Baby LeRoy (12 May 1932 – 28 July 2001) was a child actor who appeared in films in the 1930s. When he was sixteen months old, he became the youngest person ever put under term contract by a major studio.
Born Ronald Le Roy Overacker in Los Angeles, California, Baby LeRoy's career began when he was less than a year old, co-starring with Maurice Chevalier in A Bedtime Story, and ended with a cameo role as himself in Cinema Circus (1937). He is best known for his appearances in three W. C. Fields films: Tillie and Gus (1933), The Old Fashioned Way (1934) and It's a Gift (1934).
Fields recounted a difficult shooting day during Tillie and Gus where a short scene was repeatedly ruined by Baby LeRoy's crying until he surreptitiously devised a solution: "I quietly removed the nipple from Baby LeRoy's bottle, dropped in a couple of noggins of gin, and returned it to Baby LeRoy. After sucking on the pacifier for a few minutes, he staggered through the scene like a Barrymore."
And all the causes that you're fighting for can't stand up to your tan
Flip-flop and recreate yourself so you can make the common stand
Out in front of the clinic holding signs, pretending that you mind
You take the things that no one should say
And you put them on display
Come off your soapbox
Let us think for ourselves
And I swear we will find our way
So now you've got your bridge, you've got your friends
You've finally got your chance
To take the plunge just like a lemming should
To jump with all of them
Battles with the stubborn and the blind are a waste of my time