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The Post Standard (January 14, 1987)
The
Post Standard (January 14, 1987)
Actor Who Played
Dagwood
Bumstead in Movies Dead
Arthur Lake,
who portrayed Dagwood Bumstead in
more than two dozen "Blondie" films between 1939 and 1950, is dead at
81.
Lake apparently suffered a heart attack at his home in Indian Wells,
California, where he had been living in quiet retirement. He died
in the emergency room of Eisenhower Medical Center in nearby Rancho
Mirage.
Deputy Riverside County Coroner Nancy Traver said the apparent cause of
the heart failure was arterial disease.
The actor, born Arthur Silverlake, became famous throughout the world
as the bumbling, dumb husband of Blondie, as played by Penny Singleton
in the Columbia Pictures films based on the Chic Young comic strip.
The studio was struggling financially when it cast Lake and Singleton
in the first "Blondie" film it made for a mere $85,000. The
picture grossed $9 million and led to the string of sequels that
included "Blondie Meets the Boss", "Blondie Brings Up Baby", and all
the other features of interest to no one but the movie-going public.
Don Miller, a filmologist, called the signing of Lake as Dagwood "the
greatest piece of casting in the history of movies". Lake, said
Miller, "made Dagwood a bit more dumb than he was in the funnies and
etched the characterization more broadly. He was Dagwood
Bumstead.".
More than 30 years after the series ended, "Dagwood" was still getting
fan mail from around the world. Lake enjoyed being identified
with the character and continued to appear at benefits, where he
invariably would be given a huge Dagwood sandwich.
Lake and Singleton also played the parts for the first seven years that
"Blondie" ran on the radio.
In the 1950s and 1960s there were attempts to bring "Blondie" to
television- the first time in a series starring Lake and Pamela
Britton, and the second time with two other actors in the roles.
Neither effort was successful.
Lake was born in Corbin, Kentucky. His father and uncle were
touring with a circus as an aerial act called "The Flying
Silverlakes". At the age of 3, Arthur and his sister Florence
joined his parents in a family vaudeville act that played throughout
the South and Southwest.
His mother took the children to Hollywood when Lake was 12. As a
child actor, he made his debut in "Jack and the Beanstalk" in
1917. He performed in westerns and by 1925 got a good part in
"Skinner's Dress Suit".
He was signed to a contract by Universal Pictures, which changed his
name to Lake because studio head Carl Laemmle Sr. thought Silverlake
sounded too Jewish. Universal featured him in the "Sweet Sixteen"
comedies. In 1923, National Pictures borrowed him to play the
comic strip character "Harold Teen".
Later he signed with RKO, for whom he made "Dance Hall" in 1929 and
"Cheer Up and Smile" in 1930.
Other pictures included "Indiscreet" with Gloria Swanson; "Silver
Streak"; "Orchids to You"; and "Topper".
But when he heard Columbia was looking for someone to play Dagwood
Bumstead, he was determined to get the part.
He and his wife co-starred in a TV series, "Meet the Family", during
the 1950s. Lake was known to be a careful investor and was able
to live well with his family after the "Blondie" films ended.