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Rondo Hatton
Born: April 22, 1894
Died: February 2, 1946 (at the age of 51) |
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Rondo K. Hatton was the only child born to Stewart Price and Emily Zarring Hatton (both of
which were born in Missouri and were Teachers) on April 22, 1894 in Hagerstown, Maryland. The family
moved several times during Rondo's youth, to Hickory, North Carolina, and to Charles Town, West Virginia,
and at last relocated to Tampa, Florida where he spent his high school years. The Family moved to
Florida to work in a family owned business. Rondo was a popular student and a good athlete, especially
in football. Following his father's death, Hatton, his mother, and his younger brother Stewart moved
in with his maternal grandmother in Tampa. There he obtained work as a sportswriter for the local
newspaper. He would join the Florida National Guard and fought in the Mexican Border War and in France
in World War I. Rondo was exposed to Mustard Gas while serving in France and was hospitalized with
lung injury which eventually led to a medical discharge and a consigned to a pension. After he was
discharged he returned to Florida and became a reporter for the Tampa Tribune. On April 15, 1926
Rondo Married Elizabeth Immell James. Somewhere along this point Rondo developed an ailment known a
s acromegaly, it was thought to be due to the Mustard Gas Exposer. Rondo and Elizabeth were divorced
on June 9, 1930, it is thought to be due to his acromegaly. Rondo had been reported to be voted the
handsomest boy in his High School, eventually became severely disfigured by the disease.
In 1930 while still in Tampa, Rondo was covering the filming of 'Hell Harbor' for his paper
and was noticed by director Henry King. King offered Rondo a part in the film 'Hell Harbor'. On
September 29, 1934 Rondo married Mabel Housh. In 1936, Rondo and Mabel headed for Hollywood, with the
acromegaly (enlarged hands, feet, facial features and internal and external soft tissues), he landed
small parts as 'The Leper' in 'The Moon and Sixpence', the 'Hunchback' in 'Sleepy Lagoon' and 'a
contestant in an ugly-man contest' in 'The Hunchback of Notre Dame'. In 1944, Rondo got the role as
'Hoston 'The' Creeper' in the Sherlock Holmes film 'The Pearl of Death'. This role came after almost
a decade in Hollywood. With the role as 'The Creeper', Universal saw potential as a horror film star.
Rondo's career only last two more years and he starred in 'House of Horror and The Brute Man.
Around Christmas 1945 Rondo had a mild heart attack (heart weekness along with diabetes and
blindness are common to acromegaly) and seemed to recover, but one month later Rondo suffered a fatal
one. Rondo died February 2, 1946 in Beverly Hills, CA of a sever Heart Attack due to his acromegaly
at the age of 51. Rondo's body was sent back to Tampa to be buried.
Filmmaker Fred Olen Ray was so interested in Haton's Life that he wrote a very nice
article "Rondo Hatton: Monster Man". Also touched by Rondo was Rick Baker (Master Make-up Man).
In 1991 while working on 'The Rocketeer" He made actor Tiny Ron have a Hattonesque likensess as
homage to 'The Creeper'.
I have always thought that there was so many good films that Rondo could have helped
with and probably many that we have never imagined.
---------- Film Rolls ---------- |
(1949) | Gun Cargo |
|
(1946) | Brute Man, The
aka Brute, The(1946) | Hal Moffet, as the Creeper |
(1946) | House of Horrors
aka Joan Medford Is Missing (1946) (UK) | The Creeper |
(1946) | Spider Woman Strikes Back, The | Mari |
(1945) | Royal Mounted Rides Again, The | Bull Andrews |
(1945) | Jungle Captive
aka Wild Jungle Captive (1952) (USA: reissue title) | Moloch |
(1944) | Princess and the Pirate, The | (uncredited) .... Gorilla |
(1944) | Pearl of Death, The | The Creeper |
(1944) | Johnny Doesn't Live Here Any More
aka And So They Were Married (1944) (USA: reissue title) | (uncredited) .... Undertaker Graves |
(1944) | Raiders of Ghost City | (uncredited) |
(1944) | The Lodger | (uncredited (Rumored to have been in this)) |
(1943) | Moon and Sixpence, The | (uncredited) .... The Leper |
(1943) | Sleepy Lagoon | Hunchback |
(1943) | Ox-Bow Incident, The
aka Strange Incident (1943) (UK) | (uncredited) .... Gabe Hart |
(1942) | Black Swan Pirate | (uncredited) .... very brief |
(1942) | Cyclone Kid | (uncredited) .... Extra |
(1940) | One Million Years BC | (edited out of final cut) |
(1940) | Moon Over Burma | (uncredited (Rumored to have been in this)) |
(1940) | Castle on the Hudson | (uncredited (Rumored to have been in this)) |
(1940) | Chad Hanna | Canvasman |
(1939) | Union Pacific | fast Walk-through |
(1939) | Captain Fury | Australian Convict |
(1939) | Big Guy, The
aka Warden of the Big House (1939) (USA: reissue title) | (uncredited) .... Bit Part |
(1939) | Hunchback of Notre Dame, The | (uncredited) .... First 'Ugly Man' Contestant |
(1938) | Alexander's Rag Time Band | (part was cut in editing) |
(1937) | In Old Chicago | Rondo, bodyguard |
(1930) | Hell Harbor | (uncredited) .... Dance Hall Bouncer |
----- Articles Written about Rondo ----- |
Article Title |
Author / Periodical / Article Date |
In Love With a Monster | by Bill Duryea, St. Petersburg Times (June 27, 1999) |
'Rocketeer' ressurects 'monster' | by Glenn Lovell, Knight-Ridder News Service (July, 1991) |
Actor's disfiguring illness... | by Michael H. Price, NY Times News Service (June, 1991) |
Beneath the Skin | by Fred Olen Ray, Film Fax (April/May, 1991) |
A Friendly Monster | by Leland Hawes, Tampa Tribune (December 17, 1983) |
Not Just Another Pretty Face | by Ted Newsome, Oui (August, 1980) |
Good Old Days | by Alan M. Kriegsman, Washington Post (May 29, 1977) |
Needed No Makeup | author unknown, National Tattler (January 25, 1976) |
Rondo Hatton | by Barry Brown, Castle of Frankenstein (October, 1971) |
It Happened at the Movies | by Robert A. Burns, Texas Ranger (March, 1968) |
Hollywood's Strangest Love Story | by Erma Taylor, Pageant (July, 1946) |
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