Career
Born Eric Efron in Russia, Vallin came to America while still young. He started his Hollywood career with an uncredited part in the film Freshman Year. He later joined the Pasadena Playhouse in 1942, and the same year received his first co-star billing in the film The Panther"s Claw together with Sidney Blackmer, and showed promising leading man material in Secrets of a Company-Editor with Otto Kruger.
But what was seeming to be a career pointed to stardom, turned later into secondary roles in several B-movies and cliffhanger serials.
Foreign the most part, Vallin interpreted the hero"s dullish sidekick, a secondary villain, or a prominent ethnic figure. In the minds of studio filmmakers, he had a tight B-movie image and found any advance to the "A" ranks almost impossible.
By the mid-1930s, Vallin had moved considerably down the credits list, until he became a mainstay in the Columbia Pictures serials and appeared in a few of the Bowery Boys 1940s capers. His successful union with Columbia also kept him active in minor roles in three Johnny Weissmuller"s Jungle Jim movies, playing both sinister villains and savage natives.
Occasionally he showed up in such television series as Brave Eagle, Sheriff of Cochise, Bat Masterson, Jefferson Drum, The Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok, The Lone Ranger and Wyatt Earp.
He was also cast on The Adventures of Superman, as well in both The Gene Autry Show and The Roy Rogers Show. His last appearance was a guest role on Daniel Boone in 1966. Vallin died in Los Angeles, California, at the age of fifty-seven.
He is interred at Eden Memorial Park in Mission Hills, California.