
The son of a former circus clown turned grocer and a cleaning woman, Red Skelton was introduced to show business at the age of 7 by Ed Wynn, at a vaudeville show in Vincennes. At age 10, he left home to travel with a medicine show through the Midwest, and joined the vaudeville circuit at age 15. At age 17, he married Edna Marie Stilwell, an usher who became his vaudeville partner and later his chief writer and manager. He debuted on Broadway and radio in 1937 and on film in 1938. His ex-wife/manager negotiated a seven-year Hollywood contract for him in 1951, the same year The Red Skelton Hour (1951) premiered on NBC. For two decades, until 1971, his show consistently stayed in the top twenty, both on NBC and CBS. His numerous characters, including Clem Kaddiddlehopper, George Appleby, and the seagulls Gertrude and Heathcliffe delighted audiences for decades. First and foremost, he considered himself a clown, although not the greatest, and his paintings of clowns brought in a fortune after he left television. His home life was not completely happy--two divorces and a son Richard who died of leukemia at age 9--and he did not hang around with other comedians. He continued performing live until illness, and he was a longtime supporter of children's charities. Red Skelton died at age 84 of pneumonia in Rancho Mirage, California, on September 17, 1997. Red is interred at Forest Lawn Cemetery, Glendale, California, in the Great Mausoleum, Sanctuary of Benediction.

Ocean's Eleven
1960 · as Self

Around the World in 80 Days
1956 · as Drunk in Barbary Coast Saloon

Bathing Beauty
1944 · as Steve Elliott

Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 Hours 11 Minutes
1965 · as The Neanderthal Man

That's Dancing!
1985 · as From 'Bathing Beauty' (archive footage)

That's Entertainment!
1974 · as (archive footage) (uncredited)

Du Barry Was a Lady
1943 · as Louis Blore / King Louis

Twenty Years After
1944 · as (archive footage)

Susan Slept Here
1954 · as Oswald from North Dakota (uncredited)

Neptune's Daughter
1949 · as Jack Spratt

Ziegfeld Follies
1945 · as J. Newton Numbskull (segment "When Television Comes")

Clown Alley
1966 · as Freddie the Freeloader

The Fuller Brush Girl
1950 · as Red Skelton - Fuller Brush Man (uncredited)

A Brave Engineer: Buster Keaton's Last Ride
2026 · as Self (Archival)

That's Entertainment, Part II
1976 · as (archive footage)

Thousands Cheer
1943 · as Red Skelton

Swing Out, Sweet Land
1970 · as Self

A Southern Yankee
1948 · as Aubrey Filmore