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Harold Huber
Description[from Freebase]
Harold Huber (December 5, 1909 – September 29, 1959) was an American actor who appeared on film, radio and television. Huber was born Harold Joseph Huberman in the Bronx to Joseph Huberman and "Mammie" Glassberg, Jewish immigrants from Imperial Russia, who had arrived in the United States as infants. His father was the manager of an optical firm. Harold Huberman entered New York University in the Fall of 1925 at age sixteen. He was a member of the university debate team, and by his third year had become editor of a school magazine called The Medley. His tenure at that post was marked by an incident, reported in the newspapers, when the administration suspended publication of The Medley in May 1928 for printing "low humor...not fit to bear the name of New York University". After graduating from NYU in 1929, Huberman attended Columbia University for a short time, reportedly in the School of Law, but apparently dropped out after getting his first acting job in 1930. On September 22, 1930, Harold Huberman became Harold Huber, for a Broadway adaption of A Farewell to Arms.
Acted in
- Lady from Chungking (1942)
- Down Mexico Way (1941)
- The Ghost Comes Home (1940)
- Charlie Chan in City in Darkness (1939)
- Mysterious Mr. Moto (1938)
- Mr. Moto's Gamble (1938)
- You Can't Beat Love (1937)
- Trouble in Morocco (1937)
- Outlaws of the Orient (1937)
- Charlie Chan on Broadway (1937)
- The Gay Desperado (1936)
- San Francisco (1936)
- Muss 'em Up (1936)
- We're Only Human (1935)
- Naughty Marietta (1935)
- The World Accuses (1934)
- The Thin Man (1934)
- Cheating Cheaters (1934)
- The Mayor of Hell (1933)
- Ladies They Talk About (1933)
- The Match King (1932)
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