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Natural Enemy


LaserHawk

CVMC: Tommy Cook
Date of birth: 1930-07-05

Appearances

TitleRoleYear Approx. Age
The Kid From Cleveland Dan Hudson 1949 19
Song of Arizona Chip Blaine 1946 16
Humoresque Phil Boray as a Child 1946 16
Jungle Girl Kimbu 1941 11
Adventures of Red Ryder and Little Beaver Little Beaver 1940 10

Spry, curly-haired, dark-complexioned child actor Tommy Cook's most famous roles happened during his nascent career in serial adventures. He came on the feature film scene auspiciously in the role of young Indian boy Little Beaver alongside western good guy 'Don 'Red' Barry' in the Adventures of Red Ryder (1940), and followed that portraying Kimbu, the young jungle boy, alongside Frances Gifford's heroine Nyoka in Jungle Girl (1941).

Born in Duluth, Minnesota on July 5, 1930, Tommy's father was stricken with Bright's disease, a kidney ailment, which forced the family (which included a sister and grandmother) to seek warmer climate. While traveling from Minnesota to California five-year-old Tommy, his mother and sister were seriously injured in a car accident. The other driver was intoxicated and the driver of Tommy's car fell asleep at the wheel. Tommy suffered facial injuries when he went through the windshield.

In California, his mother inspired him toward theatrics and he gained entry at the Pasadena Playhouse where he stayed for seven years. Naturally talented, radio jobs soon cropped up for the youngster.

After appearing in a couple of short films for MGM and RKO, Tommy auditioned for and won the role of Little Beaver in the 12-chapter "Red Ryder" cliffhanger at Republic. He also played the role on radio. On screen Tommy had to learn to ride a horse bareback (star Don Berry also had to learn to ride).

While these first two roles were prominent parts that could have insured youthful stardom, it didn't. Tommy continued in films in both highly visible and unbilled parts. The former included active roles in Good Luck, Mr. Yates (1943); Hi, Buddy (1943); as Kimba, the Leopard Boy in Tarzan and the Leopard Woman (1946) with Johnny Weissmuller and Brenda Joyce; a Filipino in American Guerrilla in the Philippines (1950) starring Tyrone Power; and lead delinquent in the sub-par propaganda film Teen-Age Crime Wave (1955). More or less typed in exotic parts, his characters' names were usually dead giveaways -- Paco, Salim, Ponca, Mario, Chito, Pablo, Little Elk and Keoga among them.

Although he was known for pulling pranks on film sets, his transition from child to adult actor was rocky and eventually his career dissipated.

Tommy became a leading junior tennis player in Southern California which eventually led to an entirely new career in mid-life as a respected organizer (emcee/producer/director) of celebrity gala/charity events. Tommy is the father of two children.

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