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Bobby Jordan

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Bobby Jordan

Robert G. Jordan (April 1, 1923[citation needed] – September 10, 1965) was an American actor, most notable for being a member of the Dead End Kids, the East Side Kids, the Little Tough Guys, and the Bowery Boys.

Jordan was born in Harrison, New York. At the age of four, he worked in an early movie version of A Christmas Carol. His mother took him to talent shows in and around Harrison, New York. He also modeled for newspaper and magazine advertisements and appeared in short films and radio programs. In the late 1920s, his family moved to the Upper West Side of Manhattan. In 1929, he was cast as Charles Hildebrand in the 1929 Broadway play Street Scene.

The youngest of the Dead End Kids, Jordan was the first of the group to work in films (in 1931 at the Vitaphone studio in Brooklyn, alongside future screen teammate David Gorcey). In 1935, he won the role of Angel in Sidney Kingsley's Broadway drama Dead End about life in the slums of the east side of New York City. The play was performed at the Belasco Theatre and ran for three years and more than 600 performances. He appeared for the first season and the beginning of the second but left in mid-November 1936. He returned in time to join the others in 1937 in Hollywood, California to make the movie version of the play, starring Humphrey Bogart, Joel McCrea, Sylvia Sidney, and Claire Trevor.

Following the making of Dead End, the young actors (now known professionally as The Dead End Kids), were released from their contract with Goldwyn, and subsequently they were signed by Warner Bros. After one year, Warners released most of them, but kept Leo Gorcey and Jordan as solo performers. Jordan appeared (as Douglas Fairbanks Rosenbloom) in Warner's Damon Runyon comedy A Slight Case of Murder (1938) and at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in Young Tom Edison (1940).

In 1940, Jordan appeared in the movie Military Academy and accepted an offer from producer Sam Katzman to star in a new tough-kid series titled The East Side Kids. Leo Gorcey soon joined him, then Huntz Hall, and the trio continued to lead the series until 1943. Meanwhile, Universal Pictures had launched a competing series, The Little Tough Guys, which gradually recruited most of the original Dead End Kids; Bobby Jordan joined in 1940. When gang leader Billy Halop left the series to join the armed forces, Bobby Jordan replaced him in Keep 'Em Slugging (1943).

Jordan entered the United States Army during World War II as a foot soldier in the 97th Infantry Division. While on furlough he made some fast cash by appearing as himself, in uniform, in the East Side Kids comedy Bowery Champs (1944). He was subsequently involved in an elevator accident that forced him to have surgery to remove his right kneecap.[citation needed]

Leo Gorcey abruptly quit the East Side Kids in 1945. Bobby Jordan arranged a meeting with his agent, Jan Grippo, who in turn set up a new production company with Gorcey, Huntz Hall, and Jordan featured in the new Bowery Boys series. After the series began filming, Jordan soon found that Gorcey and Hall were getting the lion's share of both the films' content and salary. (Jordan received only a small fraction of the salary Gorcey was getting.) Dissatisfied with his background status, Jordan left the series after eight entries, and made only a few films thereafter.

He returned to films in 1949 (as Robert Jordan), playing a character role in the low-budget drama Treasure of Monte Cristo. Future assignments were few and far between, and the discouraged actor began drinking heavily. In subsequent years, Jordan worked as a bartender, a bad choice considering his alcoholism. He worked to support his family as a door-to-door photograph salesman and as a roughneck for an oil driller.

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