Birthday:
Birthday:

From Wikipedia Wally Brown (October 9, 1904 – November 13, 1961) was an actor, comedian, and long-time partner of Alan Carney Wally was born in Malden, Massachusetts and served as a vaudevillian. In 1942, he began his film career in Hollywood at RKO Radio Pictures with the film Petticoat Larceny. When RKO decided to emulate the comedy team Abbott and Costello he was paired with Alan Carney, creating "Brown & Carney." They premiered with the military comedies Adventures of a Rookie and its sequel Rookies in Burma. Out of their eight films together, one of their most notable films was Zombies on Broadway co-starring Bela Lugosi, a semi-sequel to Val Lewton's I Walked With a Zombie. Their contracts were terminated in 1946, after which they pursued solo careers. In the 1940s–50s, both appeared in various roles for Leslie Goodwins films. They reunited in 1961 in The Absent-Minded Professor. Wally's last years were filled with guest appearances in television, his last one in My Three Sons. He made several guest appearances on Perry Mason, including the role of murderer Harry Mitchell in the 1958 episode, "The Case of the Gilded Lily." Wally Brown had also been a regular cast member in television shows like I Married Joan, Cimarron City, and Daniel Boone. Along with Alan Carney, he was going to be given a role in It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World but died not long before filming began. He also served as a regular on The Abbott and Costello Show on radio.
Birthday: October 08, 1904
Death: November 13, 1961

August 21, 1946

May 01, 1945

June 01, 1958

April 30, 1958

November 27, 1943

July 26, 1944

July 03, 1954

November 03, 1943

December 06, 1948

April 25, 1944

March 02, 1946

July 21, 1959

October 20, 1946

August 01, 1945

October 21, 1944

April 08, 1960

October 09, 1959

June 15, 1951

July 17, 1943

August 19, 1943

December 20, 1943

January 10, 1942

December 24, 1948

April 08, 1939

July 27, 1949

September 26, 1957

January 20, 1961

February 28, 1956

December 10, 1946

May 07, 1943

March 20, 1959

April 25, 1959

August 21, 1943

March 15, 1957

December 08, 1949

March 19, 1961

July 14, 1943

October 04, 1954

March 18, 1957

September 21, 1957

February 01, 1953

September 10, 1959

September 10, 1960

September 22, 1958

October 07, 1954

July 01, 1957

October 03, 1957

September 20, 1957

September 06, 1958

September 15, 1959

September 27, 1958

October 02, 1959

September 07, 1953

October 15, 1960

October 02, 1952

September 29, 1960

October 04, 1960

September 22, 1957

September 12, 1954

September 25, 1961

September 29, 1953

October 05, 1951