Sterling Holloway

Sterling Holloway
Born: Jan 14, 1905
Cedartown, GA
Career: 1927-1986
Countries: USA
Genre/Type: Comedy
Drama
Musical
Children's/Family
Romance
Biography by Hal Erickson
Famed for his country-bumpkin features and fruity vocal intonations, American actor Sterling Holloway left his native Georgia as a teenager to study acting in New York City. Working through the Theatre Guild, the young Holloway was cast in the first Broadway production of songwriters Rodgers and Hart, Garrick Gaieties. In the 1925 edition of the revue, Holloway introduced the Rodgers-Hart standard "I'll Take Manhattan;" in the 1926 version, the actor introduced another hit, "Mountain Greenery." Hollywood beckoned, and Holloway made a group of silent two-reelers and one feature, the Wallace Beery vehicle Casey at the Bat (1927), before he was fired by the higher-ups because they deemed his face "too grotesque" for movies. Small wonder that Holloway would insist in later years that he was never satisfied with any of the work Hollywood would throw his way, and longed for the satisfaction of stage work. When talkies came, Holloway's distinctive voice made him much in demand, and from 1932 through the late '40s he became the archetypal soda jerk, messenger boy, and backwoods rube. His most rewarding assignments came from Walt Disney Studios, where Holloway provided delightful voiceovers for such cartoon productions as Dumbo (1941), Bambi (1942), Alice in Wonderland (1951), Ben and Me (1954) and The Jungle Book (1967). Holloway's most enduring role at Disney was as the wistful voice of Winnie the Pooh in a group of mid-'60s animated shorts. On the "live" front, Holloway became fed up of movie work one day when he found his character being referred to as "boy" - and he was past forty at the time. A few satisfactory film moments were enjoyed by Holloway as he grew older; he starred in an above-average series of two reel comedies for Columbia Pictures from 1946 to 1948 (in one of these, 1948's Flat Feat, he convincingly and hilariously impersonated a gangster), and in 1956 he had what was probably the most bizarre assignment of his career when he played a "groovy" hipster in the low-budget musical Shake, Rattle and Rock (1956). Holloway worked prodigiously in TV during the '50s and '60s as a regular or semi-regular on such series as The Life of Riley, Adventures of Superman and The Baileys of Balboa. Edging into retirement in the '70s, Sterling Holloway preferred to stay in his lavish hilltop house in San Laguna, California, where he maintained one of the most impressive and expensive collections of modern paintings in the world.

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Filmography

Movie/Film Released Rating Role Buy
Moonlighting: Atomic Shakespeare 1986 Actor [Starring]
Super Seal 1977 Actor [Starring]
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh 1977 Voice [Starring]
Thunder and Lightning 1977 Actor [Starring]
Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood 1976 Actor [Starring]
Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too! 1974 Actor [Starring]
All About Me [TV Series] 1971 Actor [Starring]
The Aristocats 1970 Voice [Starring]
Live a Little, Love A Little 1968 Actor [Starring]
Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day 1968 Actor [Starring]
Family Affair: Fancy Free 1967 Actor [Starring]
Gilligan's Island: The Pigeon 1967 Actor [Starring]
The Jungle Book 1967 Voice [Starring]
F Troop: Wilton the Kid 1966 Actor [Starring]
Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree 1965 Actor [Starring]
The Twilight Zone: What's in the Box 1964 Actor [Starring]
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Back to the topTop Questions about Sterling Holloway

Yes, you could probally find on ebay or other auctioning site
I didn’t. Many, many years ago, way before I was even in the business I was down in Laguna Beach, which was where Sterling retired to. He had his home there. I was in a hotel restaurant. Actually, it was kind of dead, and I looked around an...
In 1971 the English composer Gavin Bryars recorded a 13-bar snippet of a homeless man singing “Jesus’ Blood Never Failed Me Yet” and turned that loop into a four-minute composition backed by the Hampton String Quartet. It begins with the re...

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