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  1. Died Sept. 18, 1968 of lung cancer in New York, NY. F ranchot Tone played a leading role in 100 films and four marriages. Best known as a Hollywood star, he nevertheless preferred the stage to the screen and New York to Southern California. In September 1951, he fought a bloody fistfight with tough-guy actor Tom Neal over actress Barbara Payton.

  2. Franchot starred in Final Performance, episode 14 of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour's third season, in 1965. The episode aired on January 18th and costarred Sharon Farrell and Roger Perry. Although the show doesn't get as much airtime as Franchot's Twilight Zone and Hitchcock Presents episodes, you may still be lucky enough to catch this one on television. (For example, I know that the American ...

  3. Franchot was de jongste zoon van Dr. Frank Jerome Tone en zijn vrouw Getrude Franchot. Franchot werkte in een zaak die door de familie heen ging, maar gaf dat op om te acteren. Franchot ging het theater in. In 1929 brak hij door in Broadway door zijn rol in The Age of Innocence . In 1932 werd hem een contract aangeboden bij MGM en nam die aan.

  4. 11 de mar. de 2018 · Franchot was the special guest star for Wagon Train's fifth episode in its fifth season. The Malachi Hobart Story aired on January 24, 1962, with Franchot as the title character. Franchot showed up in a handful of western shows in the 1950's and especially, the 1960's. Despite their identification of him as a former film gentleman, the public seemed to embrace Franchot in these rugged cowboy ...

  5. Franchot Tone (1900-1974) Franchot Tone. Franchot Tone was an American actor who had a highly successful career appearing on stage, in movies and on television. He is best known for his role as Midshipman Roger Byam in the 1935 classic movie drama 'Mutiny on the Bounty' with Clark Gable and Charles Laughton for which he received a nomination ...

  6. Other articles where Franchot Tone is discussed: Joan Crawford: (1929–33), Franchot Tone (1935–39), and Phillip Terry (1942–46) and to Alfred Steele (1955–59), chairman of the Pepsi-Cola Company. After his death in 1959 she became a director of the company and in that role hired her friend Dorothy Arzner to film several Pepsi commercials. Crawford’s adopted…

  7. 26 de abr. de 2019 · Franchot Tone was walking down Hollywood Boulevard, when a group of children asked for his autograph. He complied, and one of the little boys gave him a tiny puppy. Franchot explained that he had no place to keep a dog. But the kid looked so hurt that Franchot took the puppy, anyhow. As the children disappeared, Franchot heard one of them remark, "Gee, now we've got only five more to get rid ...