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IMDbPro
Don DeFore

Biography

Don DeFore

Edit

Overview

  • Born
    August 25, 1913 · Cedar Rapids, Iowa, USA
  • Died
    December 22, 1993 · Los Angeles, California, USA (heart attack)
  • Birth name
    Donald John DeFore
  • Nickname
    • Dude
  • Height
    1.85 m

Biography

    • Don DeFore toured the country in stock companies for several years before making his Broadway debut in 1938. In films since 1941, he occasionally played leads in B pictures, but was more often cast as the good-natured buddy of the hero or a likable but gullible character whom the hero has to bail out of trouble. DeFore found much more success on television, and was a regular in the hit series Adèle (1961) and The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (1952).
      - IMDb mini biography by: frankfob2@yahoo.com
    • Don Defore played Mr. Thornberry ("Thorny") on The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (1952), a role that came came easy for him as in real life he was pretty much like his "Thorny" character. He married his wife Marion in 1942 and they lived in a farmhouse in the Mandeville Canyon area outside Los Angeles, which was then farm country. They drew the plans for the house themselves, Marion did all of the interior work and Don made most of the furniture, which was a hobby of his.

      DeFore was born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, one of seven children and the only one to pursue an acting career. After graduating from Washington High School in Cedar Rapids, he attended Iowa University. He showed great promise in basketball, track and baseball, but showed no interest in dramatics. Later he joined the Cedar Rapids Community Players. Since acting was not a major study at the university, he left and enrolled at the Pasadena Playhouse, where he won a scholarship and stayed for three years. During this time he and four fellow students wrote a play called "Where Do We Go From Here". It was presented in a little theater in Hollywood with Don in the cast. Oscar Hammerstein II offered to take it to Broadway and Don and five of the original cast members went along. The show ran for four weeks and Don was soon recognized as a member of legitimate theater. He remained in New York and won a key role in "The Male Animal", which ran for almost a year on Broadway and eight months on the road. When Warner Bros. made the film (The Male Animal (1942)), it signed Don to his original role. Don was also president of the Television Academy Of Arts and Sciences in 1954-55.
      - IMDb mini biography by: Bill Hafker thehuntzie@yahoo.com (qv's & corrections by A. Nonymous)

Family

  • Spouse
      Marion Holmes DeFore(February 14, 1942 - December 22, 1993) (his death, 5 children)
  • Children
      Penny DeFore
      David DeFore
      Dawn DeFore
      Ronnie DeFore
      Amy N. DeFore

Trivia

  • He was the only individual allowed to open a restaurant at Disneyland. He operated the Silver Banjo in Frontierland from 1957 to 1961. His brother Verne DeFore helped him, and they used a gift that their father, a railroad engineer, had brought home from Louisiana - a beautiful silver banjo - as the tiny restaurant's inspiration.
  • He once generously helped the beloved Walt Disney out of a jam. During the annual Disneyland Christmas parade, Disney's grandchildren were supposed to ride with him in a horse drawn carriage. Parade time was approaching and the grandchildren had not yet shown up, so he called Don DeFore in a panic and asked if he could borrow two of his children, because he couldn't ride in the parade without kids in his carriage. So Don generously offered up two of his children, Dawn DeFore and Ronnie DeFore to ride in the carriage with Disney in the parade and they dutifully waved to the crowd. This is one of Dawn and Ronnie's fondest childhood memories, and they treasure the pictures of the occasion.
  • Judy Garland was Matron of Honor at his wedding to Marion Holmes DeFore.
  • His last film was Rare Breed (1984) which was directed by David Nelson, the son of his old TV boss Ozzie Nelson.
  • Created the role of Wally Myers in the Broadway play "The Male Animal", which opened at the Cort Theatre on January 9, 1940 and ran for 243 performances. He later played the same role in the film version The Male Animal (1942) starring Olivia de Havilland and Henry Fonda. He also appeared in the remake of that film, La collégienne en folie (1952) starring Virginia Mayo and Ronald Reagan.

Quotes

  • [As Master of Ceremonies at Ronald Reagan's victory party in Los Angeles, November 1966, after his election as Governor of California] This is a great night for actors!

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