Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Bobby Jordan

 
Actor: Bobby Jordan
  • Born: Apr 01, 1923 in New York City, New York
  • Died: Sep 10, 1965 in Sawtelle, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s-'40s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: Live Wires, Mr. Wise Guy, They Made Me a Criminal
  • First Major Screen Credit: Crime School (1938)

Biography

Juvenile actor Bobby Jordan worked in radio, industrial films and as a child model before making his Broadway bow at age seven. He attended New York's Professional Children's School, making an excellent impression along with several of his classmates in Sidney Kingsley's 1935 play Dead End. This assignment took Jordan to Hollywood, along with fellow "Dead End Kids" Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Billy Halop, Gabriel Dell and Bernard Punsley. Though he most often appeared on screen with his Dead End companions, Jordan occasionally took a meaty solo supporting role, such as "Douglas Fairbanks Rosenbloom" in the 1938 gangster farce A Slight Case of Murder. Jordan went along for the ride when the Dead End Kids became the East Side Kids at Monogram studios in the early 1940s; in these cheap but endearing films, Jordan usually played the character who got into deep trouble, obliging Gorcey, Hall and the rest of the ever-aging "Kids" to bail him out. He left the East Side aggregation for military service in 1943, returning to the fold in 1946, by which time the group had reinvented himself as the Bowery Boys. Unhappy that his career as a leading man had never truly gained any momentum, Jordan left films in the late 1940s, taking on several odd jobs, ranging from bartender to oil-field worker; he re-emerged on screen as Robert Jordan for a bit in the 1956 western This Man is Armed. The rest of Jordan's life was blighted with marital problems, drunkenness, and continual run-ins with the law. Bobby Jordan died of cirrhosis of the liver at age 42. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Bobby Jordan
Top
Bobby Jordan
Born Robert Jordan
April 1, 1923(1923-04-01)
Harrison, New York, U.S.A.
Died September 10, 1965 (aged 42)
Los Angeles, California
Occupation Actor
Years active 1929 — 1961
Spouse(s) Lee

Bobby Jordan (April 1, 1923 - September 10, 1965) was an American actor, born in Harrison, New York.

Contents

Biography

Early life and career

Bobby Jordan was a talented toddler and by the time he was six years old, he could sing, tap dance and play the saxophone. At the age of four, he was working in a Christmas Carol film.

His mother took him to talent shows in and around Harrison, New York. He also modelled for newspaper and magazine advertisements, and appeared in short films and radio programs. In the late 1920s Bobby's family moved to the upper west side of Manhattan. In 1929, Bobby was cast as Charles Hildebrand in the 1929 Broadway play, Street Scene.

Dead End Kids

Though he was the youngest, Jordan was the first of the boys to work in films, with a role in a 1933 Universal short. In 1935, he became one of the original Dead End Kids by winning the role of Angel in Sydney Kingsley's riveting Broadway drama Dead End, about life in the slums of the east side New York City. The play was performed at the Belasco Theatre, and ran for three years and over 600 performances. Jordan appeared for the first season and the beginning of the second, but left in mid-November 1936. He returned in time to join the others in 1937 in Hollywood to make the movie version of the play, starring big names such as Humphrey Bogart, Joel McCrea, Sylvia Sidney and Claire Trevor.

Following the tumultuous making of Dead End, Jordan found himself "released" from his contract at Goldwyn, and subsequently appeared at Warner Bros. with the rest of the Dead End Kids. After one year, Warners released most of them, but kept Leo Gorcey and Bobby Jordan as solo performers. Jordan appeared (as "Douglas Fairbanks Rosenbloom") in Warners' Damon Runyon comedy A Slight Case of Murder (1938), and at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in Young Tom Edison (1940).

In 1940, Jordan appeared in the film Military Academy and accepted an offer from producer Sam Katzman to star in a new tough-kid series, The East Side Kids. Leo Gorcey soon joined him, then Huntz Hall, and the trio continued to lead the series through 1943, when Jordan entered the military as a foot soldier in the 97th Infantry Division. He was involved in an elevator accident that forced him to have surgery to remove his right kneecap.

Later career and personal life

When Jordan returned to films in 1945, he found that his former gangmates Gorcey and Hall were getting the lion's share of both the content and the salary for the new Bowery Boys film series. Dissatisfied with his background status, he left the series after eight entries, and made only a few films thereafter. In subsequent years, he worked as a bartender, not a good idea since he was an alcoholic.

Jordan worked to support his family as a door-to-door photograph salesman and roughneck for an oil driller. In 1957, he and his wife divorced, and on August 25, 1965, he entered the Veterans Hospital in Sawtelle, California for treatment of cirrhosis of the liver. He died at the age of 42.

Of his former Dead End Kid and East Side Kid, Leo Gorcey once observed, "Bobby Jordan must not have had a guardian angel."[citation needed]

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bobby Jordan" Read more