
Nathaniel Greene 'Nat' Pendleton was an American former Olympic wrestler turned actor.
Two-time Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association (EIWA) champion (1914-1915) in the 175-lb. class at Columbia University, Pendleton graduated Class of 1916. He wrestled for the United States at the 1920 Olympic Games in Antwerp, Belgium, earning a silver medal, losing only one match due to a controversial point decision. After the Games he became a professional wrestler and was a big fan favorite, which led to Hollywood.
In the 1920 census he was living in Manhattan with his first wife Juanita Alfonzo (age 22) and her brother Ramon Alfonso (age 13). He was working as a sports manager.
Pendleton was usually cast as a circus strongman, brutish thug, dumb cop, or dense buffoon, but he had a college degree and in 1933 wrote the script for Deception (1932), in which he starred - not surprisingly - as a wrestler.
Upon his death from a heart attack, his remains were interred at Cypress View Mausoleum and Crematory in San Diego, California.
Nat Pendleton was inducted into the Columbia University Athletics Hall of Fame inaugural class in 2006.

Baby Face
1933 · as Stolvich - Laborer (uncredited)

Buck Privates
1941 · as Sgt. Michael Collins

Swing Fever
1943 · as 'Killer' Kennedy

The Thin Man
1934 · as Inspector Guild

Another Thin Man
1939 · as Lieutenant Guild

I'm No Angel
1933 · as Harry (uncredited)

Lady for a Day
1933 · as Shakespeare

The Great Ziegfeld
1936 · as Sandow

Manhattan Melodrama
1934 · as Spud

The Sign of the Cross
1932 · as Strabo

It's a Wonderful World
1939 · as Sergeant Fred Koretz

Breakdowns of 1938
1938 · as Joe (archive footage) (uncredited)

Two in a Crowd
1936 · as Flynn

On Borrowed Time
1939 · as Mr. Grimes

Death Valley
1946 · as Jim Ward

Crazy House
1930 · as Chef (uncredited)

Northwest Passage
1940 · as 'Cap' Huff

Reckless
1935 · as Blossom