- Nacimiento
- Defunción29 de junio de 1933 · Nueva York, Nueva York, Estados Unidos (un ataque al corazón)
- Nombre de nacimientoRoscoe Conkling Arbuckle
- Alias
- Fatty
- Altura1.75 m
- Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle nació el 24 de marzo de 1887 en Kansas, EE.UU.. Fue un actor y director, conocido por Coney Island (1917), The Butcher Boy (1917) y Leap Year (1924). Estuvo casado con Addie McPhail, Doris Deane y Minta Durfee. Murió el 29 de junio de 1933 en Nueva York, Nueva York, EE.UU..
- CónyugesAddie McPhail(28 de junio de 1932 - 29 de junio de 1933) (su muerte)Doris Deane(16 de mayo de 1925 - agosto de 1928) (divorciado)Minta Durfee(6 de agosto de 1908 - 27 de enero de 1925) (divorciado)
- NiñosNo Children
- PadresWilliam Goodrich ArbuckleMollie Arbuckle
- Apart from the fact that he was overweight and thus nicknamed "Fatty," he usually wore bowler-hat and pants whose legs were too short.
- Rolling perfect cigarettes with a couple quick motions of one hand
- Remarkable agility and dexterity, especially for a man of his girth
- A screenplay about his life floated around Hollywood for years but never got sold. At one point, John Belushi was considered for the role, then John Candy, then Chris Farley. All three died suddenly and the script has been shelved indefinitely.
- He was the very first actor to be paid a million dollars a year.
- After his career was ruined, Buster Keaton personally supported him as repayment for giving him his break into film.
- Is the only person to have the three top silent film comedians, Charles Chaplin, Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd appear in supporting roles in his films; Chaplin assists Arbuckle in The Knockout (1914); Lloyd is his co-star in Miss Fatty's Seaside Lovers (1915); and Keaton supported him in at least 14 shorts.
- He was the first movie star in America to systematically direct his own films. He directed most of his output from 1914 and onwards.
- [on his sex-and-murder scandal in 1921] I don't understand it. One minute I'm the guy everybody loves, the next I'm the guy everybody loves to hate.
- [when he was called "Fatty" off-screen, a nickname he hated] I got a name, you know.
- [on his first wedding anniversary, shortly before his death] This is the best day of my life.
- I shall produce nothing that will offend the proprieties whether applied to children or grown-ups. My pictures are turned out with clean hands and therefore with a clear conscience which, like virtue, is its own reward. Nothing would grieve me more than to have mothers say, "Let's not go there [in cinema] today, Arbuckle is playing and he isn't fit for children to see." I want them to think always otherwise for me, for as long as I can please the kiddies, I don't care who entertains their elders.
- [on Charles Chaplin] I have always regretted not having been his partner in a longer film than these one-reelers we made so rapidly. He is a complete comic genius, undoubtedly the only one of our time and he will be the only one who will be still talked about a century from now.
- Brewster's Millions (1921) - $5,000
- Safe in Jail (1913) - $3 /day
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