Art Smith
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arthur Gordon "Art" Smith (March 23, 1899 – February 24, 1973) was an American film, stage and television actor, best known for playing supporting roles in the 1940s.
Born in Chicago, he was a member of the Group Theatre and performed in many of their productions, including Rocket to the Moon, Awake and Sing!, Golden Boy and Waiting for Lefty, all by Clifford Odets; House of Connelly by Paul Green; and Sidney Kingsley's Men in White. The gray-haired actor usually played studious and dignified types in films, such as doctors or butlers.
Smith appeared in many black-and-white noirish films in supporting roles alongside more handsome and popular movie leads, such as John Garfield in Body and Soul (1947) and Humphrey Bogart in In a Lonely Place (1950). He had a key role as a federal agent in 1947's Ride the Pink Horse, starring and directed by Robert Montgomery. Two of these films, In a Lonely Place and Ride a Pink Horse, were based on novels by Dorothy B. Hughes.
Smith was one of the victims of the Hollywood blacklist, which ended most of his film career in 1952. In 1957, he originated the role of Doc in the stage version of West Side Story. Smith only returned occasionally to the film business, for example in an uncredited part in The Hustler. He also worked on television before retiring in 1967. He died, aged 73, in Long Island, New York, from a heart attack.
Filmography
In a Lonely Place
as Mel Lippman 1950
Letter from an Unknown Woman
as John 1948
Brute Force
as Dr. Walters 1947
Body and Soul
as David Davis (uncredited) 1947
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
as Charley (uncredited) 1945
Caught
as Psychiatrist 1949
T-Men
as Gregg 1947
A Double Life
as Wigmaker 1947
Ride the Pink Horse
as Bill Retz 1947
Education for Death: The Making of the Nazi
as Narrator (voice) (uncredited) 1943
The Sound of Fury
as Hal Clendenning 1950
Framed
as Desk Clerk (uncredited) 1947
Quicksand
as Oren Mackey 1950
Arch of Triumph
as Inspector 1948
Edge of Darkness
as Knut Osterholm 1943
The Killer That Stalked New York
as Anthony Moss 1950