Harry Gribbon

Harry Peter Gribbon (June 9, 1885 – July 28, 1961) was an American film actor, comedian and director known for The Cameraman (1928), Show People (1928) and Art Trouble (1934).[2] Gribbon started in vaudeville, performing on the Keith, Orpheum, and Pantages circuits,[2] and in 1913 he became the leading man[1] in the Ziegfeld Follies.[3] He performed on stage in approximately 200 productions, including Buster Brown, The Man Who Owned Broadway, and The Red Widow, after which Mack Sennett signed him to make films.[4] Gribbon's Broadway credits included Meet a Body (1944), Mr. Big (1941), Arsenic and Old Lace (1944), Delicate Story (1940), and Alley Cat (1934).He died on July 28, 1961, in Los Angeles, California[2] at the Motion Picture Country Home.
Gribbon (in top hat pointing) in 1916 in A Dash of Courage . Wallace Beery to his left.
Myrtle Lind and Harry Gribbon in Rip & Stitch: Tailors (1919)
Los Angeles, CaliforniaHoly Cross CemeteryCulver City, CaliforniaMay EmoryEddie GribbonThe CameramanShow PeopleArt TroublevaudevilleMack SennettL-KO KompanyKeystoneA Dash of CourageWallace BeeryMyrtle LindFatty and Mabel at the San Diego ExpositionMabel, Fatty and the LawFatty and the Broadway StarsTheir Social SplashA Social CubAre Waitresses Safe?The King of the KitchenBusiness Before HonestySalome vs. ShenandoahDown on the FarmA Small Town IdolKnockout ReillyRose-MarieChinatown CharlieThe ShakedownTide of EmpireThe Bees' BuzzOn with the ShowThe Mysterious IslandSo Long LettyMidnight DaddiesDumb DicksRide Him, CowboyThe Kid from SpainNewspapers.comGoogle BooksInternet Broadway Database