LILE HUNNICUTT, PEBBLE PAULINE - Scott County, Arkansas | PEBBLE PAULINE LILE HUNNICUTT - Arkansas Gravestone Photos

Pebble Pauline LILE HUNNICUTT

Coop Prairie Cemetery
Scott County,
Arkansas

Pebble
1913 - 2010

Arthur
February 17, 1910 - September 26, 1979

Character Actor
Arthur Hunnicutt personified the rustic but savvy characterizations of his home state. He became one of the most sought-after character actors in Hollywood, being nominated for an Academy Award for best supporting actor in 1952’s, The Big Sky.

Arthur Hunnicutt was born in Gravelly (Yell County) and attended school in the area. He attended Arkansas State Teachers College in Conway (Faulkner County), now the University of Central Arkansas (UCA). The Depression forced him to drop out of college when he ran out of funds. Even so, Hunnicutt was already perfecting the ability to project his Arkansas drawl and persona into a character he played in many plays and movies. He began his motion picture career in 1942, playing in B-westerns, most notably as “Arkansas” in the Charles Starrett Columbia western series of the early 1940s.

Jockeying between New York and Hollywood, Hunnicutt continued to perfect his character, adding a permanent beard and grizzled look to his portrayals; he got larger and larger roles and eventually graduated to higher quality movies, such as Lust For Gold (1949), Broken Arrow (1950), Stars in My Crown (1950), and The Red Badge of Courage (1951). The Big Sky (1952), directed by Howard Hawks, resulted in Hunnicutt’s Academy Award nomination for his role as Uncle Zeb, who is freed from prison by Jim Deakins (Kirk Douglas) and Boone Caudill (Dewey Martin) for a long voyage up the Missouri River. Uncle Zeb is a salt-of-the-earth teller of tall tales; he once bragged of sewing back on a man’s ear which had been torn off by a bear, saying, “Yep… but I sewed it on backwards, and he hated me until the day he died on account of every time he heard a rattlesnake, he’d turn the wrong way and step right into it.”

From that point, Hunnicutt was in constant demand. He played Davy Crockett in The Last Command (1955), an elderly Butch Cassidy in Cat Ballou (1965), and sidekick to John Wayne in El Dorado (1966). Hunnicutt also played television roles, such as the patriarch of a feuding mountain family on The Andy Griffith Show. He had other memorable roles on a variety of television shows, including Gunsmoke, The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, and Perry Mason.

He developed tongue cancer and died at the age 69, in Woodland Hills, California. Hunnicutt was survived by his wife of many years, the former Pauline Lile, who returned to Arkansas after his death.

Contributed on 9/28/10 by murdockpat123
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Record #: 383468

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Additional LILE HUNNICUTT Surnames in COOP PRAIRIE Cemetery

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Submitted: 9/28/10 • Approved: 5/27/18 • Last Updated: 10/26/22 • R383468-G383466-S3

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