Douglas Haig
Born: 1920-03-09 in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Died: 2011-02-01
Known For: Acting
Biography
Douglas Patrick Haig (March 9, 1920 – February 1, 2011) was an American child actor appearing in films in the 1920s and 1930s. His career began at age two in silent films and (unlike many silent film actors) continued into sound films ("talkies"). From 1928 onward he appeared in at least 14 films. As a small child he was placid and pleasant-looking. In a scholarly review of Attorney for the Defense, a 1932 sound film, his performance is described as very annoying. The high point of Haig's career as a film actor came in 1935, with a starring role in Man's Best Friend (1935). Before this he had appeared in both feature films and shorts such as The Family Group (1928), Sins of the Fathers (1928 lost silent film, of which only excerpts survive at the UCLA Film and Television Archives. Betrayal(1929, a silent film with talking sequences, synchronized music and sound effects), and Welcome Danger (1929). In Man's Best Friend (1935), he starred in the lead role of Jed Strong, a boy who has a fine dog and an abusive father who wants to kill the dog. In 1986, TV Guide described this film as a "simple, unpretentious story of a little mountain boy and his pet police dog."
Filmography
1935
- Man's Best Friend as Jed Strong
1933
- High Gear as Percy
1932
- Attorney for the Defense as Paul Wallace as a Boy
- That's My Boy as Tommy - as a Young Boy
- Call Her Savage as Pete as a Boy (Uncredited)
1931
- Skippy as Boy
- The Spy as Seryoska
- The Cisco Kid as Billy Benton
1930
- Caught Short as Johnny
- Let's Go Native as Boy (uncredited)
1929
- Betrayal as Peter
- Welcome Danger as Buddy Lee (uncredited)
1928
- Sins of the Fathers as Tom, as a child
- The Street of Sin
- The Family Group
1927
- Wings as (uncredited)
1926
- The Strong Man as Minor Role (uncredited)