
Actor
Barton MacLane
Born 1902 · Columbia, South Carolina, USA
Barton MacLane graduated from Wesleyan University, where he displayed a notable aptitude for sports, in particular football and basketball. Not surprisingly, his physical prowess led to an early role in The Quarterback (1926) with Richard Dix. MacLane once commented that, as an actor, he needed to have the physical strength to tear the bad guys "from limb to limb", if necessary. Ironically, it was usually Barton himself who was destined to be at the end of a hiding (when not getting shot, instead), typically as snarling henchmen, outlaws and other assorted dubious or abrasive types throughout most of his 40-year acting career. In fact, Barton became so typecast that his name was for a time used proverbially, to generally describe a shouting, hard-nosed ruffian. After training at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, MacLane joined a stock company in Brooklyn. In 1927 he had his first part on Broadway, a brief moment as an assistant district attorney, in the melodrama "The Trial of Mary Dugan". He then played a small featured role as a police officer in "Subway Express" (1929-30), a drama enacted in the interior of a subway car. In mid-1932 MacLane tried his hand at writing his own starring vehicle for the stage, entitled "Rendezvous". While the play closed after just 21 performances, it led to a contract with Warner Brothers. Barton had already appeared in bit roles for Paramount at their Astoria Studios, including The Marx Brothers' debut film The Cocoanuts (1929). He portrayed mobster Brad Collins in 'G' Men (1935) (with James Cagney), which set the tone for most of his future assignments. Brawny, with squinty eyes and a rasping voice, MacLane was the ideal surly tough guy, particularly suitable for westerns and the type of films noir Warner Brothers excelled at. He was often cast as cops, be they bent or honest. Some of his most representative performances include gangster Al Kruger in Bullets or Ballots (1936), which won him some of the best critical notices of his career; outlaw Jack Slade in Western Union (1941); crooked construction boss Pat McCormick, who gets beaten up by Humphrey Bogart and Tim Holt over past-due wages in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948); hard-nosed cops Detective Dundy in The Maltese Falcon (1941) and Lt. Reece in Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (1950). MacLane, on loan to Universal, also had a starring role in Prison Break (1938) as an innocent tuna fisherman who is framed for murder. He was prominent as a tough but sympathetic cop, foil to sleuthing girl reporter Glenda Farrell in the "Torchy Blaine" series of the mid- to late 1930s. In the 1960s Barton began to cultivate a good-guy image as Marshal Frank Caine in the NBC western series Outlaws (1960) as well as showing up in a small recurring role as Air Force Gen. Martin Peterson in I Dream of Jeannie (1965). Barton was married to the actress Charlotte Wynters, who appeared with him in six of his films. When not on the set, the couple spent time on their 2000-acre cattle ranch in Madera County, California. For his work in television, Barton has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Acting

The Maltese Falcon
Lt. of Detectives Dundy · 1941

The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
Pat McCormick · 1948

I Dream of Jeannie
General Peterson · 1965

High Sierra
Jake Kranmer · 1941

Pocketful of Miracles
Police Commissioner · 1961

Perry Mason
Senator Harriman Baylor · 1957

You Only Live Once
Stephen Whitney · 1937

The Glenn Miller Story
General Arnold · 1954

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Sam Higgins · 1941

Gunsmoke
Herkimer Crawford · 1955

The Cocoanuts
Bather · 1929

'G' Men
Collins · 1935

The Wonderful World of Disney
Rawls Kettrick · 1954

All Through the Night
Marty Callahan · 1942

The Walking Dead
Loder · 1936

Tarzan and the Amazons
Ballister · 1945

Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye
Lieutenant John Reece · 1950

The Monkees
Bart · 1966

Western Union
Jack Slade · 1941

Bullets or Ballots
Al Kruger · 1936

Backlash
Sergeant George Lake · 1956

The Prince and the Pauper
John Canty · 1937

You and Me
Mickey · 1938

The Geisha Boy
Major Ridgley · 1958
