Actor / Director Profile
photography
Billy Gilbert videos
Loading...
related links
Billy Gilbert Biography
The son of singers in the Metropolitan Opera, Billy Gilbert began performing in vaudeville at age 12. He developed a drawn-out, explosive sneezing routine that became his trademark (he was the model for, and voice of, Sneezy in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937)). Gilbert's exquisite comic timing made him the perfect foil for such comedians as Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, and he was especially memorable as the dim-witted process server Pettibone in His Girl Friday (1940).
Billy Gilbert filmography
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
80. Violets in Spring (1936)
uncredited Professor Emmanuel Frederick Gottfried Maximillian Wiesenfader
uncredited Professor Emmanuel Frederick Gottfried Maximillian Wiesenfader
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
actor
writer
director
director
self
self
self
self
soundtrack
soundtrack
soundtrack
soundtrack
225. Here Comes the Band (1935)
(performer: "Lyonel's aria (M'appari, tutt'amor)" (1847) (uncredited))
(performer: "Lyonel's aria (M'appari, tutt'amor)" (1847) (uncredited))
soundtrack
