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#63: RONDO
HATTON

The following biography is
copied directly from IMDB.COM, but I changed the font and the color, so that
should count for something.
Only child, born to
Stewart and Emily Hatton in Hagerstown, Maryland. Family moved to Tampa,
Florida, in 1912, when he was a highschool senior and his father joined a
family-owned business there. He was apparently popular and a good athlete,
especially in football. After leaving highschool, he joined the Florida National
Guard to pursue a military career, fought in the Mexican Border War and then in
France in World War I. Here, he was exposed to poison gas, was hospitalized with
lung injury and was subsequently medically discharged from service and consigned
to a pension. Returning to Tampa, he took employment as a reporter for the Tampa
Tribune where he worked until 1936, when he moved to Hollywood. At some point
after his exposure to the poison gas, he also developed acromegaly, a slowly
progressive deforming of bones in the head, hands and feet, and internal and
external soft tissues, caused by disease of the pituitary gland which onsets
after the individual has reached his full genetic height (under normal pituitary
influence) and production of growth hormone resumes but the bone structure can
no longer produce symmetric growth (as in giantism). According to all authors,
his acromegaly was a result of the poison gas, though typically it is caused by
a tumor on the pituitary. In any event, his worsening disfigurement is thought
to have led to his first divorce, and certainly was responsible for his being
noticed by director Henry King, who was shooting a movie, Hell's Harbor, near
Tampa. Reporter Hatton was covering the filming, and King offered him a role.
Hatton remained a reporter however until after his second marriage in 1934; in
1936, he and his new, more faithful wife moved to Hollywood. Thereafter, Hatton
appears to have subsisted primarily on bit or extra roles, with an occasional
role substantial enough to earn him cast acknowledgment, until being cast for
the role of the "Hoxton Creeper" in Universal's Pearl of Death in
1944. Universal thereafter attempted to promote Hatton to horror film stardom
because of his acromegalic appearance, including a burgeoning series about a
spine-breaking maniac called "The Creeper". However, around Christmas,
1945, he had a mild heart attack (heart weakness, along with diabetes and
blindness being common complications of acromegaly) and, seemingly recovered, a
fatal one just over a month later. He was returned to Tampa for burial.
http:
MONSTER FACTS
In the film THE ROCKETEER,
a Rondoesque character was used as a tribute to his 30s character, called LOTHAR.
Richard Kiel, who played
JAWS in the James Bond movies, and Paul Benjamin who played George Jefferon's
neighbor suffered from the same affliction as Hatton.
WEBSITES
RONDO
HATTON FILMOGRAPHY
RONDO
"THE CREEPER" HATTON
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