

James Flavin
Birthday
May 14, 1906 (69 years)
Place of Birth
Portland, Maine, USA
Known For
Acting
Biography
American character actor whose career lasted nearly half a century. James Wilson Flavin Jr. was the son of a hotel waiter of Canadian-English extraction and a mother, Katherine, whose father was an Irish immigrant. (Thus Flavin, well-known in Hollywood as an "Irish" type, was only one-quarter Irish.) Flavin was born and raised in Portland, Maine (a fact that may have enrichened his later working relationship with director John Ford, also a Portland native). He attended the United States Military Academy at West Point, but (contrary to some sources) did not graduate. Instead he dropped out and returned to Portland where he drove a taxi. Then as now, summer stock companies flocked to Maine each year, and in 1929 he was asked to fill in for an actor. He did well with the part and the company manager offered him $150 per week to go with the troupe back to New York. Flavin accepted and by the spring of 1930 was living in a rooming house at 108 W. 87th Street in Manhattan. Flavin didn't manage to crack Broadway at this time (his Broadway debut would not occur for another thirty-nine years, in the 1971 revival of "The Front Page," in which Flavin played Murphy and briefly took over the lead role of Walter Burns from star Robert Ryan). He worked his way across the country in stock productions and tours, arriving in Los Angeles around 1932. He quickly made the transition to movies, landing the lead in his very first film, a Universal serial, The Airmail Mystery (1932). He also landed his leading lady, marrying the serial's female star Lucile Browne that same year. However, the serial marked virtually the last time that Flavin would play the lead in a film. Thereafter, he was restricted almost exclusively to supporting characters, many of them without so much as a name. He specialized in uniformed cops and hard-bitten detectives, but played chauffeurs, cabbies, and even a 16th-century palace guard with aplomb. Flavin appeared in nearly four hundred films between 1932 and 1971, and in almost a hundred television episodes before his final appearance, as President Dwight D. Eisenhower in Francis Gary Powers: The True Story of the U-2 Spy Incident (1976). Flavin died of a heart ailment at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles on April 23, 1976. His widow Lucile died seventeen days later. They were survived by their son, William James Flavin, subsequently a professor at the United States Army War College. James and Lucile Brown Flavin were buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.
James Flavin Movies & TV-shows on Netflix
Movies with James Flavin
King Kong
Mar 15, 1933
My Man Godfrey
Sep 2, 1936
Laura
Oct 11, 1944
The Grapes of Wrath
Mar 15, 1940
You Can't Take It with You
Sep 1, 1938
Mildred Pierce
Oct 20, 1945
Mister Roberts
Jul 10, 1955
The Most Dangerous Game
Sep 16, 1932
Nightmare Alley
Oct 9, 1947
Unconquered
Oct 10, 1947
Heaven Can Wait
Aug 5, 1943
Saboteur
Apr 24, 1942
TV shows with James Flavin
I Love Lucy
Oct 15, 1951
The Twilight Zone
Oct 2, 1959
The Twilight Zone
Oct 2, 1959
The Lucy Show
Oct 1, 1962
Four Star Playhouse
Sep 25, 1952
Burke's Law
Sep 20, 1963
The Rifleman
Sep 30, 1958
Climax!
Oct 7, 1954
The Addams Family
Sep 18, 1964
Matinee Theater
Oct 31, 1955
Cavalcade of America
Oct 1, 1952
The Abbott and Costello Show
Dec 5, 1952