Frank Jenks
Encyclopedia
Frank Jenks acid-voiced supporting actor, began in vaudeville and went on to a long career in movies and television, mostly in comedy. He was one of the more familiar faces and voices of the Hollywood Studio era. For almost ten years beginning in the early 1920s, Jenks was a song and dance man in vaudeville. In 1933, when sound films had become the norm, and Broadway actors were moving to Hollywood in droves, Jenks's flat, sarcastic delivery landed him a film career. Internet Movie Data Base lists him appearing in 180 titles over the next 28 years (including TV) often as a sarcastic cabbie, reporter, cop or soldier. Usually a supporting actor, Jenks did appear occasionally as a film lead for low-budget films for PRC
Producers Releasing Corporation
Producers Releasing Corporation was one of the more lower-end Hollywood film studios on Poverty Row from the late '30s to the mid-'40s. PRC, as it was commonly known, made low-budget B-movies for the lower-half of a double bill. A few of its films have gained a respectable reputation over the...

. Jenks appeared in not a few classics. In the Cary Grant- Rosalind Russell classic, His Girl Friday, Jenks had his most famous role, as the cynical newsman "Wilson." When television began, Jenks made a successful transition. His biggest continuing role was, for several years, to play the skeptical, proletarian right hand man for the loquacious English conman Colonel Humphrey Flack, in the TV series of that name.

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