
Harry Cording
Acting
Born 1891-04-25 · Wellington, Somerset, England, UK
Hector William “Harry” Cording was a British character actor. Cording was brought up and educated in his native England, and later settled permanently in Los Angeles, where he began a film career in 1925. He appeared in many Hollywood films from then to the 1950s. With an imposing six-foot height and stocky build, Harry the Henchman usually portrayed thugs, villains' henchmen and policemen. Cording's most notable roles were probably as the villainous Dickon Malbete, Captain of the Guard in Errol Flynn's Adventures of Robin Hood and as Thamal, the hulking henchman to Bela Lugosi's character in 1934's Black Cat. As a contract player at Universal Pictures in the 1940s, he turned up in tiny parts in many of their horror films, such as The Wolf Man. Having appeared in a bit role in 20th Century-Fox's Adventures of Sherlock Holmes starring Basil Rathbone (1939), he went on to appear in supporting and bit parts in seven of the twelve Universal Studios Sherlock Holmes films in which Rathbone starred.
Filmography

East of Eden
Apr 10, 1955

Jungle Gents
Sep 5, 1954

The Black Shield of Falworth
Sep 2, 1954

Killer Leopard
Aug 22, 1954

King Richard and the Crusaders
Aug 7, 1954

Man in the Attic
Dec 31, 1953

Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Aug 1, 1953

Law and Order
May 13, 1953

Ambush at Tomahawk Gap
May 1, 1953

Titanic
Apr 11, 1953

Treasure of the Golden Condor
Feb 4, 1953

Against All Flags
Dec 24, 1952

Road to Bali
Dec 5, 1952

Captain Pirate
Aug 27, 1952

Cripple Creek
Jun 30, 1952

Brave Warrior
May 31, 1952

Night Stage to Galveston
Mar 18, 1952

The Big Trees
Feb 5, 1952

The Strange Door
Oct 31, 1951

Iron Man
Sep 20, 1951

Mask of the Avenger
Jun 27, 1951

Sirocco
Jun 13, 1951

Santa Fe
Apr 1, 1951

Al Jennings of Oklahoma
Jan 17, 1951

Last of the Buccaneers
Oct 25, 1950

Convicted
Aug 1, 1950

The Iroquois Trail
Jun 15, 1950

Fortunes of Captain Blood
May 19, 1950

Buccaneer's Girl
Mar 1, 1950

Tyrant of the Sea
Feb 22, 1950