Born
8 April 1900 (125)
Place of Birth
Staten Island, New York City, New York, USA
Also known as
Alfred McGonegal, Allen Curtis Jenkins
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Allen Jenkins (April 9, 1900 – July 20, 1974) was an American character actor on stage, screen and television. He was born Alfred McGonegal on Staten Island, New York. He studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. In his first stage appearance, he danced next to James Cagney in a chorus line for an off-Broadway musical called Pitter-Patter. He made five dollars a week. He also appeared one thousand times in Broadway plays between 1924 and 1962, inc...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Allen Jenkins (April 9, 1900 – July 20, 1974) was an American character actor on stage, screen and television. He was born Alfred McGonegal on Staten Island, New York. He studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. In his first stage appearance, he danced next to James Cagney in a chorus line for an off-Broadway musical called Pitter-Patter. He made five dollars a week. He also appeared one thousand times in Broadway plays between 1924 and 1962, including The Front Page with Lee Tracy (1928). His big break came when he replaced Spencer Tracy for three weeks in the Broadway play The Last Mile. He was called to Hollywood by Darryl F. Zanuck and signed first to Paramount Pictures and shortly afterwards to Warner Bros. He originated the character of Frankie Wells in the Broadway production of Blessed Event and reprised the role in the film adaptation, both in 1932. With the advent of talking pictures, he made a career out of playing comic henchmen, stooges, policemen and other "tough guys" in numerous films of the 1930s and 1940s, especially for Warner Bros. He was labeled the "greatest scene-stealer of the 1930s" by the New York Times. He voiced the character of "Officer Dibble" on the Hanna-Barbera television cartoon Top Cat and was a regular on the 1956-1957 television situation comedy Hey, Jeannie! (1956), starring Jeannie Carson. He was also a guest star on The Red Skelton Show, I Love Lucy, Playhouse 90, The Ernie Kovacs Show, Zane Grey Theater, and The Sid Caesar Show. Eleven days before his death he made his final appearance, at the end of Billy Wilder's 1974 film adaptation of The Front Page. He went public with his alcoholism and was the first actor to speak in the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate about it. He helped start the first Alcoholics Anonymous programs in California prisons for women. Jenkins, James Cagney, Pat O'Brien and Frank McHugh were the original members of the so-called "Irish Mafia". He was the seventh member of the Screen Actors Guild. Description above from the Wikipedia article Allen Jenkins, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
42nd Street: From Book to Screen to Stage
2006
Complicated Women
2003
James Stewart: A Wonderful Life
1987
Hollywood Out-takes and Rare Footage
1983
The Front Page
1974
Getting Away from It All
1972
Doctor, You've Got to Be Kidding!
1967
The Spy in the Green Hat
1967
I'd Rather Be Rich
1964
Robin and the 7 Hoods
1964
For Those Who Think Young
1964
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
1963
Pillow Talk
1959
Three Men on a Horse
1957
The WAC from Walla Walla
1952
Oklahoma Annie
1952
Chained for Life
1952
Behave Yourself!
1951
Crazy Over Horses
1951
Let's Go Navy!
1951
Bodyhold
1949
The Big Wheel
1949
The Inside Story
1948
The Senator Was Indiscreet
1947
Blow-Ups of 1947
1947
Wild Harvest
1947
The Case of the Baby-Sitter
1947
The Hat Box Mystery
1947
Fun on a Weekend
1947
Easy Come, Easy Go
1947
Singin' in the Corn
1946
The Dark Horse
1946
Meet Me on Broadway
1946
Lady on a Train
1945
Wonder Man
1945
Stage Door Canteen
1943
My Wife's an Angel
1943
Three Cheers for the Girls
1943
Eyes in the Night
1942
They All Kissed the Bride
1942