno, California. Kilbride left his estate to four nephews and a sister-in-law.

Filmography

Actor
1954
Ma and Pa Kettle at Home as
Pa Kettle
1953
Ma and Pa Kettle at Waikiki as
Pa Kettle
1952
Ellis in Freedomland as
The Dehumidifier (voice)
1952
Ma and Pa Kettle on Vacation as
Pa Kettle
1952
Ma and Pa Kettle at the Fair as
Pa Kettle
1951
Ma and Pa Kettle Back on the Farm as
Pa Kettle
1950
Riding High as
Pop Jones
1950
Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town as
Pa Kettle
1949
Free for All as
Henry J. Abbott
1949
Mr. Soft Touch as
Rickle
1949
Ma and Pa Kettle as
Pa Kettle
1949
The Sun Comes Up as
Mr. Willie B. Williegood
1948
You Gotta Stay Happy as
Mr. Racknell
1948
Feudin', Fussin' and A-Fightin' as
Billy Caswell
1948
Black Bart as
Jersey Brady
1948
You Were Meant for Me as
Mr. Andrew Mayhew
1947
Welcome Stranger as
Nat Dorkas
1947
Riffraff as
Pop
1947
The Egg and I as
Pa Kettle
1946
The Well Groomed Bride as
Mr. Dawson
1945
She Wouldn't Say Yes as
Judge Whittaker
1945
Fallen Angel as
Pop
1945
State Fair as
Dave Miller
1945
The Southerner as
Harmie
1944
Guest in the House as
John - the Butler
1944
She's a Soldier Too as
Jonathan Kittredge
1944
The Adventures of Mark Twain as
Billings - Enterprise Typesetter
1944
Knickerbocker Holiday as
Schermerhorn
1943
The Woman of the Town as
Rev. Samuel Small
1943
Crazy House as
Col. Cornelius Merriweather
1942
Keeper of the Flame as
Orion Peabody
1942
George Washington Slept Here as
Mr. Kimber
1936
Soak the Rich as
Everett, 2d detective
1933
White Woman as
Jakey
Soundtrack
1945
State Fair (performer: "Our State Fair")
1942
George Washington Slept Here (performer: "I'll Never Smile Again" (1939) - uncredited)
Archive Footage
2010
Lego Ma and Pa Kettle: Back on the Farm (Short) as
Pa Kettle
1995
50 Years of Funny Females (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
1982
Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter (TV Movie documentary) as
Actor - 'Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town' (uncredited)

References

Percy Kilbride Wikipedia