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  1. Walter Huston was a Canadian-born American actor. He was the father of actor and director John Huston and the grandfather of actress Anjelica Huston and actor Danny Huston. Born Walter Houghston in Toronto, Ontario to an Ulster-Scottish father and a Scottish Canadian mother, he began his Broadway career in 1924. Once talkies began in Hollywood, […]

  2. Walter Thomas Huston ( / ˈhjuːstən / ⓘ HEW-stən; April 5, 1883 – April 7, 1950) was a Canadian actor and singer. Huston won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, directed by his son John Huston. He is the patriarch of the four generations of the Huston acting family, including his ...

  3. 2 de mar. de 2020 · Dodsworth (1936) #WarnerArchive #WarnerBros #DodsworthBased on the best-selling novel by Sinclair Lewis, this "handsome, intelligent film" (Los Angeles Times...

    • 4 min
    • 13.2K
    • Warner Bros. Classics
  4. Walter Thomas Huston (April 5, 1883 – April 7, 1950) was a respected Canadian-born American character actor during The Golden Age of Hollywood. Huston mostly played hard-working middle-class types such as Sam Dodsworth in Dodsworth. However, he was much more versatile than this suggests; to wit, his single most famous performance was his ...

  5. Childhood & Early Years. Walter Thomas Huston (originally Houghston) was born on April 5, 1883 in Toronto to Robert Moore Houghston and Elizabeth (née McGibbon). Initially, the family had a farm near Orangeville in the Dufferin County, Ontario. Just before his birth, they moved to Toronto, where his father established a construction company.

  6. Summer Holiday (1948) -- (Movie Clip) Our Home Town From the top, Walter Huston as dad Nat Miller introduces the gimmick, original tunes by Harry Warren and Ralph Blane serving as exposition in the musical adaptation of Eugene O’Neill’s Ah, Wilderness, bringing in Butch Jenkins, Michael Kirby, Marilyn Maxwell, Selena Royle, Frank Morgan and Agnes Moorehead, in Summer Holiday, 1948 ...

  7. “Hell, I ain’t paid to make good lines sound good. I’m paid to make bad lines sound good.”