Billy Curtis

Actor

Popular As Luigi Curto

Birthday June 27, 1909

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Springfield, Massachusetts, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1988-11-9, Dayton, Nevada, U.S. (79 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 4 ft

#37670 Most Popular

1909

Billy Curtis (born Luigi Curto; June 27, 1909 – November 9, 1988) was an American film and television actor with dwarfism, who had a 50-year career in the entertainment industry.

The bulk of his work was in the western and science fiction genres, portraying a little person.

1938

He also appeared in the Musical/Western The Terror of Tiny Town (1938).

As far as is known, the film is the world's only Western with an all-midget cast.

Many of the actors in Tiny Town were part of a performing troupe called Singer's Midgets, who also played Munchkins in The Wizard of Oz.

1939

One of his early roles was uncredited as a Munchkin city father in The Wizard of Oz (1939).

1942

He featured as part of the circus troupe in Alfred Hitchcock's Saboteur (1942).

1951

He also appeared in Superman and the Mole Men (1951), a B-Picture intended as the pilot for the Adventures of Superman TV series.

Curtis followed up this role by playing yet another alien visitor in an episode of the last season of The Adventures of Superman television series, titled "Mister Zero".

As the title character, he portrayed a stranded refugee from Mars who visits the Metropolis Daily Planet newspaper office, asking to be taken to Earth's leader.

1973

Curtis's work in westerns included the Clint Eastwood feature High Plains Drifter (1973) in which he was featured as Mordecai, a friendly dwarf sympathetic to Eastwood's character.

In 1973 he appeared as Arizona in an episode of Gunsmoke titled "Arizona Midnight".

He had a starring role in American International Pictures' Little Cigars (1973), about a gang of small people on a crime spree.

Billy Curtis was also Mayor McCheese.

After Curtis' death, McDonald's retired the character.

1988

Curtis died November 9, 1988, aged 79 in Dayton, Nevada of a heart attack.