
Biography
Leon Alton enjoyed a career on stage, screen, and television starting in the 1920s and lasting until the late 1970s. In the 1930s he started out on the Broadway stage appearing in various musicals which lasted until the early 1940s. Then like many Broadway actors and dancers, he seemingly drifted his way to Hollywood where he was able to use his talents as a dancer to appear in many party scenes in a suit dancing in some of the most well known films. Like many dancers though, that was only part of their work as they could not survive on musicals alone and by the mid 1950s musicals started to lose their popularity so he had to find work elsewhere He was never unemployed long. Alton's appearance was ideal for bankers, or distinguished townsman, or whatever was needed.
Known For
Now You See Him, Now You Don't (1972)Age: 65as Executive (uncredited)
Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971)Age: 64as Soldier at Portobello Road (uncredited)
Columbo (1971)Age: 64as Theatre Patron (uncredited)
Tora! Tora! Tora! (1970)Age: 63as Official (uncredited)
Watermelon Man (1970)Age: 63as Pedestrian (uncredited)
The Partridge Family (1970)Age: 63as Audience Member (uncredited)
Sweet Charity (1969)Age: 62as Dancer (uncredited)
True Grit (1969)Age: 62as Boarding House Guest (uncredited)
The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes (1969)Age: 62as Collingsgood Associate (uncredited)
The Love God? (1969)Age: 62as Club Patron (uncredited)






