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  1. Carl Benton Reid. Actor. Born August 14, 1893 in Lansing, Michigan, USA. Carl Benton Reid was a drama graduate from Carnegie Tech who had several years of stage experience performing at the Cleveland Playhouse in the 1920s, where he met his future wife, stage actress Hazel Harrison. After moving to New York, he became a noted actor on the ...

  2. Carl Benton Reid (1893-1973) is an American actor who portrayed Governor Ed in the Season 2 episode Barney and the Governor. Carl Benton Reid was a drama graduate from Carnegie Tech who had several years of stage experience performing at the Cleveland PLayhouse in the 1920's, where he met his future wife, stage actress Hazel Harrison. After moving to New York, he became a noted actor on the ...

  3. Carl Benton Reid. Highest Rated: 100% The Little Foxes (1941) Lowest Rated: 50% Madame X (1966) Birthday: Aug 14, 1893. Birthplace: Lansing, Michigan, USA.

  4. Carl Benton Reid joue au théâtre, à Broadway ( New York ), de 1929 à 1949 . Au cinéma, il apparaît en 1941, aux côtés de Bette Davis, dans La Vipère (adaptation de la pièce The Little Foxes qu'il venait de jouer à Broadway, avec Tallulah Bankhead, en 1939 - 1940) et tourne jusqu'en 1966, notamment dans des westerns .

  5. Boots Malone: Directed by William Dieterle. With William Holden, Stanley Clements, Basil Ruysdael, Carl Benton Reid. Rich kid ducks school and goes to the racetrack to learn how to be a jockey.

  6. Carl Benton Reid, född 14 augusti 1893 i Lansing, Michigan, död 16 mars 1973 i Hollywood, Kalifornien, var en amerikansk skådespelare. Han filmdebuterade 1941 i Kvinnan utan nåd där han gjorde samma roll som i Broadway-uppsättningen filmen bygger på.

  7. Little Foxes, The (1941) -- (Movie Clip) Not Even A Whole Violin Spectacular bit between Dan Duryea as shiftless Leo and Carl Benton Reid, his even more brazen father, discussing what might be done with their uncle and brother-in-law’s dormant assets, while they shave, in the circa 1900 South, William Wyler directing from Lillian Hellman’s script, in The Little Foxes, 1941.