George Irving
George Irving was an actor who had a successful Hollywood career. Irving's career in acting began with his roles in various films like the western "Three Bad Men" (1926) with George O'Brien, the adventure "The Eagle of the Sea" (1926) with Florence Vidor and the Neil Hamilton western "Desert Gold" (1926). He also appeared in "The City" (1926), "Shanghai Bound" (1927) and "The Broncho Twister" (1927) with Tom Mix. He continued to act in productions like "Touchdown" (1931), "The Naughty Flirt" (1931) and the Ben Lyon musical comedy "The Hot Heiress" (1931). He also appeared in "Merrily We Go to Hell" (1932). Toward the end of his career, he continued to act in the Bert Wheelre crime adaptation "High Flyers" (1937), the mystery "The Mandarin Mystery" (1937) with Eddie Quillan and the comedy "Meet the Missus" (1937) with Victor Moore. He also appeared in the Edward Arnold dramatic biopic "The Toast of New York" (1937) and the musical comedy "The Life of the Party" (1937) with Joe Penner. Irving more recently acted in the comedy "Magic Town" (1947) with James Stewart. Irving passed away in September 1961 at the age of 87.