Bud Linn

Bud Linn

actor, music department, soundtrack

Bud Linn was born on Apr 30, 1909 in USA. Bud Linn's big-screen debut came with Only the Brave directed by Frank Tuttle in 1930, strarring Singer (uncredited). Bud Linn is known for Margie directed by Henry King, Jeanne Crain stars as Marjorie 'Margie' MacDuff and Glenn Langan as Prof. Ralph Fontayne. The upcoming new movie Bud Linn plays is So Dear to My Heart which will be released on Jan 19, 1949.

A lifelong singer, Bud Linn's association with the King's Men quartet was his primary profession, beginning in 1930. From 1934 to 1937 The King's Men (Ken Darby, Arranger & Bass; Rad Robinson Baritone; Jon Dodson, Lead Tenor; Bud Linn, Top Tenor) were a feature of the Paul Whiteman Orchestra on RCA records and the Kraft Music Hall. They subsequently appeared with many other orchestra leaders, including Rudy Vallee. They were heard, and sometimes seen, in many feature films, including "Sweetie" (My Sweeter than Sweet), "Hollywood Party" (Feelin' High) "Let's Go Native" (title song), "Belle of the Nineties" (Troubled Waters), "Alexander's Ragtime Band," "Murder at the Vanities" (Lovely One) and notably "The Wizard of Oz," in which they are the off screen voices for the Lollipop Guild. On screen they were remembered as the singing cowboys of the Hopalong Cassidy films. In the costume party scene of the film "Honolulu," the King's Men play the Marx Brothers (Mr. Linn played Harpo). For a few years they were associated with the Music Department at Disney Studios (Make Mine Music, Pinocchio). The King's Men group was the basis for the Ken Darby Singers, featured on John Charles Thomas' "Westinghouse Broadcasts" and on many Decca phonograph records, such as Bing Crosby's original recording of "White Christmas." When Bud Linn was not singing he was the first Director for the YMCA in Thousand Oaks, California.

  • Birthday

    Apr 30, 1909
  • Place of Birth

    Indianapolis, Indiana, USA

Known For

Movies & TV Shows

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Movies