Dave O'Brien | |
Birth Name: | David Poole Fronabarger |
Birth Date: | 31 May 1912 |
Birth Place: | Big Spring, Texas, U.S. |
Occupation: | Actor |
Years Active: | 1930 - 1969 |
Children: | 5[1] |
Dave O'Brien (born David Poole Fronabarger; May 31, 1912 – November 8, 1969) was an American film actor, stunt man, film director, and Emmy awarded comedy writer.[2] In Hollywood, he was known as an innovative stunt man, among other of his talents.[3] He was well known for his portrayal, in the 1942 serial films of the children's hero, the aviator, Captain Midnight (serial), performer and comedy writer in the Pete Smith Specialties and as one of Red Skelton's comedy writers.[4]
Born in Big Spring, Texas, to Mike Fronabarger and his wife, Mary Edith, he started his film career performing in choruses and working as a stunt double, then graduating into larger roles, mostly in B pictures. He adopted "O'Brien" as his acting pseudonym. He had roles in early Western movies such as Lightnin' Crandall (1937).
O'Brien acted in the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer comedy short film series Pete Smith Specialties. O'Brien wrote and directed many of these subjects under the name David Barclay. In 1933, O'Brien also had a small dancing part with Bebe Daniels in the Busby Berkeley musical 42nd Street. O'Brien portrayed a frantic drug abuser in the 1936 anti-drug film Tell Your Children (better known under its reissue title, Reefer Madness).
He appeared in several of the East Side Kids films.[5] He appeared in low-budget Westerns, such as Producers Releasing Corporation's Texas Rangers series, billed as "Tex O'Brien".
In 1940, he appeared in Queen of the Yukon, The Devil Bat with Bela Lugosi, and Son of the Navy. In 1942, he starred in the fifteen episode movie serial Captain Midnight. In 1944, were roles in a series of Westerns, some of which were the Billy the Kid serials, and serials The Texas Rangers, a lead role in Brand of the Devil. In 1945, he appeared in The Man Who Walked Alone. By 1953, he was in the MGM musical Kiss Me, Kate.
As a comedy writer for The Red Skelton Show, O'Brien shared an Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series in 1961. Then, shared a nomination for the same award in 1963.[6] At the time of his demise in 1969, Mr. O'Brien was a "top television comedy writer" on the Red Skelton Hour.
Year | Title | Role | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1942 | Calling All Pa's | Joe Thunderstruck | |||
1943 | First Aid | Crandall K. Krumb, the Husband | |||
1943 | Seventh Column | Falstaff Pratt | Uncredited | ||
1944 | Movie Pests | Feet-in-the-Aisle-Pest | Uncredited | ||
1944 | Safety Sleuth | Careless Man | Uncredited | ||
1946 | Treasures From Trash | Alonzo T. Mousebrain | Director and Screenplay Writer as David Barclay | ||
1946 | Sure Cures | Xavier T. Schneckendorf | Director and Screenplay Writer as David Barclay | ||
1946 | I Love My Husband, BUT! | The Husband | Director as David Barclay, Dorothy Short appears as his Wife | ||
1947 | I Love My Wife, BUT! | The Husband | Director as David Barclay, Dorothy Short appears as his Wife | ||
1947 | Have You Ever Wondered | Main Character | Director and Screenplay Writer as David Barclay | ||
1948 | I Love My Mother-in-Law, But... | The Husband | Director as David Barclay, Dorothy Short as his Wife, and Anne O'Neal as the Mother-in-Law | ||
1948 | Ice Aces | Director as David Barclay | |||
1948 | You Can't Win | Harried Homeowner | Director and Screenplay Writer as David Barclay | ||
1948 | Let's Cogitate | Director and Screenplay Writer as David Barclay | |||
1949 | Just Suppose | The Dad | Director as David Barclay | ||
1950 | Did'ja Know? | Main Character | Director as David Barclay | ||
1950 | Wrong Way Butch | Wrong Way Butch | Director as David Barclay | ||
1952 | I Love Children But... | The Dad/Papa Schlemiel | Director and Writer as David Barclay | ||
1953 | Things We Can Do Without | Thaddeus E. Thud | Director and Writer as David Barclay | ||
1954 | Ain't it Aggravatin' | Main Character | Director and Writer as David Barclay | ||
1954 | Do Someone a Favor | George Dibson | Director and Writer as David Barclay | ||
1954 | Out for Fun | Businessman seeking relaxation | Director and Writer as David Barclay |