Lou Merrill

Lou Merrill (April 1, 1912 April 7, 1963) was an American actor, who worked primarily in radio from the 1930s through the 1950s.

Lou Merrill
Born(1912-04-01)April 1, 1912
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
DiedApril 7, 1963(1963-04-07) (aged 51)
Los Angeles, California, U.S
OccupationActor, Narrator
Years active1937–1963
Children2 Adopted daughters

Early life

Lou Merill was born on April 1, 1912 in Winnipeg, Canada.

Radio

He performed in Lux Radio Theater as a utility supporting player in nearly every broadcast from 1937–1939 (notably as Sleepy in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs), and also served as an assistant director handling the crowd scenes during that time. He continued to work the show sporadically until 1953. His career in the 1930s also included roles in the children's Christmas series The Cinnamon Bear (as Santa Claus), the crime drama Big Town (as various gangsters and a stand-in for Edward G. Robinson as Steve Wilson), the soap opera Those We Love (as con man Ed Neely), and The Mickey Mouse Theater of the Air. He later worked for Arch Oboler on Arch Oboler's Plays and Lights Out. As related by Mr. Oboler on the Speaking of Radio show (1976), in one dramatic real-life confrontation, Mr. Oboler broke his hand on Mr. Merrill's jaw when the former became incensed over the latter's offensive attitude. A mutual respect resulted from the incident.

In 1941, he starred as the Nemo-like Captain Craig McKenzie in the now mostly lost sci-fi radio series Latitude Zero (on which the 1969 film of the same name is based). 12 years later, he starred on the true crime anthology drama series Crime Classics. Merrill played Thomas Hyland, the host/narrator who was fascinated with crime, playing the role deadpan but with subtle humor. Radio comedy appearances included Point Sublime (a regular as jeweler Aaron Saul) and Abbott and Costello (guesting as Santa Claus) and the Life of Riley as Punchy (a punch drunk ex-prize fighter). He also appeared on Escape, The Man Called X, Suspense, NBC University Theater, On Stage, The CBS Radio Workshop, Rogue's Gallery, and The Six Shooter.

Merrill was the narrator for Retribution, a "psychological mystery series."[1]

Film

Merrill first appeared in film with the 1935 Columbia Pictures production The Black Room; he played the Story Teller in Trailer, though he was left uncredited. His formal debut in movies came in the 1939 Universal Studios production Tropic Fury.[2] He appeared sporadically in films throughout the next three decades, often in small roles along with several uncredited appearances.

Year Title Role Notes
1935The Black RoomStory Teller in TrailerUncredited
1938Flash Gordon's Trip to MarsDr. MetzSerial, Uncredited
1939Tropic FuryPorthos Scipio
1940North West Mounted PoliceLesure
1941New WineSoldierUncredited
1942Reap the Wild WindCaptain of the 'Pelican'
1943Hangmen Also Die!IndustrialistUncredited
1943Passport to SuezMr. RembrandtUncredited
1947The Lady from ShanghaiJake Bjornsen
1950The Next Voice You Hear...Radio announcerVoice, Uncredited
1951Cause for Alarm!Mr. PhillipsVoice, Uncredited
1951SiroccoEgyptianUncredited
1951The Family SecretReporterUncredited
1953Confidentially ConnieMinor RoleUncredited
1953Fort TiRaoul de MoreauUncredited
1953The Great Adventures of Captain KiddLord BellmoreSerial, [Chs. 1, 13–15], Uncredited
1954Charge of the LancersCol. Zeansky
1954Phantom of the Rue MorguePedestrianUncredited
1954The Iron GloveCount DuLusac
1954SabakaKoobah
1955Duel on the MississippiGeorges Gabriel
1955The Crooked WebHerr Schmitt
1955The Fighting ChanceSammyUncredited
1957The Giant ClawPierre Broussard
1961The Devil at 4 O'ClockAristide Giraud

Voice-overs

In his later years, Merrill continued doing voice-over work, regularly doing film trailer narration work for American International Pictures. Merrill narrated trailers for films such as It Conquered the World, I Was a Teenage Werewolf, War of the Colossal Beast, Teenage Cave Man, Night of the Blood Beast, A Bucket of Blood, Horrors of the Black Museum, The Angry Red Planet, Master of the World, and Burn, Witch, Burn.

Death

Merrill died on April 7, 1963 in Los Angeles, California, aged 51.

Family

Merrill had two adopted daughters.[3]

gollark: Also all the rest of the program.
gollark: Macronous!
gollark: I do actually have some cool ideas for analyses I could run which would be easier if i had the data in a consistent format.
gollark: You can set an authentication callback thing to make it safe™.
gollark: Well, you should have an API which lets me run arbitrary SQL commands on the database, so I can generate my own reports.

References

  1. West, Virginia (April 8, 1947). "KECA mike memos" (PDF). Radio Life. p. 10. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  2. "Merrill Makes Screen Debut". The Van Nuys News. September 25, 1939. p. 7. Retrieved June 15, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  3. "Not Bad". The Lincoln Star. March 19, 1944. p. 28. Retrieved June 15, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
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