Bobby Watson Movies
Not to be confused with lachrymose child actor
Bobs Watson (1931-1999),
Robert "Bobby" Watson was a musical comedy actor who came to films in 1925. At the advent of talkies, the short, ebullient
Watson played a few leads in such musicals as
Syncopation (1929), then spent the 1930s essaying bit roles as glib reporters and fey "pansy" types. For a while, he emulated Broadway star
Bobby Clark, adopting horn-rimmed glasses, a wide-brimmed hat, and a perpetual air of bug-eyed lechery.
Watson found his true niche in the 1940s, when his startling resemblance to Adolf Hitler assured him plenty of screen work. He alternately portrayed Der Führer as a raving madman in such serious films as
The Hitler Gang (1942) and as a slapsticky buffoon in such comedies as The Devil With Hitler (1942) and
That Nazty Nuisance (1943). Legend has it that he faced so much hostility on the set while made up as Hitler that he had to remain locked in his dressing room between takes. After the war,
Watson fell from prominence, playing a few sizeable character roles in films like
The Paleface (1948) and
Red, Hot and Blue (1949) before settling into such uncredited minor parts as the voice coach ("Moses supposes his toeses are roses") in
Singin' in the Rain (1952). Until the end of his life,
Bobby Watson remained "on call" for one-scene appearances as Hitler in films ranging from
The Story of Mankind (1957) to
Danny Kaye's
On the Double (1961). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide