Career Highlights: About Face, Tanks a Million, Tobacco Road
First Major Screen Credit: Strike up the Band (1940)
Biography
A professional actor since childhood, Philadelphia-born William Tracy came to Hollywood in his Broadway role as a military school "plebe" in Brother Rat (1938). Kept briefly under contract to Warner Bros, Tracy went on to play Pat O'Brien as a boy in the classic gangster saga Angels with Dirty Faces. The cherub-faced actor then went on to Hal Roach Studios, where he costarred in several "streamliners" (45 minute films, designed for double-feature bills) with Joe Sawyer. In such slick little comedies as Tanks a Million (1941), About Face (1941) and Yanks Ahoy (1942), Tracy played a rookie serviceman with a photographic memory, while Sawyer played his tough topkick. An attempt to recreate the team in 1951 with a pair of Lippert Studios quickies, As You Were! and Mister Walkie Talkie, sank without a trace. Tracy's other big-screen role of note was as Terry Lee in the serialized movie version of Milton Caniff's comic strip Terry and the Pirates (1940). William Tracy spent the remainder of his career in the '50s and '60s in small movie and TV supporting parts, save for a worthwhile costarring stint with John Russell in the popular 1955 syndicated TV adventure show Soldiers of Fortune. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Tracy Williams at the Hooters’ Operation Let Freedom Wing show in Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan June 2, 2004.
Tracy Williams is an American singer who belongs to UC3, an all female trio from Tampa Bay, Florida. She has performed throughout the U.S. and overseas in several countries with UC3 for U.S. military personnel.
Prior to joining UC3, she was part of the all girl group PYT, which she joined at the age of 12. In 2000 the four member group released the album Down with Me on the Epic Records label. The group released the singles "Something More Beautiful" and "Same Ol' Same Ol'". The group's songs were also on the soundtracks for the 2000 films Center Stage and Bring It On. Their possibly most popular song was "Anywhere USA", which was not even released as a single, but appeared on the soundtrack for the 2000 movie Miss Congeniality.