Jack Waldron (actor)
Jack Waldron was an American actor-comedian, singer and dancer.
Early life
As a boy, his two passions were baseball and the theatre, and he began his career as a dancer in vaudeville. During the Meuse–Argonne offensive in World War I, he entertained the troops as a member of the "Argonne Players".Career
After the war, he played in Chicago nightclubs during the Prohibition years: the Chez Paris, Colosimo, the Paramount, and the Follies; he knew many of the racketeers of the period, including Al Capone. After the repeal of Prohibition, Waldron returned to New York to entertain in cafes.On Broadway, he played the role of Tommy in Flossie, an unspecified role in The Great Temptations, one of the Boys of the Chorus in Hello Daddy! and again in Woof Woof. In the 1950s, he played Mike Spears in the revival of Pal Joey, a salesman in The Pajama Game, Myron H. Hubbard in The Vamp, and Schatzie Harris in Say, Darling.
As a comedic actor, he was known for his short films for Vitaphone Varieties: A Breath of Broadway and Radio and Relatives. He also played a bartender in a 1951 episode of Martin Kane, Private Eye.