
Howard Smith
Known for department: Acting
Birthday: 1893-08-10 – 1968-01-11
Place of birth: Attleboro, Massachusetts, U.S.
Biography
Howard Irving Smith (August 12, 1893 in – January 10, 1968) was an American character actor with a 50-year career in vaudeville, theater, radio, films and television. In 1938 he performed in Orson Welles's short-lived stage production and once-lost film, Too Much Johnson, and in the celebrated radio production, "The War of the Worlds". He portrayed Charley in the original Broadway production of Death of a Salesman and recreated the role in the 1951 film version. On television Smith portrayed the gruff Harvey Griffin in the situation comedy, Hazel.
Known for

A Face in the Crowd
1957J.B. Jeffries
Call Northside 777
1948K.L. Palmer
I Bury the Living
1958George Kraft
The Street with No Name
1948Ralph Demory
Murder, Inc.
1960Albert Anastasia
The Caddy
1953Golf Official
Her Kind of Man
1946Bill Fellows
No Time for Sergeants
1958Maj. Gen. Eugene Bush
Bon Voyage!
1962Judge Henderson
Death of a Salesman
1951CharleyThe Great Merlini
1951Davis Belmont
Cry Murder
1950Sen. Alden
Never Wave at a WAC
1953Maj. Gen. Prentiss (uncredited)
Too Much Johnson
1938Joseph Johnson
Don't Go Near the Water
1957Admiral Junius Boatwright
Face of Fire
1959Sheriff Nolan
State of the Union
1948Sam I. Parrish
Wind Across the Everglades
1958George Leggett
The Brass Bottle
1964Senator Grindle