Leo Gorcey
Leo Bernard Gorcey was an American stage and film actor, famous for portraying the leader of a group of hooligans known variously as the Dead End Kids, The East Side Kids, and, as adults, The Bowery Boys. Gorcey was famous for his use of malapropisms, such as "I depreciate it!" instead of "I appreciate it!"
Early years
Gorcey was born in New York City, on June 3, 1917, the son of Josephine, an Irish Catholic immigrant, and Bernard Gorcey, a Russian Jewish immigrant. Both were vaudevillian actors of short stature. Bernard Gorcey was ; his wife,. Their son would reach in adulthood.Film career
In the 1930s, Gorcey's father lived apart from the family while working in theater and film. When he returned in 1935, he and David, Gorcey's brother, persuaded them to try out for a small part in the play Dead End. Having just lost his job as a plumber's apprentice and seeing his father's relative success, Gorcey decided to give acting a try. The Gorcey boys were cast in small roles as two members of the East 53rd Place Gang. Charles Duncan, originally cast as Spit, left the play, and Gorcey, his understudy, was promoted. Gorcey created the stage persona of a quarrelsome guttersnipe whose greatest joy was in making trouble.In 1937, Samuel Goldwyn made the popular play into a movie of the same name and transported the six rowdy boys to Hollywood. Gorcey became one of the busiest actors in Hollywood during the following twenty years, starring as various characters in seven "Dead End Kids" films between 1937 and 1939, as Ethelbert "Muggs" McInnis/McGinnis/Maloney in twenty-one "East Side Kids" film between 1940 and 1945, and as Terence Aloysius "Slip" Mahoney in forty-one "Bowery Boys" films between 1946 and 1956. Gorcey's character "Slip" was famed for his malapropisms, always delivered in a thick Brooklyn accent, such as: "a clever seduction" for "a clever deduction", "I depreciate it!" for "I appreciate it!", "I regurgitate" for "I reiterate", and "optical delusion" for "optical illusion"." In the Bowery Boys series, Gorcey's father Bernard played Louie Dumbrowski, the diminutive owner of a "sweetshop" where they boys hung out and conned banana splits and financial loans.
In 1944, Gorcey had a recurring role in the Pabst Blue Ribbon Town radio show, starring Groucho Marx. He also had a small role in a 1948 film, the comedy So This Is New York, starring comedian, Henry Morgan, and Arnold Stang.
In 1955, after his father died as a result of injuries from an automobile accident, Gorcey began abusing alcohol and lost a great deal of weight. When he trashed a film set in an intoxicated rage, the studio refused to give him the pay raise he demanded, so he quit the Bowery Boys and was replaced in the last seven films by Stanley Clements. However, Gorcey's brother David remained with the series until it ended in early 1958.
During the 1960s, Gorcey did very little acting. He had a bit part in the 1963 comedy, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, he appeared with old sidekick, Huntz Hall, in a pair of low budget films, Second Fiddle to a Steel Guitar in 1966 and The Phynx in 1970. Gorcey also made an appearance in a TV commercial for the 1969 Pontiac.
Autobiography
Gorcey published an autobiography, An Original Dead End Kid Presents: Dead End Yells, Wedding Bells, Cockle Shells, and Dizzy Spells, in 1967, which was limited to 1,000 copies. It was reprinted in 2004.Personal life
In May of 1939, Gorcey married 15-year-old dancer Kay Marvis, who appeared in four of his Monogram movies. They divorced in 1944, after which Kay met Groucho Marx and very soon became Groucho's wife.Gorcey married actress Evalene Bankston in October 1945, but they divorced two years later. He was arrested for firing a gun at his wife when she entered his home in Van Nuys, CA, but was acquitted of the charge in 1948.
In February 1949, Gorcey married actress and "Hedy Lamarr look-a-like" Amelita Ward, with whom he had worked in Clancy Street Boys and Smugglers' Cove. The union produced two children, including Leo Gorcey Jr., but the marriage ended in divorce in February 1956. Later that year, Gorcey married Brandy Davis. They had a daughter, Brandy Gorcey Ziesemer, but divorced in 1962. Finally, Gorcey married Mary Gannon on July 12, 1968, to whom he remained married until his death.
Death
Years of alcoholism eventually caught up with Gorcey and he died of liver failure on June 2, 1969, one day short of his 52nd birthday. He is buried at Molinos Cemetery in Los Molinos, California.Legacy
His image was to appear on the cover of the Beatles' 1967 album, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, but he requested a fee and was painted out. Coincidentally, he died on the second anniversary of the album's US release.Me and the Dead End Kid, a book about his father by Gorcey's son, Leo Jr., was published in 2003. In 2017, a third book on his life appeared, Leo Gorcey's Fractured World, by Jim Manago, which included an examination of Gorcey's use of malapropisms in the Bowery Boys films.
Filmography
Film
- Dead End as Spit
- Portia on Trial as Joe Gannow
- Headin' East as Boy Boxer in Gym
- Mannequin as Clifford
- The Beloved Brat as Spike Matz
- Crime School as Spike
- Angels with Dirty Faces as Bim
- They Made Me a Criminal as Spit
- Hell's Kitchen as Gyp Haller
- The Angels Wash Their Faces as Leo Finnegan
- On Dress Parade as Slip Duncan
- Private Detective as Newsboy
- Invisible Stripes as Jimmy
- Boys of the City as Muggs McGinnis
- That Gang of Mine as Muggs Malone
- Hullabaloo as Apartment House Bellhop
- Gallant Sons as "Doc" Reardon
- Pride of the Bowery as Muggs McGinnis
- Road to Zanzibar as Boy
- Flying Wild as Muggs
- Angels with Broken Wings as Punchy Dorsey
- Out of the Fog as Eddie
- Bowery Blitzkrieg as Muggs McGinnis
- Down in San Diego as Snap Collins
- Spooks Run Wild as Muggs
- Born to Sing as Snap Collins
- Mr. Wise Guy as Muggs McGinnis
- Sunday Punch as Biff
- Lets Get Tough as Muggs McGinnis
- Maisie Gets Her Man as Cecil
- Smart Alecks as Muggs McGinnis
- 'Neath Brooklyn Bridge as Muggs McGinnis
- Kid Dynamite as Muggs McGinnis
- Clancy Street Boys as Muggs McGinnis
- Ghosts on the Loose as Muggs McGinnis
- Destroyer as Sarecky
- Mr. Muggs Steps Out as Muggs McGinnis
- Million Dollar Kid as Muggs McGinnis
- Follow the Leader as Muggs McGinnis
- Block Busters as Muggs McGinnis
- Bowery Champs as Muggs McGinnis
- Docks of New York as Muggs McGinnis
- Mr. Muggs Rides Again as Muggs McGinnis
- Midnight Manhunt as Clutch Tracy
- Come Out Fighting as Muggs McGinnis
- Live Wires as SlipMahoney
- In Fast Company as Slip Mahoney
- Bowery Bombshell as Slip Mahoney
- Spook Busters as Slip Mahoney
- Mr. Hex as Slip Mahoney
- Hard Boiled Mahoney as Slip Mahoney
- News Hounds as Slip Mahoney
- Bowery Buckaroos as Slip Mahoney
- Angel's Alley as Slip Mahoney
- So This Is New York as Sid Mercer
- Jinx Money as Slip Mahoney
- Smuggler's Cove as Slip Mahoney
- Trouble Makers as Slip Mahoney
- Hold That Baby! as Slip Mahoney
- Angels in Disguise as Slip Mahoney
- Master Minds as Slip Mahoney
- Blonde Dynamite as Slip Mahoney
- Lucky Losers as Slip Mahoney
- Triple Trouble as Slip Mahoney
- Blues Busters as Slip Mahoney
- Bowery Battalion as Slip Mahoney
- Ghost Chasers as Slip Mahoney
- Let's Go Navy! as Slip Mahoney
- Crazy Over Horses as Slip Mahoney
- Hold That Line as Slip Mahoney
- Here Come The Marines as Slip Mahoney
- Feudin' Fools as Slip Mahoney
- No Holds Barred as Slip Mahoney
- Jalopy as Slip Mahoney
- Loose in London as Slip Mahoney
- Clipped Wings as Slip Mahoney
- Private Eyes as Slip Mahoney
- Paris Playboys as Slip Mahoney
- The Bowery Boys Meet The Monsters as Slip Mahoney
- Jungle Gents as Slip Mahoney
- Bowery to Bagdad as Slip Mahoney
- High Society as Slip Mahoney
- Spy Chasers as Slip Mahoney
- Jail Busters as Slip Mahoney
- Dig That Uranium as Slip Mahoney
- Crashing Las Vegas as Slip Mahoney
- It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World as First Cab Driver
- Second Fiddle to a Steel Guitar as Leo
- The Phynx as Himself
Television