Robert Hutton
Known for: Acting
Born: June 10, 1920 in Kingston, New York, USA - Died: August 6, 1994
Robert Hutton (born Robert Bruce Winne; June 11, 1920 – August 7, 1994) was an American actor. Robert Bruce Winne was born in Kingston, New York, and he grew up in Ulster County, New York. He was the son of a hardware merchant and a cousin of the Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton. He attended Blair Academy, a small boarding school in Blairstown, New Jersey. Before he ventured into films, Hutton acted at the Woodstock Playhouse in Woodstock, New York for two seasons. His film debut as Robert Hutton came in Destination Tokyo (1943). Hutton resembled actor Jimmy Stewart: during World War II when Stewart enlisted in the Army Air Forces in March 1941, Hutton benefited from "victory casting" in roles that would ordinarily have gone to Stewart.[4] His final film was The New Roof (1975). After leaving Warner Brothers’ studios Hutton continued working in movies, TV shows and as a writer and director in England for several years. He returned years later to the United States and lived in New York where he was born and raised.
Known for
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Cry of the Banshee
Party Guest
Destination Tokyo
Tommy Adams
The Racket
Dave Ames
They Came from Beyond Space
Dr. Curtis Temple
The Slime People
Tom Gregory
Scandal Incorporated
Brad Cameron
Hollywood Canteen
Cpl. Slim Green
The Man on the Eiffel Tower
Bill Kirby
Smart Girls Don't Talk
'Doc' Vickers
The Steel Helmet
Private Bronte
Cinderfella
Rupert
The Big Bluff
Dr. Peter Kirk
The Colossus of New York
Dr. John Robert Carrington
Invisible Invaders
Dr. John Lamont
Northern Pursuit
Internment Camp Guard (uncredited)
The Vulture
Dr. Eric Lutens
Slaughter Trail
Lt. Morgan
The Younger Brothers
Johnny Younger
The Man Without a Body
Dr. Phil R. Merritt
Roughly Speaking
John Crane, ages 20-28
Wild Youth
Maddo
So You Want to Be in Pictures
Self (uncredited)
And Baby Makes Three
Herbert T. 'Herbie' Fletcher
Man from Tangier
Chuck