Fuzzy Knight(1901-1976)
- Actor
- Composer
- Soundtrack
American character actor primarily of Western "sidekick" roles. Born
John Forest Knight in Fairmont, West Virginia, Knight joined a
traveling minstrel show as a musician at age 15. He attended The
University of West Virginia as a law student, supporting himself as the
drummer in his own band. Finding music more rewarding, he left school
and played on the vaudeville and cabaret circuits. He appeared in Earl
Carroll's Vanities of 1927 and on Broadway as a musical performer in
"Here's Howe" and "Ned Wayburn's Gambols." He also played drums for the
Irving Aaronson and
George Olsen big bands. He appeared in a few short films
for MGM and Paramount from 1928 to 1931, performing his "Little Piano" act. Mae West saw
Knight in vaudeville and championed him for her film
She Done Him Wrong (1933) and
gave him his first substantive film role. His comic style and the soft
voice which had given him his nickname stood him in good stead in
movies, and he appeared in nearly 200 films over the next thirty years.
His singing was a memorable part of the films
The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1936)
and
The Shepherd of the Hills (1941),
but it was as a Western sidekick that he gained his greatest fame. He
played the comic pal of
Johnny Mack Brown and other cowboy
heroes in scores of Westerns, and was listed among the Top Ten
Money-Making Western Stars in 1940. In the 1950s, he gained new
audiences with his sidekick role on
Buster Crabbe's TV series
Captain Gallant of the Foreign Legion (1955).
He retired in 1960, but continued to make occasional appearances. He
died in his sleep at the Motion Picture Country Home and Hospital in
Woodland Hills, California at 74, survived by his wife, actress
Patricia Ryan (née Thelma de Long). He is buried in an unmarked grave
next to the grave of comedian
Maxie Rosenbloom
at Valhalla Memorial Park in Burbank, California.