
Peter Lind Hayes (born Joseph Conrad Lind; June 25, 1915 – April 21, 1998) was an American vaudeville entertainer, songwriter, and film and television actor.
Hayes made his vaudeville debut with his mother at the age of six. In 1939, his mother sold some jewelry and borrowed $8,000 to open the Grace Hayes Lodge in Los Angeles, where he began working as a nightclub performer.
He appeared in films throughout the 1930s and 1940s, and had a significant television career in the 1950s. He often appeared with his wife Mary Healy. In 1946, Hayes opened at the Copacabana in New York. This led to an engagement with the Dinah Shore radio show. (Dinah Shore later sang the song for Chevrolet starting in 1952.) The couple starred in Zis Boom Bah (1941) and had major supporting roles in the cult fantasy musical film The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T (1953). He also had a considerable reputation as a singer of comic songs, several of which made their way onto record, including "Life Gets Tee-Jus, Don't It".
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Pacific Paradise
1937 · as Naval Officer Kissing Woman (uncredited)

Naughty but Nice
1939 · as Bandleader in Nightclub (uncredited)

Sunkist Stars at Palm Springs
1936 · as Mr. Mike (voice)

Lookin' to Get Out
1982 · as Tourist at Registration Desk

Sunday Night at the Trocadero
1937 · as Uniformed Messenger

Winged Victory
1944 · as O'Brien

Miracle On 34th Street
1959 · as Fred Gaily

You Ruined My Life
1987 · as Congressman Riley

Seven Days' Leave
1942 · as Pvt. Pete Jackson

The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T.
1953 · as August Zabladowski

Once You Kiss a Stranger...
1969 · as Pete Delaney

These Glamour Girls
1939 · as Skel (as Peter Hayes)

Danger on the Air
1938 · as Harry Lake

The Senator Was Indiscreet
1947 · as Lew Gibson

Million Dollar Legs
1939 · as Freddie 'Ten-Percent' Fry

All Women Have Secrets
1939 · as Slats Warwick

Dancing on a Dime
1940 · as Dandy Joslyn

The Yin and the Yang of Mr. Go
1974 · as Prof. Robert Bannister