Bob McKenzie Movies
Irish-born
Robert McKenzie was already a theatrical showman of some renown by the time he made his first film appearance in 1921. The barrel-chested, snaggle-toothed McKenzie appeared in dozens of westerns and comedies, usually as a bombastic lawman or backwoods con artist. Even when he played bits (which was often), his raspy voice and hyena-like laugh always identified him. His more memorable feature-film roles included
W. C. Fields' drinking buddy Charlie Bogle in
You're Telling Me (1934), larcenous Judge Roy Dean in
Gene Autry's
Sing, Cowboy, Sing (1937), and the jolly captain who rents Laurel & Hardy a broken-down boat in
Saps at Sea (1940). In addition, he appeared in hundreds of short subjects, playing opposite the likes of Our Gang,
Andy Clyde,
Charley Chase and the
Three Stooges. In 1927, McKenzie tried his hand at screenwriting with the low-budget western
The White Outlaw. Robert McKenzie and his actress-wife Eva had three daughters, all of whom acted in films at one time or another; their daughter Ella was the wife of comedian
Billy Gilbert. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide