Eddie Cantor(1892-1964)
- Artiste
- Scénariste
- Production
Eddie Cantor est né le 31 janvier 1892 dans l'état de New York, États-Unis. Il était acteur et scénariste. Il est connu pour Le gosse aux millions (1934), Le Kid d'Espagne (1932) et Forty Little Mothers (1940). Il était marié à Ida Tobias Cantor. Il est mort le 10 octobre 1964 en Californie, États-Unis.
- Récompenses
- 6 victoires au total
Artiste
Scénariste
Production
- Site officiel
- Taille
- 1,73 m
- Date de naissance
- Date de décès
- Conjoint
- Ida Tobias Cantor9 juin 1914 - 9 août 1962 (son décès, 5 enfants)
- Enfants
- ProchesBrian Gari(Grandchild)
- Autres œuvresStage: Appeared (Broadway debut) in "Ziegfeld Follies of 1917" on Broadway. Musical revue. Music by Raymond Hubbell and Dave Stamper. Patriotic finale by Victor Herbert. Book / Lyrics by Gene Buck and George V. Hobart. Musical Direction by Frank Darling. Featuring songs by James F. Hanley, Jack Egan, Jerome Kern, Ring Lardner, Turner Layton (Broadway debut; credited as J. Turner Layton), Les Copeland and Leo Edwards. Featuring songs with lyrics by Ballard MacDonald, Alfred Harriman, Ring Lardner, Henry Creamer, Rennold Wolf and Blanche Merrill. Directed by Ned Wayburn. New Amsterdam Theatre: 12 Jun 1917-4 Sep 1917 (111 performances). Cast: Miss Alexander, Miss Allen, Mary Arthur, Don Barclay, Helen Barnes, Miss Barnett, Miss Bowman, Fanny Brice, Betty Browne, Miss Calais, May Carmen, Miss Carr, Claremont Carroll, Walter Catlett, Ethel Delmar, Bernice Dewey, Dorothy Dickson, Rose Dolores, Emily Drange, Marcelle Earle, Miss Eberts, Helen Ellsworth, Madeleine Fairbanks, Marion Fairbanks, Miss Falconer, W.C. Fields, Irving Fisher, Edith Hallor, Fred Heider, Malcolm Hicks, Clay Hill, Freda Hirsch, Hilda Hirsch, Peggy Hopkins, Carl Hyson, Florence Kern, Allyn King, Eleanor Lang, Dorothy Leeds, Doris Lloyd, Gladys Loftus, Cecile Markle, Bruce McKay, Gus Minton, Bessie Nelligan, Peter Ostrander, Miss Palfer, Kathryn Perry, Tom Richards, Will Rogers, Charles Scribner, Margaret St. Clair, Lilyan Tashman, Russell Vokes, Marie Wallace, Miss Walsh, Edythe Whitney, Bert Williams, Miss Worth. Produced by Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
- Annonces publicitaires
- AnecdotesTaking his show on a national tour, he was preparing to open one night at a theater in Minneapolis, in which every seat had been sold. Shortly before the show was to begin that night, a terrific snowstorm hit Minneapolis, effectively shutting the city down, and of the hundreds of people who had bought tickets to see the show, only seven managed to make it to the theater. When the management wanted to cancel the show and refund the patrons' money, Cantor refused, saying, "These people have paid their money to come and see me, and that's what they're going to get". So he put on the full show--elaborate musical numbers, sketches, dancing girls, comics, etc.--for an audience of just seven people.
- Citations[after attending the premiere of the film The Eddie Cantor Story (1953)] If that was my life, I didn't live.
- Surnoms
- Banjo Eyes
- The Apostle of Pep
- Ol' Banjo Eyes
- Salaire
- (1930)$100,000 + 10% profits
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