David Gorcey


David Gorcey was an American actor best known for portraying "Pee Wee" in Monogram Pictures' East Side Kids series, and "Chuck" in its offshoot The Bowery Boys. He was the younger brother of fellow Bowery Boy Leo Gorcey.

Life and career

Gorcey was born in Washington Heights, Manhattan, New York, the son of Josephine and Bernard Gorcey. His father was a Russian Jewish immigrant and his mother was an Irish Catholic immigrant. and entered the entertainment business at a young age. He appeared in vaudeville during his childhood, and eventually made it to the stage and screen.
When Gorcey was 10 years old, he was signed by Vitaphone studio to portray Sam in the one-reel film One Good Deed.
He is not usually thought of as one of the "original" Dead End Kids, but he did have a small role in the 1935 Broadway production of Sidney Kingsley's Dead End. During his time as a cast member of Dead End, Gorcey helped secure a role for his older brother Leo, who ultimately became a star while Gorcey remained a supporting character.
Although not in the movie Dead End, Gorcey was eventually cast in Universal Pictures' Little Tough Guys, an offshoot of the Dead End Kids. He later joined brother Leo in Monogram Pictures' East Side Kids and The Bowery Boys series. For five years he was credited as "David Condon", using his mother's maiden name to avoid accusations of nepotism. During World War II he served in the US Army. He reverted to his real name in 1957. He occasionally appeared apart from the gang, in such films as Sergeant Madden, The Babe Ruth Story, and Abbott and Costello in the Foreign Legion.

Personal life

He was married to Dorothea Jocker, with whom he had David Gorcey Jr. Between 1953 and 1956 he fathered two more sons, Raymond Conlin and Timothy Kevin. Later in life, he became a minister and founded a halfway house to help recovering alcoholics and people with substance abuse problems. He died in Van Nuys, California on October 23, 1984 of complications of diabetes.

Filmography

Film

Television