Louis Jean Heydt Movies
It was once said of the versatile
Louis Jean Heydt that he played everything except a woman. Born in New Jersey, the blonde, chiseled-featured Heydt attended Worcester Academy and Dartmouth College. He briefly served as a reporter on the New YorkWorld before opting for a stage career. Among his Broadway appearances was the lead in
Preston Sturges' Strictly Dishonorable, establishing a long working relationship with Sturges that would extend to the latter's film productions
The Great McGinty (1940) and The Great Moment (1942). Heydt's film characters often seemed destined to be killed off before the fourth reel, either because they were hiding something or because they'd just stumbled upon important information that could prove damaging to the villains. He was knocked off in the first three minutes of
Charlie Chan at Treasure Island (1939) and was shot full of holes just before revealing an important plot point to
Humphrey Bogart in The Big Sleep (1946) (this after an unforgettable interrogation scene in which Heydt is unable to look Bogart straight in the eye). Heydt's many other assignments include the hungry soldier in
Gone with the Wind (1939), Mentor Graham in
Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1940), a frustrated general practitioner in
Tortilla Flat (1941), a squadron leader in
Gung Ho (1943) and a loquacious rural family man in
Come to the Stable (1949). Our Gang fans will recall Heydt as
Bobby Blake's stepfather in the MGM "Gang" shorts
Dad For a Day (1939) and
All About Hash (1940). A ubiquitous TV actor,
Louis Jean Heydt was seen on many anthology series, and as a semi-regular on the 1958 syndicated adventure weekly MacKenzie's Raiders. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide