Crahan Denton (pronunciation: "kran"; born Arthur Crahan Denton; March 20, 1914 – December 4, 1966) was an American stage, film and television actor. One of his most famous film roles was in To Kill a Mockingbird (1962), in which he portrayed Walter Cunningham, a client of the main character, lawyer Atticus Finch. Walter is the leader of a mob that attempts to lynch another one of Finch's clients.
He had a number of roles in Broadway plays and won an Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Performances in Supporting Roles for 1954-1955 for his work in Bus Stop (1955).[1]
Early years
Born Arthur Crahan Denton in Seattle, Washington, he was the son of Arthur P. Denton (born in New York) and his wife May (née Graham; born in Montana).[2][3] He and his parents later moved to Piedmont, California, surrounded by the city of Oakland.[3]
Denton was active in Little Theater productions during his time as a student at the University of California, Berkeley.[5] In New York, he gradually gained stage roles, with Broadway credits including Key Largo (1940), Liberty Jones (1941), Fragile Fox (1954), Bus Stop (1955), Orpheus Descending (1957), and Winesburg, Ohio (1958).[6]
During May 1952, he starred as Abraham Lincoln in an episode of American Inventory that was a preview of a pilot for a proposed series.[7] He also performed as a guest star in many television series, including Bonanza (1961 episode "The Secret"), Alfred Hitchcock Presents,Gunsmoke (as “Clint”, a homicidal cold blooded outlaw in the S7E11 episode “Apprentice Doc” & as “”Walker”, a murderer whose guilt eats away at him in the S8E24 episode “Blind Man’s Bluff”), Have Gun Will Travel with Richard Boone, The Fugitive with David Janssen, and The Donna Reed Show (1962 episode "Once Upon a Timepiece"). In 1960, he co-starred in an unsold pilot titled, Mountain Man, about a Rocky Mountainfur trading station in the 1840s. Denton made two guest appearances on the CBS courtroom drama series Perry Mason.
Personal life
Denton married Eleanor Brown in 1955 in New York City.[8]
Death
In 1966, Denton died after suffering a heart attack in Piedmont, California. He was 52 years old.[8]