- Born
- Died
- Birth nameJohn Edward Tyrrell
- John Tyrrell entered show business at the age of 16 as half of the vaudeville dance team of Tyrrell and Mack. The act became very successful, and for the next ten years they played engagements all over the country and secured billing as featured players in the famous revue "George White's Scandals." As vaudeville began to wane, however, Tyrrell saw the handwriting on the wall and began studying acting, sensing that his future would be in motion pictures. He spent two years with a stock theater company in Connecticut perfecting his craft, then journeyed to Hollywood. He was soon placed under a long-term contract to Columbia Pictures, and appeared in many of the studio's prestige pictures in supporting parts. He was a staple in the studio's comedy shorts, and often appeared with such comics as El Brendel, Andy Clyde and The Three Stooges, specializing in playing con artists, swindlers and other shady types.- IMDb Mini Biography By: frankfob2@yahoo.com
- SpouseGrette Ardine
- Married to stage actress Grette Ardine, the two performed in several shows together.
- He is buried in Hollywood, California's Hollywood Forever Cemetery.
- He starred in almost 29 Three Stooges shorts, starting with ''Three Little Beers (1935)'' until ''Uncivil War Birds (1946)'' as his final appearance in a Three Stooges short, all with Curly Howard.
- He is very familiar to Stooge fans as the Judge in ''A Plumbing We Will Go (1940)'', B.O. Davis/Lone Wolf Louie in ''So Long Mr. Chumps (1941)'', ''In the Sweet Pie and Pie (1941)'' as Williams the Maître d', Manny Weeks in Gents Without Cents ''(1944)''.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content