Dudley Digges
An image from China Seas, one of the productions that also features Dudley Digges.
Dudley Digges

Dudley Digges

June 8, 1879 — Dublin, Ireland, UK [now Republic of Ireland]

​From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dudley Digges (June 9, 1879 – October 24, 1947) was an Irish character actor on stage and in motion pictures.

He was born in Dublin. He went to America with a group of Irish players in 1904 and became successful both as an actor and producer. For a time he was stage manager to Charles Frohman and George Arliss. He went to Hollywood in 1930.

On stage, one of his famous roles was as Ficsur in the original 1921 Broadway production of Ferenc Molnár's Liliom, the play that Rodgers and Hammerstein later musicalized as Carousel. Ficsur was the criminal who talks Liliom into helping him commit a robbery; in Carousel, his name was changed to Jigger Craigin, but the character otherwise remained almost the same. He played the role of the Heavenly Examiner in both the original Broadway and the 1930 screen versions of Sutton Vane's hit play Outward Bound.

Digges appeared in forty films between 1929 and 1946, including the original, nearly forgotten 1931 version of The Maltese Falcon, as Caspar Gutman, the character later made famous by Sydney Greenstreet in the 1941 Humphrey Bogart film version of the story. He also worked as a director on Broadway.

In 1924, Digges founded the Maverick Theater, in Woodstock, New York, with the assistance of Hervey White, the founder of the Maverick Arts Colony. Digges was artistic director of a company that included Helen Hayes and Edward G. Robinson.

Description above from the Wikipedia article Dudley Digges (actor), licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

The Invisible Man

The Invisible Man

1933

Mutiny on the Bounty

Mutiny on the Bounty

1935

The Maltese Falcon

The Maltese Falcon

1931

China Seas

China Seas

1935

The Mayor of Hell

The Mayor of Hell

1933

The Emperor Jones

The Emperor Jones

1933

Kind Lady

Kind Lady

1935

The General Died at Dawn

The General Died at Dawn

1936