DIED
January 24, 1973

RECENT CREDITS
Dracula vs. Frankenstein (FILM)  Jan. 1, 1973
This Could Be the Night (FILM)  May. 1, 1957
Desert Sands (FILM)  Sep. 1, 1955
The Last Command (FILM)  Aug. 1, 1955
Hit the Deck (FILM)  Mar. 1, 1955

BIOGRAPHY
Though descended from a highly respected family of Irish politicians and civil servants, actor J. Carroll Naish played every sort of nationality except Irish during his long career. Naish joined the Navy at age sixteen,....
Though descended from a highly respected family of Irish politicians and civil servants, actor J. Carroll Naish played every sort of nationality except Irish during his long career. Naish joined the Navy at age sixteen, and spent the next decade travelling all over the world, absorbing the languages, dialects and customs of several nations. Drifting from job to job while stranded in California, Naish began picking up extra work in Hollywood films. The acting bug took hold, and Naish made his stage debut in a 1926 touring company of The Shanghai Gesture. Within five years he was a well-established member of the theatrical community (the legendary actress Mrs. Leslie Carter was the godmother of Naish's daughter). Naish thrived during the early days of talking pictures thanks to his expertise in a limitless variety of foreign dialects. At various times he was seen as Chinese, Japanese, a Frenchman, a South Seas Islander, Portuguese, an Italian, a German, and a Native American (he played Sitting Bull in the 1954 film of the same name). Many of his assignments were villainous in nature (he was a gangster boss in virtually every Paramount "B" of the late 1930s), though his two Oscar nominations were for sympathetic roles: the tragic Italian POW in Sahara (1943) and the indigent Mexican father of a deceased war hero in A Medal For Benny (1954). Naish continued to flourish on radio and television, at one point playing both a priest and a rabbi on the same anthology series. He starred in both the radio and TV versions of the melting-pot sitcom "Life with Luigi," essayed the title role in 39 episodes of "The New Adventures of Charlie Chan" (1957), and played a comedy Indian on the 1960 sitcom "Guestward Ho." Illness forced him to retire in 1969, but J. Carroll Naish was cajoled back before the cameras by quickie producer Al Adamson for the 1970 ultracheapie Dracula vs. Frankenstein; even weighed down by bad false teeth, coke-bottle glasses and a wheelchair, Naish managed to act the rest of the cast right off the screen.

~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide


Rovi Data Solutions, Inc.
- Portions of Content Provided by Rovi Data Solutions © 2009 Rovi Data Solutions, Inc.




Advertisement

Recently Worked With...

This Could Be the Night
Released: May. 1, 1957

Desert Sands
Released: Sep. 1, 1955

The Last Command
Released: Aug. 1, 1955

Rage at Dawn
Released: Mar. 1, 1955

Hit the Deck
Released: Mar. 1, 1955


Fan Sites

J. Carrol Naish Fansites

No fan sites available. Create the first!
Are you the #1 J. Carrol Naish Fan? Sign Up To Create A Website Here.



Top 5 Celebrities

Naomi Watts
September 28, 1968
Shoreham, England

Megan Fox up close at 'Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen' UK premiere
May 16, 1986
Tennessee

Angelina Jolie at the Orange British Academy Film Awards (BAFTA) 2009 - Arrivals.  London, England - 02/08/09
June 04, 1975
Los Angeles, CA

Scarlett Johansson at the 83rd Annual Academy Awards (Oscars 2011) . Kodak Theatre. Hollywood, CA. 02-27-2011
November 22, 1984
New York, NY



Whats on Hollywood.com

Actors 302,663

Photos 461,527

Videos 12,836

Fan Pages 128,090

Reviews 2,466

Trailers 5,115

TV 129,006

Movies 269,380




Isn't It Time You Went Hollywood ®
©1999-2012 Hollywood.com, LLC