Harry Sweet

Harry Sweet

Sweet in 1921
Born October 2, 1901
Colorado, USA
Died June 18, 1933 (aged 31)
Big Bear, California, USA
Years active 1919 - 1933
Mickey & Harry Sweet; Thelma & Bert Gilroy
Inn registration book
Harry Sweet Exhibitors Trade Review December 17, 1921
Harry Sweet Lee Moran Baby Peggy Exhibitors Trade Review 1922

Harry Sweet (October 2, 1901 June 18, 1933) was an American actor, director and screenwriter. He appeared in 57 films between 1919 and 1932. He also directed 54 films between 1920 and 1933, including one Harry Langdon short, two of the Tay Garnett- penned comedies Stan Laurel made for Joe Rock, and fifteen of the earliest entries in the Edgar Kennedy "Average Man" series.

Death

On June 18, 1933, Sweet was location scouting by private plane in the vicinity of Big Bear, California.[1] That night, at 7:15 pm, a plane crashed and sank to the bottom of Big Bear Lake, with the authorities initially uncertain as to the identity of the pilot as well as the number and identity of the plane's passengers; on June 19, Bert Gilroy, a film associate of Sweet's, left Los Angeles for Big Bear after efforts to contact the director in that city failed.[2] Hours after the accident, when the plane was pulled from 28 feet of water, the bodies of Sweet, actress Claudette Ford, and scenario writer Howard (Hal) Davitt, were found in the cockpit; the coroner's investigation determined Sweet had drowned and that his companions had both died from fractured skulls suffered in the crash.[3]

Selected acting filmography

Selected directing filmography

References

  1. "Harry Sweet biography". allmovie. Retrieved 2010-10-17.
  2. "Harry Sweet, Pilot, Believed Victims Of Air Crash". Bernardino County Sun 06/19/33 newspapers.com. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  3. "Bear Lake Plane Crash Cause Probed". Berkeley Daily Gazette 06/20/33 google.com/newspapers. Retrieved 2014-01-20.

External links

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