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George J. Lewis

 
Actor: George Lewis
 
  • Born: Dec 10, 1904 in Mexico
  • Died: Dec 10, 1995
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Western, Action
  • Career Highlights: The Big Sombrero, South of the Rio Grande, Pirates of Monterey
  • First Major Screen Credit: South of the Rio Grande (1932)

Biography

Born in Mexico, George J. Lewis gained prominence in the mid-1920s as a an athletic all-American boy in Universal's popular Collegiates 2-reeler series. He remained with Collegiates into the talkie era before forsaking leading roles for character parts. Sporting a mustache in most of his talkie appearances, Lewis played a steady stream of society villains, weaklings, "other men" and cads, at both Republic Studios and the Columbia short-subjects unit. His best-known serial role was as the erudite gangster who plays "Moonlight Sonata" on his piano while planning the demise of the hero in the 1945 Republic serial Federal Operator 99. Uncharacteristically, Lewis was cast as the good guy in the 1944 chapter play Zorro's Black Whip. Thirteen years later, a much grayer George J. Lewis returned to the same territory by playing the father of the "Mexican Robin Hood" on the Disney TV series Zorro. In the mid 1960s, Lewis swapped his acting career for a long, successful stint in real estate. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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George J. Lewis
Born December 10, 1903(1903-12-10)
Guadalajara, Jalisco Mexico
Died December 8, 1995 (aged 91)
Rancho Santa Fe, California, USA
Spouse(s) Mary Louise Lohman
(March 1928 - ?)

George J. Lewis (Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, December 10, 1903 — Rancho Santa Fe, California, USA, December 8, 1995) was a Mexican-born actor who appeared in many films and eventually TV series from the 1920s through the 1960s, usually specializing in westerns. He is probably best known for playing Alejandro de la Vega, who was Don Diego de la Vega's father in the 1950s Disney television series Zorro.

Contents

Career

Lewis broke into films in the 1920s, and his handsome presence led to leading roles in a Universal Pictures short-subject series, The Collegians. The arrival of sound movies came as a blessing for Lewis, who was bilingual. He spoke English without any trace of accent, and could play character or dialect roles of practically any ethnicity. His language skills earned him leading roles in Spanish-dialogue features, produced by American studios for international release. He also played supporting roles in Educational Pictures shorts.

Most of George's screen work was in low-budget films, although he can be seen in a few major productions (in Casablanca he's an Arab peddler with a monkey). Some of his roles were sympathetic; he played the male leads in the 1944 serial Zorro's Black Whip and in the Vera Vague comedy shorts of the 1940s. Usually, George J. Lewis played villains in westerns and serials, chiefly at Republic Pictures. Cast as a sinister henchman, Lewis would carry out the villain's diabolical orders, setting death traps and ambushes week after week. The high point of Lewis's serial career was probably the 1945 Republic cliffhanger Federal Operator 99, in which he was the full-fledged villain of the piece, playing "Moonlight Sonata" on a piano while plotting crimes. Holding the heroine captive, the nonchalant Lewis asks the hero: "What will it be? Cash for me... or incineration for Miss Kingston?"

He appeared in Three Stooges films as Vernon Dent's knife-wielding conspirator in the Stooge short Malice in the Palace, and its remake, Rumpus in the Harem.[1] He was also featured with the Stooges (as George Lewis) in Hollywood's final two-reel comedy release, Sappy Bull Fighters.

Many low-budget filmmakers scored successes in early television, and many familiar faces turned up in half-hour action fare. George J. Lewis appeared in the first episode of The Lone Ranger, called "Enter the Lone Ranger", as a villain who helps betray a group of Texas Rangers and leads them all into a deadly ambush, with the series star of course being the lone survivor. He played a Native American in an Adventures of Superman episode called "Test of a Warrior." Lewis continued to work in dozens of TV episodes until he retired in 1969.

Lewis died of a stroke in 1995, two days before his 92nd birthday. He was cremated.[1]

Selected filmography

References

  1. ^ a b Shifres, Ed. The Three Stooges Journal #95 (2000) p. 8

External links



 
 

 

Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "George J. Lewis" Read more

 

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