Otto Fries | |
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Born | October 28, 1887 St. Louis, Missouri, United States |
Died | September 15, 1938 Los Angeles, California United States |
(aged 50)
Other names | Otto H. Fries |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1920 - 1938 |
Children | Sherwood Fries.[1] |
Otto Fries (28 October 1887 – 15 September 1938) was an American film actor. He appeared in 129 films between 1920 and 1938.
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Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Fries became a dapper-looking supporting comic with a varied background in medicine shows and vaudeville. He easily transitioned to film in the early 1910s. By 1915, he was with the Keystone Cops and entered a lifelong friendship with Stan Laurel, which led to appearances in that star comedian's early films for Bronco Billy Anderson. Not surprisingly, Fries later landed at Hal Roach Studios, where he supported not only Laurel & Hardy and Charley Chase but also such lesser stars as Max Davidson and James Finlayson.
Sound proved no hindrance and Fries would appear in many of Roach's German-language talkies, as well as characters in many of the Our Gang shorts. Often cast as inebriates, detectives, and bartenders (with a memorable turn as a Blacksmith matching wits with a delinquent 9-year-old in Roach's Readin' and Writin'), Fries played scores of bit parts and walk-ons in grade-A films. One of his more notable appearances was as a shiphand in the Marx Brothers' Monkey Business.
Fries died in 1938 in Los Angeles, California at age 50.