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Karl Swenson

From Alfred Hitchcock Wiki

  • born: 23/Jul/1908 (Brooklyn, New York, USA)
  • died: 08/Oct/1978 (Torrington, Connecticut, USA) - heart attack

Biography

Karl Swenson was an American theatre radio, film, and television actor.

Born in Brooklyn, New York, Swenson made several appearances on Broadway in the 1930s and 40s, including the title role in Arthur Miller's first production, "The Man Who Had All the Luck". He appeared extensively on the radio from the 1930s through the 1950s in such programs as "Cavalcade of America", "The Chase", "Columbia Presents Corwin", "The Columbia Workshop", "Inner Sanctum Mysteries", "Joe Palooka", "Lawyer Q", "Lorenzo Jones", "The March of Time", "The Mercury Theatre on the Air", "Mrs. Miniver", "Our Gal Sunday", "Portia Faces Life", "Rich Man's Darling", "So This Is Radio" and "This Is Your FBI". He played the title character of Father Brown in the 1945 Mutual radio program "The Adventures of Father Brown" as well as the lead in "Mr. Chameleon".

Swenson entered the film industry in 1943 with two wartime documentary shorts, "December 7th" and "The Sikorsky Helicopter", followed by more than thirty-five roles in feature films and television movies. "No Name on the Bullet" (1959) is only one of the many Westerns he did for both film and television.

Although Swenson had credits on dozens of TV series, he was best known for his performance as Lars Hanson in forty episodes of "Little House on the Prairie". Swenson died of a heart attack in Torrington, Connecticut, ironically shortly after filming the episode in which Hanson died.

(Wikipedia)

Filmography

With Hitchcock...

Links

Film Frames

Selection of film frames of Karl Swenson (click image to view larger version or refresh thumbnails)...

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