- Born
- Died
- Birth nameWalter Scott Kolk
- Nickname
- Scott Colton
- A tall, amiable, good-looking, wavy-haired singer and actor during the 1930s, Scott Kolk (born Walter Scott Kolk), later known as Scott Colton, was born in Baltimore, Maryland, of privilege and attended that city's McDonough Academy. Following his father's death, the family moved to a farm in Portland, Maine where he later studied at Thornton Academy.
He began his career singing in orchestras and made his Broadway debut in the musical "Take the Air" in 1927. He met Hearst paramour Marion Davies while singing in Venice, Italy and she cast him in a featured part in both the silent and talking versions of her movie Marianne (1929).
Showing great promise, Universal signed him and he appeared opposite Laura La Plante in Hold Your Man (1929) and then scored a supporting soldier role in the classic anti-war drama All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) as well as the William Powell vehicle For the Defense (1930).
A lull in film work occurred and he relocated to the East Coast appearing on Broadway for the next several years, including the plays "Brief Moment," "Personal Appearance" and "Baby Pompadour". Universal later starred him in the serial cliffhanger Secret Agent X-9 (1937) and in The Wildcatter (1937), in which the studio changed his name to Scott Colton, which he kept.
Dropped by the studio, he was later picked up by Columbia, who cast him in very minor "B" film fare such as Murder in Greenwich Village (1937), All American Sweetheart (1937), Little Miss Roughneck (1938), Women in Prison (1938) and Extortion (1938). Following an unbilled appearance in I Am the Law (1938), Scott abandoned Hollywood.
Aside from Broadway and stock productions (including "I Must Love Someone" and "Watch on the Rhine"), Scott Colton happily spent the rest of his life in Maine. He did work as a radio announcer and at one point became a ranger.
Married three times, Scott Colton died at age 88 and was interred at Lakeview Cemetery in Wilton, Maine.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net
- SpousesMargaret Rebecca Trethewey(1969 - March 27, 1978) (her death)Catharine Azadia Newman(August 3, 1938 - January 15, 1943) (divorced)
- According to Laura Wagner, in her article on Scott in Films of the Golden Age, Fall 2014 issue, Scott left Hollywood in the late 1940s and resided in Maine for the rest of his life, hunting and fishing and appearing in stock shows. He later became a ranger.
- His first wife was Azadia Newman, a portrait artist whose subjects included several well known Hollywood and Washington figures. After the couple's divorce in 1943, Newman married director Rouben Mamoulian.
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