Bobby Dunn (28 August 1890 – 24 March 1937) was a comic actor who appeared in several Laurel and Hardy comedies, beginning with Duck Soup, and notably as the shoplifter in Tit for Tat. He was one of the original Keystone Kops in Hoffmeyer's Legacy.
Born Robert V. Dunn in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to Richard P. and Melissa Dunn, he started his career at Keystone Film Company production. He worked in a number of American motion-picture producer and director Mack Sennett's comedies, and lost one of his eyes in a stunt that went wrong (while falling into a barrel of water, his eye was caught by a floating matchstick on top) and had to wear a glass eye, which gave him a somewhat cross-eyed appearance. He later supported such comedians as Harold Lloyd, W.C. Fields and Charley Chase, before his early death.
You spend you life just thinking of how bad it could be
But life gets tough so you close your eyes so you don't have to see
I don't think we recognize where our intentions seem to lead
So stop your tears of self-mutilation 'cause everything you got was free
MY FRIEND
I know a better way we can change today
Don't take your life for granted because it get worse here everyday
Our lives are constantly connected in ways we'll never know
But we're taught to lie, hide behind the lines before the feelings start to grow
So live your life here as my friend or as my foe
'Cause I got no room for self-centered motherfuckers
If that's you you've got to go
MY FRIEND
I know a better way we can change today
Don't take your life for granted because it get worse here everyday
We've got to learn to react
No longer can we hide the facts
We've got to learn to react
Take a look at the hidden tracks
I know a better way we can change today
Bobby Dunn (28 August 1890 – 24 March 1937) was a comic actor who appeared in several Laurel and Hardy comedies, beginning with Duck Soup, and notably as the shoplifter in Tit for Tat. He was one of the original Keystone Kops in Hoffmeyer's Legacy.
Born Robert V. Dunn in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to Richard P. and Melissa Dunn, he started his career at Keystone Film Company production. He worked in a number of American motion-picture producer and director Mack Sennett's comedies, and lost one of his eyes in a stunt that went wrong (while falling into a barrel of water, his eye was caught by a floating matchstick on top) and had to wear a glass eye, which gave him a somewhat cross-eyed appearance. He later supported such comedians as Harold Lloyd, W.C. Fields and Charley Chase, before his early death.
DNA India | 20 Jul 2018