
Effective light comedian of '30s and '40s films and '50s and '60s TV series, Robert Cummings was renowned for his eternally youthful looks (which he attributed to a strict vitamin and health-food diet). He was educated at Carnegie Tech and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Deciding that Broadway producers would be more interested in an upper-crust Englishman than a kid from Joplin, Missouri, Cummings passed himself off as Blade Stanhope Conway, British actor. The ploy was successful. Cummings decided that if it worked on Broadway, it would work in Hollywood, so he journeyed west and assumed the identity of a rich Texan named Bruce Hutchens. The plan worked once more, and he began securing small parts in films. He soon reverted to his real name and became a popular leading man in light comedies, usually playing well-meaning, pleasant but somewhat bumbling young men. He achieved much more success, however, in his own television series in the '50s, The Bob Cummings Show (1955) and My Living Doll (1964).
Cummings was born June 10, 1910, in Joplin, Missouri, and he died of kidney failure December 2, 1990, in Woodland Hills, California. He is interred at Forest Lawn, Glendale, California, in the Great Mausoleum, Columbarium of Sanctity.

Disneyland Handcrafted
2026 · as Self (archive footage)

Dial M for Murder
1954 · as Mark Halliday

Stagecoach
1966 · as Henry Gatewood (as Bob Cummings)

My Geisha
1962 · as Bob Moore

What a Way to Go!
1964 · as Dr. Victor Stephanson

Disneyland's 35th Anniversary Celebration
1990 · as Self

Sleep, My Love
1948 · as Bruce Elcott

Hideaway Girl
1936 · as Mike Winslow

Sons of the Desert
1933 · as Steamship Announcement Witness (uncredited)

Saboteur
1942 · as Barry Kane

Rio
1939 · as Bill Gregory

Disneyland '59
1959 · as Self

Touchdown, Army
1938 · as Cadet Jimmy Howal

Reign of Terror
1949 · as Charles D'Aubigny

Beach Party
1963 · as Professor Sutwell

The Lost Moment
1947 · as Lewis Venable

Flesh and Fantasy
1943 · as Michael (segment 1)

Forever and a Day
1943 · as Ned