Lon Chaney Jr.
Promoting media: pictures, videos, wallpapers, quotes, bio, filmography.
| Known for: |
High Noon, The Defiant Ones, Bud Abbott Lou Costello Meet Frankenstein |
| Birth name: |
Creighton Tull Chaney |
| Birthday: |
10 February 1906,
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA |
| Height: |
6' 3½" (1.92 m) |
Trivia

Son of
Lon Chaney.

His career suffered in his later years due to alcoholism.

Attempted an early career as a songwriter.

He is the only person to have played all four of the classic movie monsters:
The Wolf Man (Larry Talbot/Wolf Man);
The Ghost of Frankenstein (The Frankenstein Monster);
The Mummy's Tomb (Kharis, the mummy);
Son of Dracula (Count Anthony Alucard, Dracula's son).

Pictured on one of a set of five 32¢ US commemorative postage stamps, issued 30 September 1997, celebrating "Famous Movie Monsters". He is shown as the title character in
The Wolf Man. Other actors honored in this set of stamps, and the classic monsters they portray, are
Lon Chaney as
The Phantom of the Opera;
Bela Lugosi as _Dracula (1931/I)_ ; and
Boris Karloff on two stamps as
The Mummy and the monster in
Frankenstein.
Broderick Crawford, who had played Chaney's role of Lennie in "Of Mice and Men" on Broadway in 1937, worked with Chaney at one time and shared a dressing room with him. Apparently, both men were such heavy drinkers that they'd get drunk together and take turns beating each other up.

Well-known character actor
William Smith started out as a child actor, and in an interview with a horror-film magazine stated that during breaks on the set of
The Ghost of Frankenstein, Chaney treated all of the children on the set to ice cream.

Father of two sons, Lon and Ron.

From his father he developed skills as a makeup artist. He was not able to make much use of these skills due to strict union rules.

Two sons with Dorothy Hinckley: Lon Ralph Chaney born July 3, 1928, and Ronald Creighton Chaney born March 18, 1930.

His father told him he was too tall for a successful career in film.

His favorite role was that of Lennie Small in
Of Mice and Men. After a few drinks at parties, he would recite scenes from that film.

Like his father, he refused requests for autographs.

Was possibly not as tall as is often reported. According to Calvin Thomas Beck in "Heroes of the Horrors" (Macmillan, 1975), Chaney wore special shoes in
Of Mice and Men to increase his height by six inches. "In reality," Beck writes, "he was just six feet tall." Chaney said, according to Beck, that "from that film on, people thought I was much taller" (Beck, p. 235). Early publicity accounts from the 1930s describe Chaney as a strapping six-footer. In Gregory William Mank's books, Chaney is described as being 6'2" (though Mank reproduces press material for
The Wolf Man which describes Chaney as being five inches taller than
Claude Rains, who was 5'7").

He was born prematurely, and the illnesses he suffered at the end of his life may have been partially the result of this. In fact, he was born, in his own words, "black and dead." His father took him outside to a ice covered lake, broke the ice and put him into the ice cold water to jump-start his breathing. However, according to his son Lon Ralph Chaney as well as Cleva's daughter by her second marriage, Stella George, the story is complete fiction.

In 1930, lived at 735 N. Laurel Avenue, Los Angeles, while working as an advertising manager for a water-heater company.

Is mentioned in the
Warren Zevon song "Werewolves of London."
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