
Acting
Birth Date
December 27, 1887
Death Date
January 19, 1956
(passed away at 68)
Place of Birth
Wabash, Indiana, USA
Popularity
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Charles Dingle (December 28, 1887, Wabash, Indiana – January 19, 1956, Worcester, Massachusetts) was an American stage and film actor. Dingle made his Broadway debut in the short-lived drama Killers in 1928. Better roles followed including Duke Theseus in the 1932 revival of A Midsummer Night's Dream and Sheriff Cole in Let Freedom Ring in 1935. He made his musical debut in Irving Berlin's Miss Liberty in 1950. A veteran of over 50 feature films, he was best noted for portraying hard edged businessmen and villains. He was best known for his role as Ben Hubbard, the crafty eldest member of the Hubbard family in The Little Foxes on both stage and screen, and for his role as Senator Brockway in the film version of Call Me Madam. Critic Bosley Crowther wrote of his performance in The Little Foxes in New York Times of August 22, 1941, "Charles Dingle as brother Ben Hubbard, the oldest and sharpest of the rattlesnake clan, is the perfect villain in respectable garb".[citation needed] His last stage appearance was in 1954's The Immoralist co-starring with Louis Jourdan, Geraldine Page, and James Dean; it was also Dean's last Broadway appearance. He was married to actress Dorothy White (1911-2008). Charles Dingle died of a sudden heart attack at age 68. He was cremated and his ashes scattered in Germany. His widow survived him by 52 years.



Anthony Pollet
1950 • 1 episode

Daddy Tom
1948 • 1 episode

1948 • 1 episode

1949 • 1 episode
Mr. Wendell Deeves
1950 • 1 episode

Arthur Truesdale Worth
1945

Charles 'C.J.' Chesley
1947

Mathias Taylor
1949

Michael Kenny
1946

Col. Weatharby
1948

Sheriff Hardy
1946

1951 • 1 episode

Paul Badger
1946

Mr. Bascomb
1953

Bill Nolard Hardy
1948
Miles Virdin
1954 • 1 episode

Major Simon Montague
1947

Inspector Harrigan
1943

Jacomet
1943
1954 • 145 episodes