Ray "Crash" Corrigan
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Ray "Crash" Corrigan | |
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Born | Raymond Benard 14 February 1902 Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States |
Died | 10 August 1976 (aged 74) Brookings Harbor, Oregon, United States |
Other name(s) | Raymond Benard, Ray Benard, Ray Corrigan, Crash Corrigan, Gorilla |
Ray "Crash" Corrigan (14 February 1902 - 10 August 1976) born Raymond Benard was an American actor most famous for appearing in B-Western movies.
His career in Hollywood began as a physical fitness instructor. In the early 1930s he did stunts and bit-parts. Many of his early roles were in ape costumes - for example, as a Gorilla in Tarzan and His Mate (1934) and an "Orangopoid" in the original Flash Gordon serial. In 1936 he got his break with roles in two Republic serials, The Vigilantes Are Coming and Undersea Kingdom (in the main starring part).
According to Ray himself, his stagename of "Crash" Corrigan came from his role in the Undersea Kingdom (it was produced to rival Universal's Flash Gordon - the same one in which he played the Orangopoid - and the name was designed to be similar). Other stories go that it was due to his size or because he kept falling off his horse on set. There is no firm proof for any of this but it is verifiable that this serial was the first time he used the name professionally.
On the basis of this, Republic signed him to a Term Player Contract, running from 25 May 1936 to 24 May 1938. He was cast as one the trio in the Three Mesquiteers series of films and starred in 24 in all. He left Republic in 1938 in a dispute over pay.
At Monogram Pictures, he began a new series of films - The Range Busters (a cheap copy of the Three Mesquiteers) - with a character of his own name. Ray starred in 20 of the 24 films in this series between 1940 and 1943.
Following this, his on screen work largely returned to appearing in Ape costume - for example, one of the title roles in 1952's Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla.
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[edit] Corriganville
In 1937 Ray Corrigan had purchased some land in Simi Valley, California. He developed this into Corriganville, a general location used for many Western movies and TV shows. Ray made a lot of money from renting out this location and from paying visitors - it was opened to the public for Western-themed shows in 1949.
Examples of movies and shows filmed at Corriganville:
- Drums of Fu Manchu (1939)
- Fort Apache (1948)
- The Lone Ranger (1949-1957)
- Advetures of Rin Tin Tin (1954-1959)
- Have Gun - Will Travel (1957-1963)
Corriganville was eventually sold to Bob Hope in 1966, at which point it became Hopetown.
[edit] See also
[edit] Trivia
- Ray had an Ape suit fitted to his own measurements with fur made of human hair.
[edit] External links
- Ray Corrigan at the Internet Movie Database
- Ray "Crash" Corrigan at B-Westerns
- List of productions filmed at Corriganville at the Internet Movie Database
- Corriganville site
Persondata | |
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NAME | Corrigan, Ray |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Benard, Raymond; Corrigan, "Crash" |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | American actor |
DATE OF BIRTH | 14 February 1902 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States |
DATE OF DEATH | 10 August 1976 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Brookings Harbor, Oregon, United States |