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Acting
May 4, 1910
December 23, 1993
Guthrie Center, Iowa, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. James Ellison (May 4, 1910 - December 23, 1993) was an American actor, born James Ellison Smith in Guthrie Center, Iowa, son of Edward James Smith and Ona Mary Ellis. Ellison appeared in nearly seventy films between 1932 and 1962. Ellison worked for a time in a film laboratory and while there was offered a screen test. He developed it himself and when he saw it, decided it was not satisfactory so he would not show it to the director. But he saw it anyway and Ellison got a contract. Despite his rugged good looks and height of 6 feet 3 inches, Ellison's limited range and somewhat wooden screen presence kept him from the first (or even second) ranks of stardom. He spent much of his career in Westerns, including a stint in the mid-thirties as the sidekick of Hopalong Cassidy in Paramount's successful series. In 1938, he played a charming, romantic character opposite 26 year old Lucille Ball in the comedy, "Next Time I Marry", a film where Ball had her first top billing on screen credits. Before that, in 1936, he played his highest-profile role, as Buffalo Bill in Cecil B. DeMille's The Plainsman, which also starred Gary Cooper and Jean Arthur. Despite that film's success, Ellison spent most of the remainder of his career shuttling between cowboy pictures and more varied roles, primarily in B movies with titles like Mr. District Attorney in the Carter Case and The Undying Monster. He had a supporting role in 1941's Charley's Aunt (which starred Jack Benny) and played the romantic lead in 1943's The Gang's All Here, a Twentieth Century Fox musical in which he seemed somewhat lost among the vivid antics of Carmen Miranda, Charlotte Greenwood, and Edward Everett Horton (and was the only principal not to sing a note). He also co-starred with Tom Conway and Frances Dee in Val Lewton's production of I Walked with a Zombie, directed by Jacques Tourneur. Ellison landed another romantic lead role as 'Jerry Gibson' in the musical film Lady, Let's Dance (1944) which starred ice skating sensation 'Belita'. In the early 1950s, Ellison moved from acting to real estate. Joining fellow veteran Jackie Coogan, Ellison returned to the screen only once to play Axel 'Longhorn' Gates in a picture called When the Girls Take Over (1962). James Ellison died at age 83 in Monterey, California after suffering a broken neck as the result of a fall. Description above from the Wikipedia article James Ellison (actor), licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Alex 'Longhorn' Gates (as Jimmy Ellison)
1962
Dan Winslow
1952
Jim Fallon
1952
Jim Kirby (as Jimmy Ellison)
1952
Sheriff Tod Merrick
1951
Sheriff Dave Holland
1951
Clancy
1951
Jeff Benson
1951
Gordon Hastings
1950
Capt. Jeff Packard
1950
as Alex 'Longhorn' Gates (as Jimmy Ellison)
as Dan Winslow
as Jim Fallon
as Jim Kirby (as Jimmy Ellison)
as Sheriff Tod Merrick
as Sheriff Dave Holland
as Clancy
as Jeff Benson
as Gordon Hastings
as Capt. Jeff Packard
as Shamrock Ellison
as Shamrock Ellison
as Shamrock Ellison
as Shamrock Kid
as Shamrock Ellison
as Jimmy Ellison
as Shamrock Ellison
as Duke Barnum
as Monte Crandall
as Steve Adams
as Steve Giles
as Larry Winters
as Mike Burke
as Jerry Gibson
as Andy Mason
as Cadet
as Wesley Rand
as Roger Hudson
as Capt. James Mason
as Robert Curtis
as Henry Summers
as Thomas Aldrich
as P. Cadwallader Jones
as Bob Clemens
as Jack Chesney
as Tim Kelly
as Thomas Elwood Dice
as Tony Pringle
as Andrew Hinklin
as Mike
as Jeff Buchanan
as Bill Loomis
as Jeff Carter
as Dan Preston
as Anthony J. Anthony
as Ralph Thurston
as Keith
as Lt. Burrell
as William J. "Bill" Martin
as Sgt. Robert Gray
as Johnny Nelson
as Johnny Nelson
as William "Buffalo Bill" Cody
as Johnny Nelson
as Johnny Nelson
as Johnny Nelson
as Mac MacDonald
as Jimmy Peyton
as Johnny Nelson
as Johnny Nelson
as Johnny Nelson
as Dale Every
as Jimmy
as Detective (uncredited)
as Reporter Lane (uncredited)
as Elmer