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Infos supplémentaires

Acteur dans 38 films

Né(e) le 16 juillet 1926

Lieu de naissance
Long Island, New York, USA

Mort le 16 octobre 1981 (à 55 ans)

Stanley Clements

Acteur dans

1978

  • Tête brûlée et pied tendre

1975

  • Timber Tramps

1968

  • Panic in the City

1963

  • Un monde fou, fou, fou, fou
  • Tammy and the Doctor

1962

  • Saintly Sinners

1958

  • A Nice Little Bank That Should Be Robbed
  • In the Money

1957

  • Looking for Danger
  • Spook Chasers
  • Hold That Hypnotist

1956

  • Hot Shots
  • Fighting Trouble

1955

  • Last of the Desperados
  • Wiretapper
  • Robbers' Roost
  • Mad at the World
  • Air Strike

1954

  • The Rocket Man

1953

  • Hot News
  • White Lightning

1952

  • Les dégourdis de la M.P.
  • Boots Malone

1950

  • Destination Murder

1949

  • Johnny Holiday
  • Red Light
  • Mr. Soft Touch
  • Bad Boy

1948

  • Canon City
  • Big Town Scandal

1947

  • Variety Girl

1945

  • Salty O'Rourke

1944

  • La reine de Broadway

1943

  • Ghosts on the Loose

1942

  • 'Neath Brooklyn Bridge

1941

  • Qui a tué Vicky Lynn ?
  • Accent on Love
  • Tall, Dark and Handsome
  • A participé à

    • The Devil's Partner
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Stanley Clements (July 16, 1926 – October 16, 1981) was an American actor and comedian. Stanley Clements was born Stanislaw Klimowicz in Long Island, New York. Young Stan realized that he wanted a show-business career while he was in grammar school, and when he graduated from college he toured in vaudeville for two years. He then joined the touring company of the Major Bowes Amateur Hour. In 1941, he was signed to a contract by 20th Century Fox and appeared in several B films for the studio. After a short stint with the East Side Kids, he set out on his own again, this time landing roles in more prestigious pictures. He was featured in the Bing Crosby hit Going My Way, and scored a great success as a jockey in the Alan Ladd feature Salty O'Rourke. His career was interrupted by military service in World War II, and when he returned, he began appearing in lower-budgeted films, including Johnny Holiday (cast against type as a psychopath). He starred in a series of action/detective pictures at Allied Artists for producer Ben Schwalb and director Edward Bernds. Schwalb soon became staff producer for The Bowery Boys, and when he needed a replacement for Leo Gorcey in 1956, he asked Clements to step in. Clements comfortably settled into the role of Huntz Hall's sidekick, beginning with Fighting Trouble, and co-starred in the final seven Bowery Boys comedies. The series finally ended in 1958, and Clements went on to a steady career of supporting roles in film and TV until his death from emphysema in 1981. One of his last jobs was an appearance in a nationally advertised commercial for Pringle's potato chips. Stanley Clements died of emphysema in Pasadena, California, and is buried at Riverside National Cemetery in Riverside, California. Description above from the Wikipedia article Stanley Clements,licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.





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