All Movies List
Funny Girl

as Branca

1968
Fantastic Four

as Mr. Fantastic (voice)

1967
1967 Busch Advertisement

as Narrator (uncredited)

1967
This Rebel Breed

as Lt. Robert Brooks

1960
The Angry Red Planet

as Col. Thomas O`Bannion

1959
A Date with Death

as Michael David Mason / Louis Deverman

1959
Guns Girls and Gangsters

as Charles (Chuck) Wheeler

1959
My World Dies Screaming

as Philip Tierney

1958
The Buckskin Lady

as Slinger

1957
Dragonfly Squadron

as Capt. MacIntyre

1954
Money from Home

as Marshall Preston

1953
Raiders of the Seven Seas

as Captain Jose Salcedo

1953
The Eddie Cantor Story

as Rocky Kramer

1953
The Sniper

as Joe Ferris

1952
Invasion, U.S.A.

as Vince Potter

1952
The Duel at Silver Creek

as Rod Lacy

1952
Foreign Intrigue

as Christopher Storm

1951
Detective Story

as Tami Giacoppetti

1951
Sirocco

as Major Jean Leon

1951
Ten Tall Men

as

1951
Undercover Girl

as Reed Menig

1950
Hunt the Man Down

as Walter Long

1950
Two Guys from Texas

as Link Jessup

1948
The Lone Wolf in London

as Michael Lanyard

1947
The Lone Wolf in Mexico

as Michael Lanyard

1947
The Notorious Lone Wolf

as Michael Lanyard / The Lone Wolf

1946
Gerald Mohr Gerald Mohr

Birthday

1914-06-11

Place of Birth

New York City, New York USA

Biography

Gerald Mohr was an American radio, film and television character actor who appeared in more than 500 radio plays, 73 films and over 100 television shows. Born in New York City, he was educated in Dwight Preparatory School in New York City, where he learned to speak fluent French and German. At Columbia University, where he was on a course to become a doctor, before being discovered as promising voice talent by a radio producer. Mohr was hired by the radio station and became a junior reporter. In the mid-1930s, Orson Welles invited him to join his formative Mercury Theatre and appeared on Broadway.   Mohr began appearing in films in the late 1930s, playing his first villain role in the 15-part cliffhanger serial Jungle Girl (1941). After three years' service in the US Army Air Forces during World War II, he returned to Hollywood, starring and appearing in numerous movies until 1949 when he joined Fred Foy has co-announcer for the first series of The Lone Ranger.   From the 1950s on, he appeared as a guest star in more than one hundred television series, mostly westerns, though several comedy, variety, crime, and early science fiction serials.  Mohr is remembered for his performance as "Ricky's friend" psychiatrist 'Dr. Henry Molin' (real life name of the assistant film editor on the show) in the classic February 1953 I Love Lucy episode, "The Inferiority Complex". Mohr's repeated line was, "Treatment, Ricky. Treatment".
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