Bobby Driscoll Movies
American child actor
Bobby Driscoll was five years old when, thanks to the tireless efforts of his mother, he made his first film appearance in MGM's
Lost Angel (1943). Three years later, Driscoll was a full-fledged star under contract to Walt Disney studios, where the producer saw to it that the bright-eyed, ingratiating lad was given plum roles in
Song of the South (1946) and
So Dear to My Heart (1948). Driscoll matured from mere "personality" to "actor" in 1949's
The Window, a low-budget RKO melodrama which became the sleeper of the year and which earned Driscoll a special Oscar. The following year, the boy played his best role for Disney: Jim Hawkins in
Treasure Island (1950). One of the most vivid memories of young moviegoers of that era was the sight of a terrified
Bobby Driscoll shooting a murderous pirate right between the eyes; in fact, it was
so vivid that the vignette was cut when
Treasure Island was re-issued in the '80s so that the film, which had been passed and approved by the 1950 censors, could qualify for a "G" rating. Driscoll's last work for Disney was as the voice of Peter Pan in the 1953 animated film version of the same name. Driscoll's last film was
The Party Crashers (1958), a turgid juvenile delinquent melodrama starring
Frances Farmer. After this film he dropped out of sight altogether. On March 30, 1968, in an abandoned New York City tenement not unlike the setting of
The Window,
Bobby Driscoll was found dead of an apparent drug overdose; the identity of the body would not be confirmed for nearly two years. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide