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Fred Kohler
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BIRTHDAY
April 20, 1889
Kansas City, MO
DIED
October 28, 1938
RECENT CREDITS
The Buccaneer
(FILM)
Jan. 1, 1938
Daughter of Shanghai
(FILM)
Jan. 1, 1937
Little Man, What Now?
(FILM)
Jan. 1, 1934
Underworld
(FILM)
Aug. 20, 1927
View all
Fred Kohler Credits
BIOGRAPHY
Nominated by film historian William K. Everson as "the best western badman of all," American actor Fred Kohler Sr. began appearing onscreen in 1911. A homely man with a burly physique and huge, bearlike hands, Kohler....
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Nominated by film historian William K. Everson as "the best western badman of all," American actor Fred Kohler Sr. began appearing onscreen in 1911. A homely man with a burly physique and huge, bearlike hands, Kohler seemed born to play characters who'd sell liquor to Indians, kidnap the sheriff's daughter, burn out homesteaders and shoot stagecoach guards in the back. In virtually all his films, Kohler wore the same costume: a stained frock coat, ostentatiously flowered vest and sloppily knotted string tie. As the principal heavy in 1924's The Iron Horse, Kohler had a rugged fistfight with leading man George O'Brien; these two actors continued to clash on-screen into the B-westerns of the '30s, including Kohler's final picture Lawless Valley (1938). This last-mentioned film is worth noting because it teamed Kohler with his equally unsavory-looking actor son, Fred Kohler Jr. (Senior's wife was one-time musical comedy actress Maxine Marshall, whom he'd met in vaudeville.) Apparently, if the part was good enough and the character bad enough, Fred Kohler Sr. would appear in any sort of film, from such top-drawer epics as Cecil B. DeMille's The Buccaneer (1938), to such meager-budgeted fare as the Three Stooges short Horses Collars (1935).
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Recently Worked With...
Charles Trowbridge
The Buccaneer
Released: Jan. 1, 1938
Andre Marsaudon
Daughter of Shanghai
Released: Jan. 1, 1937
Paul Fix
Little Man, What Now?
Released: Jan. 1, 1934
George Bancroft
Underworld
Released: Aug. 20, 1927
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