John Leslie Coogan , known professionally as Jackie Coogan, was an American actor who began his movie career as a child actor in silent films. Many years later, he became known as Uncle Fester on 1960s sitcom The Addams Family. In the interim, he sued his mother and stepfather over his squandered film earnings and provoked California to enact the first known legal protection for the earnings of child performers, billed as the Coogan Act. Coogan was born in 1914 in Los Angeles, California to John Henry Coogan, Jr. and Lillian Rita Coogan, as John Leslie Coogan . He began performing as an... infant in both vaudeville and film, with an uncredited role in the 1917 film Skinner's Baby. Charlie Chaplin discovered him in the Orpheum Theatre, Los Angeles, a vaudeville house, doing the shimmy, a popular dance at the time, on the stage. Coogan's father was also an actor. Jackie Coogan was a natural mimic and delighted Chaplin with his abilities. Chaplin subsequently cast him in a brief role in his short film A Day's Pleasure, made in 1919.
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| Birthdate: | October 26, 1914 |
| Birthplace: | Los Angeles, California |
| Date of death: | March 1, 1984 |
| Religion: | Roman Catholicism |
| Also known as: | John Leslie Coogan, Jr., jackie_coogan, Jackie Coogan |