Lyle Talbot
Lyle Talbot (born Lisle Henderson; February 8, 1902 – March 2, 1996) was an American actor recognized for his prolific output in film, television, and stage performances across six decades, often in character roles within B-movies, serials, and family-oriented sitcoms.[1][2] Talbot initiated his professional career in traveling stock theater companies during the 1920s before entering Hollywood with a Warner Bros. contract in 1931, where he contributed to pre-Code era productions such as Three on a Match (1932) and 20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932).[1][2] Transitioning to freelance work amid the shift to sound films and studio changes, he sustained a steady presence in low-budget features and chapterplays throughout the 1930s and 1940s, later achieving television prominence as Joe Randolph, the affable neighbor on The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet from 1955 to 1966, alongside guest appearances on series including The Lucy Show, Burns and Allen, and The Danny Thomas Show.[2][3] In the 1950s, Talbot featured in several Ed Wood productions, notably Glen or Glenda (1953) and Plan 9 from Outer Space (1958), which later garnered cult followings despite their contemporary obscurity.[4][2] A founding member of the Screen Actors Guild, Talbot navigated personal challenges including multiple marriages—brief unions in the 1930s and 1940s followed by a 41-year marriage to Paula Epple starting in 1948, with whom he raised four children—while maintaining professional resilience until health issues prompted retirement in the 1980s.[5][6]Early life
Childhood and family background
Lyle Talbot, born Lisle (or Lysle) Henderson on February 8, 1902, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, was the only child of Florence May Talbot, a Nebraska native, and Joel Edward Henderson.[7] His mother died shortly after his birth, and his father subsequently departed, resulting in an orphan-like upbringing under the care of his maternal grandmother, Mary Hollywood Talbot, with whom he relocated to the rural village of Brainard, Nebraska.[7][8] Talbot adopted his grandmother's surname, reflecting her central role in his early life amid the absence of both parents.[7] In Brainard, a small farming community, Talbot grew up amid the economic rigors of early 20th-century rural America, where his grandmother managed family-owned property and emphasized practical self-sufficiency.[9] This environment, characterized by limited resources and manual labor demands, cultivated a foundational work ethic centered on diligence and adaptability rather than formal privilege.[5] Family dynamics prioritized survival over sentiment, with Mary Talbot's widowed status and Nebraska roots shaping a household focused on resilience against instability.[8] As a teenager, Talbot moved with his grandmother to Omaha, Nebraska, where he completed high school despite the financial strains of the World War I era, including inflation and labor shortages that constrained access to extended education for working-class families.[8][10] This period of familial upheaval and modest means directly contributed to his pragmatic worldview, enabling later professional longevity through versatile employment patterns that outlasted many peers reliant on more stable upbringings.[5]Entry into vaudeville and stock theater
Talbot's professional debut occurred in 1919, at age 17, shortly after completing high school in Nebraska, when he joined a traveling hypnotist's act as an assistant. In this capacity, he performed songs, basic magic tricks, and short comedic sketches, marking his entry into the itinerant world of carnivals and tent shows prevalent in the American Midwest. These early gigs, often under rudimentary conditions with small audiences in rural areas, exposed him to the rigors of live performance, including frequent travel and the need for rapid adaptation to varied roles amid economic instability for performers.[11][12] Transitioning from carnival work, Talbot entered stock theater in the early 1920s, leveraging his emerging skills in repertory acting across Midwestern and Southern companies. He spent two years in a resident stock troupe in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, portraying a range of characters in weekly productions that demanded versatility and memorization under tight schedules. During this period, he occasionally performed with his father in similar outfits, refining his technique as a leading man while navigating the competitive landscape of regional theater, where opportunities hinged on personal networks rather than formal credentials.[11][13] By the mid-1920s, Talbot had adopted the professional name Lyle Talbot—stemming from his grandmother's legal adoption that changed his surname from Henderson—and established his own short-lived stock company, The Talbot Players, in Memphis, Tennessee. This venture involved producing and starring in multiple plays per season, fostering his ability to handle diverse genres from drama to light comedy in front of live crowds. Such experiences in vaudeville-adjacent circuits and stock venues built practical expertise in audience interaction and ensemble dynamics, without reliance on emerging unions, in an industry shifting toward film but still sustained by live regional demand.[11][13]Film career
Arrival in Hollywood and initial roles
Talbot traveled to Hollywood in late 1931 for a screen test at Warner Bros., performing a scene from the Broadway play Louder, Please! that inadvertently satirized studio production methods but nonetheless impressed executives, leading to a seven-year contract.[14][13] His arrival aligned with the transition to sound films, as studios urgently recruited stage-trained actors with articulate voices to meet demand amid the Great Depression's unemployment surge, which saw thousands compete for limited roles.[7] Initial appearances consisted of supporting parts in Warner Bros. features, marking a swift entry into production schedules strained by economic pressures yet fueled by expanding studio output.[15] Notable early credits included Three on a Match, released October 28, 1932, where he portrayed a lawyer opposite Ann Dvorak and Joan Blondell.[16] This period saw Talbot accumulate roles in rapid succession, with 28 films completed between 1932 and 1934, primarily for Warner Bros. and First National, demonstrating his adaptability in an industry prioritizing volume over selectivity.[17] By 1934, these efforts culminated in leading roles, such as the romantic lead in Three on a Honeymoon, signaling his ascent from bit player to contracted player amid Warner Bros.' cost-conscious operations, which emphasized efficient casting to sustain output during fiscal constraints.[15]Pre-Code films and Warner Bros. contract
Talbot signed a contract with Warner Bros. following a successful screen test in the early 1930s, marking his entry into feature films as a supporting player and occasional leading man.[15] During the 1932–1934 period, he appeared in approximately 28 films, predominantly for Warner Bros. and its subsidiary First National, capitalizing on the pre-Code era's lax censorship to portray suave, charismatic characters in dramas and comedies.[17] This prolific output provided significant visibility, positioning him alongside established stars like Barbara Stanwyck and Spencer Tracy, though it often confined him to formulaic romantic leads that risked typecasting.[4] In pre-Code productions such as Three on a Match (1932) and 20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932), Talbot embodied polished, morally ambiguous figures amid themes of infidelity, crime, and social transgression, reflecting the era's unrestricted exploration of adult subjects.[4] His role as Don Bradshaw in Ladies They Talk About (1933), a prison drama featuring Stanwyck as a bank robber, highlighted his appeal as a debonair district attorney entangled in corruption and romance, exemplifying the bold characterizations possible before the Motion Picture Production Code's enforcement in mid-1934.[18] Similarly, in She Had to Say Yes (1933), he supported narratives of coerced prostitution and power imbalances, underscoring the genre's provocative edge that boosted studio output but drew later critiques for glamorizing ethical lapses.[19] While these roles enhanced Talbot's profile within Warner Bros.' assembly-line system, yielding steady employment and exposure, they also entrenched a "leading man" archetype that limited dramatic range and exposed him to industry backlash. His early affiliation with the Screen Actors Guild, as the studio's first contract player to join in 1933, reportedly strained relations with Warner Bros. executives, contributing to tensions that culminated in the non-renewal of his contract around 1936 despite initial seven-year terms.[15] This phase thus represented a high-water mark of productivity in an uncensored cinematic landscape, balancing career advancement against the perils of repetitive casting and union-related reprisals.[4]Impact of SAG involvement and typecasting
Talbot joined the Screen Actors Guild as a charter member upon its founding on July 26, 1933, among the original group of 21 actors who signed its declaration of principles to counter producer dominance in contract terms, residuals, and working conditions.[10] As the first Warner Bros.-contracted performer to affiliate, his early advocacy exposed him to studio retaliation in an era when major lots wielded near-absolute control over casting and renewals, often sidelining union supporters to maintain leverage.[20][21] Warner Bros. opted not to renew Talbot's standard player contract around 1936, a move multiple accounts link directly to his guild participation, which disrupted the studio's preferred non-union status quo and signaled broader risks of organized labor challenging profit-driven scheduling and pay scales.[10][22] This non-renewal precipitated a sharp career pivot, curtailing access to A-list productions and compelling Talbot to seek employment at Poverty Row independents like Monogram Pictures, where budgets averaged under $100,000 per film compared to Warner's multimillion-dollar features.[23] At Monogram, he took on roles such as the opportunistic husband in Man of Courage (1943), marking a departure from his prior romantic leads to more peripheral parts amid the studios' informal blacklist of SAG pioneers.[24] The fallout manifested in typecasting as "light heavies"—suave yet scheming antagonists or morally ambiguous figures like gangster-playboys—roles that capitalized on his debonair appearance but confined him to B-movie supports, a pattern causal observers attribute to punitive industry dynamics rather than performative shortcomings, given his established draw in over 20 Warner features from 1931 to 1935.[10][25] This shift reduced his annual output from 10-15 major-studio appearances to sporadic low-rent gigs, underscoring how guild efforts, while advancing collective bargaining (e.g., minimum wages rising from $25 to $50 daily by 1937), imposed individual costs through selective exclusion from prestige projects.[23] Empirical patterns in casting logs show similar fates for other early SAG adherents, reinforcing retaliation as the operative mechanism over market-driven talent evaluation.[22]B-movies, serials, and post-war work
During the late 1930s and early 1940s, Talbot increasingly took roles in B-movies and serials, reflecting a shift toward lower-budget productions amid intensifying competition for leading parts in major studios.[13] These genres demanded prolific output, with Talbot contributing to cliffhanger serials and quick-turnaround features that prioritized volume over prestige, often portraying authority figures or antagonists in action-oriented narratives.[4] His film work was interrupted by World War II service from 1942 to 1945, during which he enlisted as a sergeant in the U.S. Army Air Forces' entertainment division, performing for troops overseas.[26] [27] This hiatus aligned with broader industry disruptions, but Talbot's pre-war accumulation of credits positioned him for postwar resumption in supporting capacities. Postwar, Talbot solidified his niche in B-movies and serials, amassing roles in over 150 films total through the 1950s, including villainous turns as Lex Luthor in Atom Man vs. Superman (1950) and Commissioner Gordon in Batman and Robin (1949).[4] [13] Additional serial appearances encompassed Chick Carter, Detective (1946), The Vigilante (1947), Son of Geronimo (1952), Gunfighters of the Northwest (1952), and The Great Adventures of Captain Kidd (1953), where he often played heavies or lawmen in formulaic plots designed for matinee audiences.[13] He also featured in B-Westerns, contributing to the genre's supporting ecosystem with portrayals of outlaws, judges, or sheriffs in low-cost oaters from Poverty Row studios.[11] This sustained productivity—averaging dozens of credits per decade—stemmed from pragmatic career adaptation to typecasting and economic realities, rather than selective artistic ambition, enabling financial stability in an era when A-list opportunities for aging contract players diminished.[5]Stage career
Early Broadway appearances
Talbot made his Broadway debut in the comedy Separate Rooms by Charles MacArthur and Edward Sheldon, which premiered on March 23, 1940, at Maxine Elliott's Theatre.[28] He portrayed Don Stackhouse, the husband in a strained marriage central to the plot's exploration of reconciliation amid divorce proceedings.[29] Co-starring with Glenda Farrell as his wife Pamela Barry and Alan Dinehart, the production drew on Talbot's established reliability from years in regional stock companies, where he had honed versatile supporting and leading roles since the 1920s.[13] The play resonated with audiences, running for 611 performances until its closure on September 6, 1941, marking a significant live theater milestone amid Talbot's concurrent film commitments.[28] This appearance underscored his foundational stage craftsmanship, which had earlier facilitated his transition to Hollywood screen tests by demonstrating consistent professionalism in demanding repertory schedules.[14]Later regional and touring productions
Talbot sustained his performing career through extensive involvement in regional theater and national touring companies during the 1940s through 1960s, particularly as film opportunities waned and television emerged as the dominant medium. These productions, including summer stock engagements across the United States, offered steady employment that capitalized on his versatility and stage-honed skills, though they entailed the rigors of travel and smaller venues compared to Hollywood's allure.[12] Notable among these were his roles in Neil Simon's The Odd Couple, where he alternated leads in consecutive national tours: portraying the fastidious Felix Ungar in the 1966–1967 production and the slovenly Oscar Madison in the 1967–1968 tour.[30][31] He also appeared in summer stock revivals of Gore Vidal's The Best Man, a political drama premiered on Broadway in 1960, which toured regionally to capitalize on the play's topical appeal.[7] Such work underscored the practical resilience required of character actors like Talbot, who navigated career longevity by adapting to less prestigious but viable outlets amid industry shifts, performing in locales from Midwest stock houses to East Coast circuits without the glamour of major studio contracts.[5] These endeavors not only extended his professional output into his later years but also highlighted the grind of repertory schedules, often involving multiple roles per season to meet audience demand for familiar faces in revivals of comedies and dramas.[12]Television career
Transition to TV in the 1950s
As opportunities in feature films waned for Talbot following World War II, with his last major serial roles in the late 1940s giving way to sporadic B-movie appearances, he pivoted to television amid the medium's rapid expansion in American households during the early 1950s.[2] This shift aligned with broader industry trends, as studios faced declining theater attendance and rising TV viewership, creating demand for seasoned actors in episodic formats. Talbot's initial foray included a guest appearance as District Attorney Phillips in a 1950 episode of the short-lived series The Life of Riley.[32] By mid-decade, Talbot secured recurring roles that capitalized on his affable everyman persona honed in pre-Code films and serials. He portrayed Joe Randolph, the bumbling neighbor and friend to Ozzie Nelson, in The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet starting in 1955, appearing in over 100 episodes through the series' run.[2][33] Concurrently, he played a similar "best friend" character, Mr. Addison, on The Bob Cummings Show from 1955 to 1959, marking his establishment as a reliable TV supporting player.[34] Talbot also took on guest spots in anthology and action series, such as voicing the villain "The Brain" in the 1950s Dick Tracy TV adaptation and appearing in Dangerous Assignment, reflecting television's appetite for familiar faces from radio serials and low-budget cinema.[13] These early television engagements, often in Westerns and crime dramas, provided steady work as film roles dried up, underscoring the medium's role in sustaining careers disrupted by technological and economic shifts in entertainment.[11]Recurring roles and guest appearances through the 1980s
Talbot maintained a steady presence on television into the 1980s through guest appearances on established series, often portraying authoritative or paternal figures suited to his seasoned demeanor. In 1979, he guest-starred as Tom Mills in the Charlie's Angels episode "Angels on Vacation," contributing to the show's ensemble of small-town characters amid a plot involving gangsters and disrupted vacations.[35] This role exemplified his versatility in supporting parts on action-oriented programs. He followed with appearances on The Dukes of Hazzard, leveraging his experience in serials for episodic Western-tinged comedy.[36] By the mid-1980s, Talbot's output included a guest spot on Who's the Boss? in 1984, where he embodied the era's archetype of a no-nonsense elder statesman.[4] His final credited television role came in 1987 on Newhart, at age 85, underscoring a career totaling over 150 film credits and numerous television outings that persisted well beyond typical retirement age for actors of his generation.[13] These late appearances highlighted his reliability as a character actor, unhindered by the era's youth-focused casting trends, with no evidence of recurring series commitments during this decade but consistent demand for his polished, dependable screen presence.[37]Political involvement
Founding role in Screen Actors Guild
Lyle Talbot emerged as a key figure in the establishment of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) in July 1933, joining as one of its initial organizers amid widespread actor exploitation by Hollywood studios, including excessive work hours, arbitrary contract terminations, and lack of compensation for film reruns.[21] As the first Warner Bros. contract player to affiliate with the nascent union, Talbot defied studio executives who viewed collective bargaining as a threat to their control over talent, positioning himself at the forefront of efforts to secure basic labor protections grounded in actors' economic vulnerabilities during the Great Depression.[2][38] Talbot served on SAG's inaugural board of directors in 1933, advocating for minimum wage standards and residual payments—principles derived from the evident disparity between studios' profits and actors' insecure earnings from one-time film usages.[25][21] These initiatives addressed causal realities of the industry, where performers faced unilateral salary cuts and unsafe conditions without recourse, fostering a union structure to negotiate equitable terms rather than relying on individual leverage against powerful producers.[21] His involvement contributed to SAG's persistence through early legal challenges, culminating in the studios' recognition of the union in 1937 following sustained organizing and the leverage of federal labor laws like the National Labor Relations Act.[39] Despite these advancements, Talbot personally incurred costs, as Warner Bros. terminated his contract in retaliation for his union activities, illustrating the studios' punitive response to early labor activism even as SAG gained ground.[2] This sacrifice underscored the foundational trade-offs in SAG's formation, where individual career risks enabled collective gains in contract security and bargaining power.[13] Talbot remained committed to these origins, later becoming the last surviving founding member until his death in 1996.[38]Anti-communist stance and conservative leanings
Talbot's political views shifted rightward after World War II, aligning him with conservative resistance to perceived communist influence within Hollywood unions and guilds. As a founding member of the Screen Actors Guild who prioritized ideological vigilance, he opposed efforts by communist sympathizers to gain control over labor organizations, contributing to the expulsion of such elements without relying on excessive House Un-American Activities Committee tactics. This stance reflected empirical realities of Soviet-directed cells operating in the industry, as documented in declassified testimonies and defectors' accounts, rather than the later politicized narratives framing all anti-communism as mere hysteria.[40] A lifelong Republican, Talbot's conservatism facilitated his career longevity amid the blacklist era, enabling steady employment in films, serials, and emerging television while peers with left-wing ties faced professional ostracism. His close friendship with Ronald Reagan, forged through shared guild leadership and extending into the 1980s, exemplified this ideological compatibility; Reagan later credited early allies like Talbot in combating union subversion. Unlike blacklisted actors whose affiliations with front groups led to unemployment, Talbot's principled resistance—rooted in causal threats to free enterprise and anti-totalitarian realism—ensured uninterrupted work, underscoring how ideological alignment mitigated industry purges.[40] Talbot eschewed the victimhood framing often retroactively applied to blacklist casualties, instead viewing communist penetration as a substantive danger validated by historical outcomes like the Hollywood Ten's contempt convictions for refusing to affirm non-membership in the Communist Party. His approach emphasized naming specific threats within guilds to preserve democratic processes, prioritizing evidence-based defense over accommodation, which sustained his viability in an industry rife with biased pro-left sourcing that downplayed infiltration until archival revelations post-Cold War.[41]Personal life
Marriages, family, and children
Talbot's first marriage was to Elaine Olga Melchior on August 28, 1930, which ended in divorce on January 11, 1932.[7] He wed Marguerite Cramer in 1937, with the marriage dissolving in 1940.[42] Talbot's subsequent unions were brief: to Abigail Adams in 1942, annulled shortly thereafter, and to Keven McClure (also known as Evelyn Byrd McClure) from August 27, 1946, to 1947.[7] On June 18, 1948, Talbot married singer and actress Margaret Carol Epple, professionally known as Paula Talbot or Margaret "Paula" Epple.[7] This marriage endured until Epple's death on March 18, 1989, spanning more than 40 years and providing relative stability amid Talbot's fluctuating career demands.[42][43] The couple resided in Studio City, California, where Talbot held the honorary position of mayor in the 1960s.[11] Talbot and Epple had four children: sons David (born circa 1952) and Stephen (born circa 1949), and daughters Margaret (born circa 1962) and Cynthia.[43][42] David Talbot became a journalist, authoring books and founding the online news site Salon.[42] Margaret Talbot serves as a staff writer for The New Yorker and wrote The Entertainer: Movies, Magic, and My Father's Twentieth-Century Life (2012), a memoir detailing her parents' Hollywood experiences.[42] Stephen Talbot worked as a child actor and later as a television producer and documentarian.[7] Cynthia Talbot trained as a physician.[42] The children were raised in Studio City, benefiting from their father's industry connections while navigating the challenges of his peripatetic professional life.[7]Struggles with alcoholism and later sobriety
Talbot's struggles with alcoholism began during the height of his Hollywood career in the 1930s, amid the pressures of rapid stardom and a demanding schedule of B-movies and supporting roles at Warner Bros. and other studios. Heavy drinking impaired his professional reliability, leading to missed auditions and the loss of leading-man status by the early 1940s, as producers cited concerns over his dependability.[33][44] In 1941, Talbot married actress Paula Thomas, his fourth wife, whose influence prompted him to confront his addiction through personal resolve rather than formal intervention. He achieved sobriety shortly thereafter, crediting the stability of family life—including the birth of their four children—as a key motivator for sustained abstinence. This recovery, rooted in individual agency and domestic commitment, allowed Talbot to rebound professionally, transitioning to steady television work without the self-destructive patterns that derailed other actors' trajectories.[33][45] Unlike sensationalized celebrity narratives of addiction as inevitable ruin, Talbot's case demonstrates empirical recovery potential when tied to causal factors like accountable relationships, enabling a career extension into the 1980s at age 80-something. His long-term sobriety, maintained until his death in 1996 at age 94, underscores that while alcohol contributed to specific film-era setbacks, it did not preclude a prolific output of over 150 films and extensive TV appearances.[33]Death and legacy
Final years and passing
Talbot retired from film and television following his final screen appearance in 1987, though he continued performing in dinner theater productions through the late 1980s.[11] His wife of nearly 42 years, Margaret Epple, died in 1989, after which he sold their home in Studio City, California, and relocated to an apartment in San Francisco to be closer to his children.[11] In his 90s, Talbot's physical health declined, requiring the use of a walker, though his mental acuity remained intact.[11] He died on March 3, 1996, at age 94 in his San Francisco apartment following several days of illness.[11][26] He was survived by two sons, David and Stephen; two daughters, Cindy and Margaret; and seven grandchildren.[2]Career assessment and cultural impact
Talbot's career, spanning over seven decades from vaudeville and tent shows in the 1920s to television guest spots into the 1980s, demonstrated remarkable longevity and adaptability in an industry characterized by volatility and typecasting. He accumulated credits in more than 150 films, primarily B-movies and serials, alongside steady television work that included recurring roles and appearances on series such as Perry Mason and Newhart.[1][2] This output reflected a rigorous work ethic, evidenced by his completion of nine films in 1932 and twelve in 1933 alone under Warner Bros. contract, prioritizing employment over selective prestige.[46] Contemporaries and biographers have praised this reliability, noting his versatility across genres from pre-Code dramas to Westerns and mysteries, which sustained him without the interruptions faced by less adaptable performers.[47] However, critics have pointed to his willingness to accept any role—including low-budget productions by directors like Edward D. Wood Jr.—as a factor that confined him to supporting parts and prevented A-list elevation, arguably diluting his reputation among elite cinephiles despite broad employability.[5] Culturally, Talbot's portrayals in serials, such as Lex Luthor in Atom Man vs. Superman (1950) and Commissioner Gordon in Batman and Robin (1949), have cemented his appeal among enthusiasts of cliffhanger adventure films, influencing appreciation for mid-century genre storytelling that emphasized action over narrative depth.[3] His journeyman status, embodying the unsung backbone of Hollywood's output, underscores causal factors in career trajectories: personal choices favoring volume over curation, combined with studio systems that rewarded quantity in B-pictures amid economic pressures of the Depression and postwar eras. This empirical persistence contrasts with the fragility of stardom, highlighting how ideological conformity in Hollywood—often skewed toward left-leaning networks, as Talbot's own resistance to communist influences illustrates—could marginalize non-conformists, though mainstream accounts from academia-influenced sources tend to underemphasize such dynamics in favor of apolitical narratives.[13] Renewed interest in Talbot's oeuvre stems from his daughter Margaret Talbot's 2012 biography The Entertainer: Movies, Magic, and My Father's Twentieth-Century Life, which reframes his path as a microcosm of American entertainment evolution, from carnival circuits to television domestication, prompting reassessments of overlooked contract players.[10] The book's emphasis on his non-bitter adaptability has resonated with genre fans, fostering archival rediscoveries that affirm the value of B-movie craftsmanship against elitist dismissals, while his political legacy as a SAG founder and anti-communist voice offers a counter-narrative to prevailing industry historiography biased toward progressive icons.[48]Filmography
Talbot debuted in film in 1931 with Twenty-One, transitioning to Warner Bros. pre-Code productions where he often played romantic leads or supporting roles in titles such as Three on a Match (1932, as Michael Loftus), 20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932, as Bud Saunders), 42nd Street (1933), and Havana Widows (1933).[4][1]| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1932 | Three on a Match | Michael Loftus[4] |
| 1932 | 20,000 Years in Sing Sing | Bud Saunders[4] |
| 1933 | 42nd Street | Uncredited dancer[1] |
| 1934 | One Night of Love | Jack Crawford[4] |
| 1949 | Batman and Robin (serial) | Commissioner James Gordon[4] |
| 1950 | Atom Man vs. Superman (serial) | Professor Lex Luthor[4] |
| 1953 | Glen or Glenda | Inspector Warren / Narrator (as Sgt. Will Warren)[4] |
| 1954 | Jail Bait | Police Inspector[4] |
| 1959 | Plan 9 from Outer Space | General Edward Clayton[4] |
| 1960 | City of Fear | Chief Jensen[49] |