| Gabriel Dell | |
|---|---|
| Born | Gabriel Marcel Dell Vecchio October 8, 1919 New York, New York, U.S.A. |
| Died | July 3, 1988 (aged 68) North Hollywood, California |
| Occupation | Actor |
| Years active | 1937 — 1982 |
| Spouse(s) | Barbara Viola Essen |
Gabriel Dell (born Gabriel Marcel Dell Vecchio in New York City, on October 8, 1919 – died July 3, 1988 in North Hollywood, California) was an American actor and one of the members of what came to be known as the Dead End Kids/East Side Kids/The Bowery Boys.
Born in Brooklyn, Dell was perhaps the most successful of all of the gang away from their films. Dell almost made his stage debut a few years before Dead End when he and his sister were slated for roles in The Good Earth with Alla Nazimova and Claude Rains.
By the time he was cast in Dead End, he had changed his last name to Dell, and after achieving fame with the other youthful thugs, Dell moved back and forth between Warner Bros., Universal and Monogram during the guys' heyday, appearing as a member of the Dead End Kids, East Side Kids and The Bowery Boys before leaving the series in 1950.
He won a role in Tickets Please on Broadway, and also toured with former gang buddy Huntz Hall in a nightclub partnership that eventually caused them both to become divorced. Dell spent the next three years at the Actor's Studio, married and had a son in 1956.
In the late 1950s, Dell joined the now-legendary stock company of The Steve Allen Show, along with Don Knotts, Louis Nye, Tom Poston, Bill Dana, Pat Harrington, Dayton Allen and Skitch Henderson. During this period Dell developed a Bela Lugosi imitation that has since become the "official" Lugosi imitation (see any of the recordings done during this period).
Over the next few years Dell appeared in several critically acclaimed productions on and off Broadway, and supplied all of the voices for an LP recording of When Famous Monsters Speak. In 1964 Dell won the role that brought him to critical and public fame again: the title character in Lorraine Hansberry's The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window.
Dell had several other hits, a second son, a third wife, and roles on several prominent TV series in the fifties and sixties. In the latter part of his life, Dell also appeared as the propietor of The Corner Bar (1972) on ABC, a major supporting role in Earthquake, " a 1976 pilot, Rusko, and A Year at the Top, in which he played opposite Mickey Rooney as the Devil's son.
Dell died in North Hollywood of leukemia in 1988 at age 68.
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