Chief Yowlachie(1891-1966)
- Actor
- Additional Crew
Chief Yowlachie was born in Kitsap County, Washington, and later lived with his family on the Yakima Indian Reservation. Although he was not enrolled in the Yakima Nation, his parents John W. Simmons and Lucy Riddle both had Puyallup heritage and owned allotted land on the Yakima reservation. Yowlatchie's real name was Daniel Simmons and he began his show-business career as--believe it or not--an opera singer and spent many years in that
profession. In the 1920s he switched to films, and over the next 25 or
so years played everything from rampaging Apache chiefs to comic-relief
sidekicks. A large, round-faced man, his distinctive voice--a deep,
resonant bass somewhat resembling Bluto's in the old "Popeye"
cartoons--was instantly recognizable, and he had the distinction of not
appearing to have aged much over his career, which is most likely
attributable to the fact that he looked quite a bit younger than he
actually was, so his "aging" wasn't all that noticeable. In addition to
his "serious" roles, he had somewhat more light-hearted parts in
several films, notably
Red River (1948), where he traded quips
with veteran scene-stealer
Walter Brennan, and held his own quite
well.