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Reading about Catlett on the Wheeler & Woolsey thread made me feel some appreciation of him is in order.
I remember first seeing him in THE BOY WITH GREEN HAIR, and feeling that here is an actor that must have had lots of entertainment experience.
Moving forward a long time, and now being involved in film preservation, I have seen a couple of his early 1930s performances that are really worth watching, but not readily available. The first is as the ship's bartender in THE CAPTAIN HATES THE SEA (Columbia 1934). This was John Gilbert's last film, and is said to inspire an exchange between Harry Cohn and director Lewis Milestone, more or less, Cohn: "The cost of this picture is staggering." Milestone: "So is the cast."
The other, really obscure is PRIVATE JONES (Universal 1933). When we were commissioned by Universal to do preservation work on this one, it was just another unknown title. It stars Lee Tracy in the title role, with Donald Cook and Gloria Stuart. Catlett has a pretty meaty and amusing part working in the army canteen. I won't go into details, as the story can be found via the TCM.com library (which is actually the AFI Catalog). If it ever becomes available, see it.
The preservation was done from the original negative, held at the Library of Congress, so is pristine.
A third film is SO THIS IS HARRIS (RKO 1933), the second short subject to win an Academy Award. It involves Catlett and bandleader Phil Harris on a golf course, in a 3-reel (29 min.) short. Again, just preserved for the Academy Film Archive from the original negative.
More information about him would be interesting.
I remember first seeing him in THE BOY WITH GREEN HAIR, and feeling that here is an actor that must have had lots of entertainment experience.
Moving forward a long time, and now being involved in film preservation, I have seen a couple of his early 1930s performances that are really worth watching, but not readily available. The first is as the ship's bartender in THE CAPTAIN HATES THE SEA (Columbia 1934). This was John Gilbert's last film, and is said to inspire an exchange between Harry Cohn and director Lewis Milestone, more or less, Cohn: "The cost of this picture is staggering." Milestone: "So is the cast."
The other, really obscure is PRIVATE JONES (Universal 1933). When we were commissioned by Universal to do preservation work on this one, it was just another unknown title. It stars Lee Tracy in the title role, with Donald Cook and Gloria Stuart. Catlett has a pretty meaty and amusing part working in the army canteen. I won't go into details, as the story can be found via the TCM.com library (which is actually the AFI Catalog). If it ever becomes available, see it.
The preservation was done from the original negative, held at the Library of Congress, so is pristine.
A third film is SO THIS IS HARRIS (RKO 1933), the second short subject to win an Academy Award. It involves Catlett and bandleader Phil Harris on a golf course, in a 3-reel (29 min.) short. Again, just preserved for the Academy Film Archive from the original negative.
More information about him would be interesting.
Dick May

