Career Highlights: The Crimson Pirate, The Twilight Zone: Nightmare at 20,000 Feet, The Flame and the Arrow
First Major Screen Credit: The Flame and the Arrow (1950)
Biography
Diminutive New York native Nick Cravat spent his first two decades in show business as a circus and carnival acrobat. From the mid-'30s to the early '40s, he was the smaller half of the Lang and Cravat trapeze act; "Lang" was his childhood pal Burt Lancaster. While it is commonly assumed that Cravat made his first screen appearances in tandem with Lancaster, his film debut was in fact My Friend Irma (1949), which starred Diana Lynn, Marie Wilson, and Martin and Lewis. He did, of course, show up quite often in Lancaster's starring features, beginning with The Flame and the Arrow (1950) and ending with The Island of Dr. Moreau (1977). In the delightful The Crimson Pirate (1952), Cravat was afforded co-star billing with Lancaster, above leading lady Eva Bartok. Because he so often played a mute, many filmgoers believed that Cravat was genuinely non-verbal; actually, he possessed so thick and pronounced an East Coast accent that he was averse to mouthing dialogue. Outside of his work with Lancaster, Cravat is best remembered for one of his uncredited appearances: as the "thing on the wing" in the 1963 Twilight Zone installment "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet." ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Nick Cravat real name Nicholas Cuccia (pronounced coo cha) (January 11, 1912, New York City – January 29, 1994, California) was an American film actor. "Cravat" is actually a stage name that he selected based on a character in a play he had seen and rather liked. Life-long friend and trapeze partner of Burt Lancaster, they performed as "Lang and Cravat". He co-starred with Lancaster in nine films all together, of which The Crimson Pirate and The Flame and the Arrow are the best-known. The acrobatic Cravat is also remembered as playing the "gremlin" on the wing of an airplane in the 1963 Twilight Zone episode, "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet".
He played a mute character in several movies, notably The Flame and the Arrow and The Crimson Pirate, mostly because his thick Brooklyn accent, which he could not shake, would have been out of place in the film's storyline.
Nick Cravat and Burt Lancaster were childhood friends and met as youngsters (approximately at age 9) at a summer camp in New York. Their friendship continued through the years. They later created an acrobatic act and joined the Kay Brothers circus in Florida. Cravat & Lancaster both died in 1994. His grave is located at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery.