
Malcolm Atterbury
Multiple people share this name — showing the most well-known match (Acting).
Acting · Born 1907-02-20 · age 85 at death · Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Malcolm MacLeod Atterbury (February 20, 1907 – August 16, 1992) was an American stage, film, and television actor, and vaudevillian. Atterbury is perhaps best known for his uncredited role in Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest (1959), as the rural man who exclaims, "That plane's dustin' crops where there ain't no crops!" Four years later, Atterbury appeared as the Deputy in Hitchcock's The Birds (1963). He further appeared in such films as I Was a Teenage Werewolf (1957), Crime of Passion (1957), Blue Denim (1959), Wild River (1960), Advise and Consent (1962), and Hawaii (1966). His last film was Emperor of the North Pole (1973). Atterbury was married on February 6, 1937 to Ellen Ayres Hardies (1915–1994) of Amsterdam, New York, daughter of judge Charles E. Hardies Sr. and sister of Charles Hardies Jr., who later became Montgomery County district attorney. He died in Beverly Hills of old age in 1992. CLR
Titles

North by Northwest

The Birds

Rio Bravo

The Twilight Zone

Bonanza

The Chase

The Longest Yard

Alfred Hitchcock Presents

Seven Days in May

The Andy Griffith Show

Emperor of the North

Perry Mason

Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea

Man Without a Star

Advise & Consent

Quincy, M.E.

Gunsmoke

Wild River

Lassie

The Odd Couple

The Bob Newhart Show

The Fugitive

The Invaders

From the Terrace

I Was a Teenage Werewolf

Crime of Passion

Hawaii

Rawhide

Have Gun, Will Travel

Hell Bent for Leather

The Virginian

Dragnet

Daniel Boone

Blood of Dracula

Summer and Smoke

How to Make a Monster

Crime in the Streets

77 Sunset Strip

The Lone Ranger

Dragnet

The Learning Tree

Peter Gunn

The F.B.I.

The Rookies

High School Big Shot

Route 66

Dr. Kildare

Police Story

Valerie

Dakota Incident

Laredo

Cattle King

Toward the Unknown

Studio One

The Westerner

Four Star Playhouse

Stranger at My Door

Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre

Hawaiian Eye

The Guns of Will Sonnett