Conlin was born in Camden, New Jersey in 1884, and his acting career started out in vaudeville, where he and his wife Myrtle Glass played the Keith-Albee-Orpheum circuits billed as "Conlin & Glass," a song-and-dance team.[1] They also starred together in two short films, Sharps and Flats (1928) and Zip! Boom! Bang! (1929) for Vitaphone.[1] These early shorts display Conlin's musical talents, including his impressive skills at the piano. In later years Conlin became strictly a character comedian, with little opportunity to show his vaudeville skills.
Jimmy Conlin made another comedy short without Glass in 1930 (A Tight Squeeze), but his film career started in earnest in 1933, and for the next 27 years, with the single exception of 1951, every year saw the release of at least one film in which Conlin appeared – at the height of his career, often more than a dozen of them.[citation needed] Recognizable by his small size and odd appearance, Conlin played all sorts of small roles and bit parts, many times not receiving an onscreen credit. Today's audiences may remember him as the assistant bartender to W. C. Fields in My Little Chickadee, the collections agent in the Fred Astaire musical Second Chorus, the beggar posing as a blind man in Dick Tracy's Dilemma, and the elderly horse trainer in Rolling Home.
In the 1940s, Conlin was part of Preston Sturges' unofficial "stock company" of character actors, appearing in nine films written and directed by Sturges.[2] His roles in Sturges' films were often sizable and often came with good billing. One of his best performances came in Sturges' The Sin of Harold Diddlebock in 1946, when he played "Wormy", the racetrack tout who convinces Harold Lloyd to have his first drink, setting off the events of the film. The loyalty between Sturges and Conlin ran both ways, and when the former golden boy of Hollywood fell on hard times, Conlin remained a friend, stayed in contact, and helped out in any way he could.[1]
Conlin did not make many television appearances, but he did have a regular role as a bartender on Duffy's Tavern,[3] a syndicated series from 1954.[1] He made his final film in 1959, when he played a habitual criminal in Anatomy of a Murder.
Personal life
Conlin's first wife, Myrtle Glass, died in 1945. They had been married 27 years.[4] He later married the former Dorothy Ryan.[5]
Death
Conlin died at his home in Encino, California on May 7, 1962, at the age of 77.[5]
"Jimmy Conlin, Actor, Is Dead". The Lincoln Star. Nebraska, Lincoln. Associated Press. May 8, 1962. p.15. Retrieved January 4, 2018– via Newspapers.com.
"Mrs. Jimmy Conlin". The Los Angeles Times. California, Los Angeles. May 14, 1945. p.8. Retrieved January 4, 2018– via Newspapers.com.
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