- His first wife Edna died in 1921 while giving birth to their daughter, whom Mr. Pidgeon also named Edna. His widowed mother Hannah moved out to California to help care for his daughter. She lived there for the next 38 years, dying at the age of 94.
- Had a notoriously poor memory for names, referring to anyone whose name he could not remember as "Joe." This became such a habit that, for his birthday one year, the cast and crew of the picture he was working on bought him a present: A director's chair enscribed "Joe Pidgeon."
- He donated his body to the U.C.L.A. Medical School in Los Angeles for teaching and research purposes.
- Walter had a brother, Larry Pidgeon. Larry suffered from yellow fever, caught while serving in the Pacific in WWII. Larry Pidgeon was the editorial editor of the Santa Barbara News-Press for many years.
- Fred Astaire heard him singing at a party while appearing with an amateur company in Boston and got him an agent. Walter was more interested in acting, however, and joined E.E. Clive's repertory stage company where he worked on his craft. Thanks also to Astaire, the deep baritone auditioned for and became the singing partner for singer/entertainer Elsie Janis which toured for six months in the mid-1920s. Pidgeon's first wife traveled with the company as an understudy for Janis.
- Played the husband of Greer Garson's character a total of seven times on film; in Blossoms in the Dust (1941), Mrs. Miniver (1942), Madame Curie (1943), Mrs. Parkington (1944), Julia Misbehaves (1948), The Miniver Story (1950) and Scandal at Scourie (1953). That Forsyte Woman (1949) was the eighth film they did together.
- Pidgeon became a naturalized American citizen after living in the United States for a number of years.
- Pidgeon ran off to join his brother, Don, in the Canadian Army, but his young age (16) was discovered and he was sent back home. He eventually enlisted in the 65th Battery of the Royal Canadian Artillery during World War I, but he was injured during his training when he was crushed by two gun carriages at Camp Petawawa and also caught pneumonia. As a result of these, he spent 17 months recovering at an army hospital in Toronto, having never been sent overseas.
- According to the producer of Salt of the Earth (1954), Paul Jarrico, who had been blacklisted during the "Red Scare" of the mid-1950s, Pidgeon tried to stop the production of this motion picture (which was being made by blacklistees) in his capacity as the president of the Screen Actors Guild, which had approved of the blacklisting. In an interview in 1997, Jarrico said, "There was a concerted effort to stop the making of the film after it became known that we were making the film. We had started the film in quite a normal fashion with contracts with Pathe Lab to develop our film and rental of the equipment from Hollywood, people who supplied such things. A whistle was blown by Walter Pidgeon, the then president of the Actors Guild, and the FBI swung into action and movie industries swung into action and we found ourselves barred from laboratories, barred from sound studios, barred from any of the normal facilities available to filmmakers, and we found ourselves hounded by all kinds of denunciations on the floor of Congress and by columnists. The public was told that we were making a new weapon for Russia, that since we were shooting in New Mexico, where you find atom bombs, you find Communists, and every kind of scurrilous attack--vigilante attacks--on us while we were still shooting developed".
- Died one week after Richard Basehart, and from the same medical malady - stroke. Basehart famously played Admiral Harriman Nelson in Irwin Allen's television series, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (1964), the role that Pidgeon had originated in Allen's 1961 movie of the same name, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (1961).
- During his early performances on stage, he played a Mountie in the play "Rose Marie". After playing this character on stage, Pidgeon became so enthusiastic that he actually applied to join the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Unfortunately he was medically rejected due to his earlier injuries in the Canadian Army.
- According to Forbidden Planet (1956) costar Anne Francis, Pidgeon would entertain the cast and crew of his various projects with his encyclopedic collection of bawdy limericks.
- Was the last of the four stars (including Bette Davis, Michael Rennie, and Hugh O'Brian) who played a "substitute attorney" on the Perry Mason TV series in 1963 when the star of the program, Raymond Burr was recovering from an operation to remove intestinal polyps. The pressures of performing that guest role convinced him that starring in any TV series was not to his liking.
- Walter Pidgeon, Raymond Massey and Ryan Gosling are the only three Canadians to be nominated for a Best Actor Oscar (as of 2014).
- (1952-1957) President of Screen Actors Guild (SAG).
- He appeared in two Best Picture Academy Award winners in consecutive years: How Green Was My Valley (1941) and Mrs. Miniver (1942). Rhys Williams, Mary Field and Frank Baker also appeared in both films. Walter Pidgeon also appeared in three other Best Picture nominees: Blossoms in the Dust (1941), Madame Curie (1943) and Funny Girl (1968), and was a narrator in one more: Quo Vadis (1951).
- Wife Ruth was his secretary before he married her.
- Hobbies included tending to his rose garden and playing bridge.
- After World War I Pidgeon worked at a brokerage house in Boston while taking acting lessons at E. E. Clive's Copley Playhouse.
- Turned down an offer to star opposite Irene Dunne in the 1936 Show Boat (1936) because he didn't want to appear in another musical.
- Starred in Universal's first all-talkie, "Melody of Love," in 1928.
- His daughter, Edna Pidgeon Aitkens, was born in 1921, and she once worked at the Animation Department of MGM before marrying in 1947. She gave Walter two granddaughters, Pat and Pam.
- Was a co-star to five Oscar winning acting performances: Donald Crisp for How Green Was My Valley (1941); Greer Garson and Teresa Wright for Mrs. Miniver (1942); Gloria Grahame for The Bad and the Beautiful (1952); and Barbra Streisand for Funny Girl (1968).
- Was nominated for Broadway's 1960 Tony Award as Best Actor (Musical) for "Take Me Along" -- a award that was won by his co-star Jackie Gleason.
- He has appeared in five films that have been selected for the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant: How Green Was My Valley (1941), Mrs. Miniver (1942), The Bad and the Beautiful (1952), Forbidden Planet (1956) and Funny Girl (1968).
- He performed in early talking musicals for Warner Brothers.
- Died two days after his 87th birthday.
- Turned down the role of Gaylord Ravenal in the Universal remake of Show Boat (1936) because he did not want to be typecast in musicals. Allan Jones played the role instead opposite Irene Dunne's Magnolia.
- Biography in: "The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives". Volume One, 1981-1985, pages 640-642. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1998.
- He launched his career with the E E Clive stock company., toured in vaudeville then made his film debut in 1925 then returned to to New York's Broadway appearing in several successful successful stage and road show companies before returning to films then back to Broadway then films.
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