Malcolm Atterbury
Malcolm MacLeod Atterbury was an American stage, film, and television actor, and vaudevillian.
Early years and education
A native of Philadelphia, Atterbury was the son of Malcolm MacLeod, Sr. and Arminia Clara MacLeod. He had an older sister, Elizabeth, a twin brother, Norman, and a younger brother, George Rosengarten MacLeod. After his father's death his mother remarried to General William Wallace Atterbury, president of Pennsylvania Railroad. Through this marriage, he had a half-brother, William Wallace Atterbury Jr.He graduated from The Hill School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania.
In the mid-1930s, Atterbury decided to pursue a career in drama. He enrolled at Hilda Spong's Dramatic School using an assumed name. Later, after revealing his true identity, he went on to "finance a summer theater for the Hilda Spong Players at Cape May, and they, in turn, asked him to be their managing director."
Career
Radio
In 1928, Atterbury was the bass singer in a quartet that sang on WLIT in Philadelphia. In 1930, he became the program director of a radio station in Philadelphia. He went on to become business manager of WHAT.Theatre
Atterbury was a devoted theatre actor. He owned and operated two theatres in the Adirondack Mountains of New York, the Tamarack Playhouse in Lake Pleasant, New York and the Albany Playhouse Co. in Albany. He also appeared on Broadway in the original cast of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, as Scanlon.Film
Atterbury is perhaps best known for his uncredited role in Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest, as the rural man who exclaims, "That plane's dustin' crops where there ain't no crops!" Four years later, Atterbury appeared as the deputy in Hitchcock's The Birds. He further appeared in such films as I Was a Teenage Werewolf, Crime of Passion, Blue Denim, Wild River, Advise and Consent, and Hawaii. His last film was Emperor of the North.Television
Atterbury made frequent appearances on television. He was cast in five episodes of CBS's murder mystery series Perry Mason during the late 1950s and early 1960s. Three times he played the murderer. He played Sam Burris in the 1957 episode, "The Case of the Angry Mourner".His guest-starring roles included appearances on Gunsmoke, The Twilight Zone, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The Asphalt Jungle, Have Gun - Will Travel, Wagon Train, Window on Main Street, Straightaway, Bonanza, Hazel, Kentucky Jones, The Odd Couple, The Rookies, The Sheriff of Cochise, The Fugitive, State Trooper, Rescue 8, Fury, The Man from Blackhawk, The Tall Man, The Invaders and The Andy Griffith Show, The Bob Newhart Show.
He had a rare regular role as Grandfather Aldon in the 1974–75 CBS television family drama, Apple's Way.
Personal life
Atterbury was married on February 6, 1937 to Ellen Ayres Hardies of Amsterdam, New York, daughter of judge Charles E. Hardies Sr. and sister of Charles Hardies Jr., who later became Montgomery County district attorney.Filmography
- Dragnet - Lee Reinhard
- Man Without a Star - Fancy Joe Toole
- The Rawhide Years - Luke, Paymaster
- Alfred Hitchcock Presents as the Blackmailer
- Silent Fear - Dr. Vernon
- Gunsmoke - Seldon & Liveryman
- The Lone Ranger - Phineas Tripp Frontier Season 1, Episode 19 The Assassin as Donley
- The Steel Jungle - Mailman
- Miracle in the Rain - Special Delivery Man
- Stranger at My Door - Reverend Hastings
- A Day of Fury - Gaunt Farmer
- Crime in the Streets - Mr. McAllister
- Dakota Incident - Bartender / Desk Clerk
- Johnny Concho - Milo, Mail Dispatcher
- Storm Center - Frank
- Toward the Unknown - Hank - Bell Technical RepresentativeReprisal! - Luther Creel
- Crime of Passion - Police Officer Spitz
- Slander - Byron
- Hot Summer Night - Jim - Newspaper Man on Street
- Fury at Showdown - Norris
- I Was a Teenage Werewolf - Charles Rivers
- Valerie - Sheriff
- Blood of Dracula - Lieutenant Dunlap
- The Walter Winchell File "The Witness" - Major Frank Spears
- The Dalton Girls - Mr. Sewell, the Bank Manager
- Perry Mason - Sam Burris
- Too Much, Too Soon - Older Attendant
- The High Cost of Loving - Harry Lessing
- From Hell to Texas - Hotel Clerk
- No Time for Sergeants - Bus Driver with Applications
- How to Make a Monster - Security Guard Richards
- Badman's Country - Buffalo Bill Cody
- Rio Bravo - Jake
- The Twilight Zone - Henry J. Fate
- High School Big Shot - Mr. Grant
- North by Northwest - Man at prairie crossing
- Blue Denim - Marriage License Clerk
- Hell Bent for Leather - Gamble
- Wild River - Sy Moore
- From the Terrace - George Fry
- Route 66 - Bolton
- Summer and Smoke - Reverend Winemiller
- Advise & Consent - Senator Tom August
- The Birds - Deputy Al Malone
- Cattle King - Abe ClevengerBob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre, episode:"A Killing at Sundial"
- Seven Days in May - Horace - White House Physician
- The Fugitive -Sheriff Mead
- Joy in the Morning - Willis J. Calamus
- The Fugitive - Sheriff Bilson
- Bonanza - Willard Walker
- The Chase - Mr. Reeves
- Hawaii - Gideon Hale
- The Hardy Boys - Clams Daggett
- The Learning Tree - Silas Newhall
- Emperor of the North - Hogger
- The Towering Inferno - Jeweler
- The [Bob Newhart Show] – Mr. Arbogast
- Police Story – Alfred Weiser
- Quincy M.E. – Raymond Kaufman
- Little House on the Prairie - Brewster Davenport