George Chesebro(1888-1959)
- Actor
- Director
George Chesebro was an American character actor who, after a few
leading roles in silent films, became an omnipresent bit player in "B"
westerns. A native of Minneapolis, Minnesota, Chesebro became involved
in traveling stock theater productions before the age of 20, and by
1911 was a seasoned performer. He played in a musical spectacular that
toured Asia for two years, then returned to America and played in stock
and vaudeville. Moving to Los Angeles in 1915, Chesebro began to
supplement his vaudeville career with movie work and quickly began
moving up the ladder of film success. World War I interrupted his work
(sources differ as to whether he served in the US Navy or US Army).
Following the war he resumed his movie career, starring in several
popular serials. His popularity and the size of his roles waned during
the 1920s, and with the arrival of talkies he was most often seen as
heavies, henchmen and cops in a huge number of westerns and crime
dramas, most of them low-budget. He became a fixture in "B" westerns,
rarely billed but always familiar, and finished out his career in the
1950s with the demise of the B-Western. Occasional TV appearances
marked his retirement, and he died in 1959, two months prior to his
71st birthday.