published on in Quick Update

How did Richard Cromwell (actor) die?

American actor Richard Cromwell, sometimes known as Roy Radabaugh, was born LeRoy Melvin Radabaugh on January 8, 1910, and passed away on October 11, 1960. His roles in Jezebel (1938) with Bette Davis and Henry Fonda, as well as his subsequent collaborations with Fonda in John Ford’s Young Mr. Lincoln, marked the apex of his career (1939). With Gary Cooper and Franchot Tone sharing the lead roles in The Lives of a Bengal Lancer (1935), Cromwell’s fame may have initially been established.

LeRoy Melvin Radabaugh was born in Long Beach, California, the second of his mother Fay B. (née Stocking) and his father Ralph R. Radabaugh’s five children. His father was an inventor. One of the millions of individuals who died during the “Spanish flu” pandemic in 1918, when Radabaugh was still in grade school, was his father, who passed away abruptly.

On a scholarship, Radabaugh enrolled in the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles as an adolescent. He owned a store in Hollywood where he sold artwork, made lampshades, and created color schemes for homes, including “painting a bathroom for Colleen Moore and designing a house that he rented to Cole Porter.”

How did Richard Cromwell (actor) die?

Cromwell, who was 50 at the time, fell ill on October 11th in Hollywood and passed away from liver cancer. He is buried in Santa Ana, California’s Fairhaven Memorial Park.

ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7pLHLnpmroaSesrSu1LOxZ5ufonuotI6hprBllJ6xbr7InJ%2BaqpRisLO7zLCcpaRdlrC1u9Fmm6KdXw%3D%3D