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Don Brodie

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Don Brodie

Donald Ellis Brodie (May 29, 1904 – January 8, 2001) was an American film and television actor.

The youngest of six children born to Frank Ellis Brodie and Charlotte Moonert, Donald Brodie was raised in Cincinnati's Avondale neighborhood and attended Hughes High School and the University of Cincinnati. Before becoming a professional actor, Brodie worked in Procter & Gamble's main offices. At age 16, his first-place finish-this-'filmerick' entry was published in The Cincinnati Post:

Little Mary Miles Minter was ill;
She thought that she needed a pill.
Lon Chaney said: "Tarry,
I'll fetch Wesley Barry,
With his capers, the pain he will kill.

As early as 1922, Brodie was acting on stage. In 1924, he co-starred in a production of Lord Dunsany's Fame and the Poet. In November 1927, a story in The Cincinnati Post mentions "Donald Brodie" among the players in the Emery Theatre production of Mrs. Leopold Markbreit's comedy, Diplomatic Perplexities. Five months later, a review in The Cincinnati Enquirer listed him in the cast of the Civic Theater's production of The Pigeon.

Brodie worked with Cincinnati's Civic Repertory Theater for nine years.

A veteran of over 250 film and television productions, Brodie signed his first film contract with Universal Pictures Corporation in 1931. Initially signed as a "feature comedian" and promoted as "Steve" Brodie, a name "already famous as a synonym for daring" (presumably a reference to the suddenly like-named bridge-jumper), Universal evidently thought better of this plan; the nickname was dropped well before Brodie made his debut later that year in the two-reeler, Out Stepping.

He appeared as a callow, mustachioed actor in various utility roles in films from the early 1930s. Usually playing bit parts in features, his more notable credits include his voiceover work in the Disney cartoon features Pinocchio and Dumbo and his portrayal of a carefully used car lot owner in the film noir classic Detour. He also worked off and on as a dialogue director.

In 1938, Brodie, with considerable media fanfare, landed by far the most substantial role of his screen career: prominently featured in the fifth installment of Universal's Crime Club series, The Last Express. (He had appeared uncredited in each of the four prior entries). Although the film was widely dismissed by critics, those few reviewers who did more than merely mention Brodie by name lauded his contribution. The Jackson Sun describes leading man Kent Taylor and Brodie as "mak[ing] most of meaty roles of private detective and stooge, respectively," and notes that "Brodie adapts himself readily to the comic relief," while the Liverpool Evening Express deems Brodie "very amusing as [Taylor's] assistant."

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