Edgar Kennedy, who was born on April 26, 1890, near Monterey,
California, hit the road as a young man and traveled across the
country, working in a succession of jobs. He became a professional
boxer, claiming to have gone 14 rounds against The Manassas Mauler,
Jack Dempsey.
In addition to his knowledge of the "Sweet Science", Kennedy possessed
a good musical voice, and wound up singing in musical shows in the
Midwest, his first taste of show business. During his cross-country
peregrinations he wound up in Los Angeles, and found himself hired as
an actor by comedy producer
Mack Sennett.
At the Sennett Studios he was allegedly one of the original
Keystone Cops, but soon graduated from bit
parts to supporting roles in Keystone comedies, including
Tillie's Punctured Romance (1914)
with
Charles Chaplin. Kennedy had good
roles in other Chaplin movies, but when his contract expired in 1921 he
went freelance, though he did occasionally return to Sennett.
After leaving Sennett Kennedy established himself as a first-rate
supporting comic, and made a career out of playing harassed
businessmen, next-door neighbors, cops, etc. By the late 1920s his
craft was most prominently featured in comedies for
Hal Roach, Sennett's arch-rival, where
he flourished in support of
Stan Laurel and
Oliver Hardy. It was with Roach that he
developed his mastery of the "slow burn", a routine for which he became
famous. He often played a none-too-bright policeman brought to the
boiling point by the absurdities of Laurel and Hardy. He also directed
the two in
From Soup to Nuts (1928) and
You're Darn Tootin' (1928).
RKO hired Kennedy to appear in a series of comedy shorts called "The
Average Man," in which he played the head of a family. The shorts had
very tight shooting schedules, often as few as three days, but Kennedy
was always a pro and delighted the audience by giving them his all. He
made over 200 short subjects and appeared in over 100 feature films,
still in demand right up to the day he died of cancer on November 9,
1948.