Walter Baldwin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Walter S. Baldwin Jr. (January 2, 1889 − January 27, 1977) was a prolific character actor whose career spanned five decades and 150 film and television roles, and numerous stage performances.
Baldwin was born in Lima, Ohio from a theatrical family and served in the First World War.
He was probably best known for playing the father of the handicapped sailor in The Best Years of Our Lives. He was the first actor to portray "Floyd the Barber" on The Andy Griffith Show.
Prior to his first film roles in 1939, Baldwin had appeared in more than a dozen Broadway plays. He played Whit in the first Broadway production of Of Mice and Men, and also appeared in the original Grand Hotel in a small role, as well as serving as the production's stage manager. He originated the role of Bensinger, the prissy Chicago Tribune reporter, in the Broadway production of The Front Page.
In the 1960s he had small acting roles in television shows such as Petticoat Junction and Green Acres. He continued to act in motion pictures, and one of his last roles was in Rosemary's Baby.
Baldwin was known for playing solid middle class burghers, although sometimes he gave portrayals of eccentric characters. He played a customer seeking a prostitute in The Lost Weekend and the rebellious prison trusty Orvy in Cry of the City. Walter Baldwin was featured in a lot of John Deere Day Movies from 1949-59 where he played the farmer Tom Gordon. In this series of Deere Day movies over a decade he helped to introduce many new pieces of John Deere farm equipment year-by-year. In each yearly movie he would be shown on his in A Tom Gordon Family Film where he would be buying new John Deere farm equipment or a new green and yellow tractor.A picture of Walter Baldwin playing Tom Gordon can be found on page 108 of Bob Pripp's book John Deere Yesterday & Today
Hal Erickson writes in Allmovie: "With a pinched Midwestern countenance that enabled him to portray taciturn farmers, obsequious grocery store clerks and the occasional sniveling coward, Baldwin was a familiar (if often unbilled) presence in Hollywood films for three decades."

The Best Years of Our Lives

Cry of the City

The Devil Commands

Scattergood Rides High

The Racket

Cheaper by the Dozen

Framed
Peaceful Relations

The Unsuspected

Interrupted Melody

The Man from Colorado

Winter Meeting

Cheyenne Autumn

After Midnight with Boston Blackie

The Jackpot

Miss Polly

Dark Mountain

The Winning Team

Special Agent

Return of the Bad Men

A Stranger in Town

I Want You

Rosemary's Baby

Scandal at Scourie

Wild in the Country

All That Money Can Buy

The Fastest Gun Alive

The Harder They Fall

Hazard

Rough Riders of Durango

The Man Who Returned to Life

Carrie

The Secret of Dr. Kildare

Come to the Stable

The Lost Weekend

Dragonwyck

Sister Kenny

Thieves' Highway

Why Girls Leave Home

Stranger on Horseback

Christmas in Connecticut

Mourning Becomes Electra

The Mark of the Whistler

The Gay Amigo

Syncopation

Those High Grey Walls

Wilson

Arizona

Rachel and the Stranger

Happy Land

Angels Over Broadway

Look Who's Laughing

Storm Warning

Cafe Hostess

Faces in the Fog

Bring on the Girls

Trail to Vengeance

Rhythm Round-Up

Albuquerque

They Died with Their Boots On

The Kansan

Oklahoma Territory

The Incredible Stranger

The Bride Wore Boots

Powder Town

The Remarkable Andrew

Living It Up

Ride, Vaquero!
Eyes Aloft

Reconnaissance Pilot

Destry

Murder, He Says

Reckless Age

The Ghost That Walks Alone

The Desperate Hours

The Strange Love of Martha Ivers

Glory

I'm from Arkansas

Calamity Jane and Sam Bass

In This Our Life

Young Widow

You Can't Run Away from It

For Me and My Gal

The Missing Juror

Scared Stiff

The Long, Long Trailer

Hemingway’s Adventures of a Young Man

The Andy Griffith Show

Petticoat Junction

Mannix

Gunsmoke

General Electric Theater

Lassie

Nanny and the Professor

The Fugitive

The Millionaire

My Mother the Car

Lancer

The Dakotas

Lawman

Frontier

General Electric Theater

General Electric Theater

Wagon Train

Casey Jones

Green Acres

Screen Director's Playhouse
The Pepsi-Cola Playhouse
