Background
Flaherty was born Edmund Joseph Flaherty in Washington, District of Columbia The son of Mary Rose Ella (née Wilson) and Michael Joseph Flaherty.
Flaherty was born Edmund Joseph Flaherty in Washington, District of Columbia The son of Mary Rose Ella (née Wilson) and Michael Joseph Flaherty.
Pat attended Eastern High School, and Dean College in Franklin, Massachusetts. After playing baseball, he attended Princeton University and graduated on January 26, 1918.
He was the older brother of writer Vincent X. Flaherty. Flaherty had Irish ancestry. Flaherty served in the United States Army during the Pancho Villa Expedition and then as a pilot in World War I.
Early athletic career
Flaherty was a popular Washington, District of Columbia athlete and coach, who went on to become a professional baseball and football player who pitched for John McGraw"s New York Giants, and punted for George Halas" Chicago Bears.
After his professional athletic career ended, he went into the music publishing business with the legendary DeSylva, Brown and Henderson during the time of Mayor Jimmy Walker in New New York
Acting career
Flaherty relocated to Hollywood to take a position as a producer at 20th Century Fox for the owner Joseph P. Kennedy when the Great Depression began. Subsequently, he found work as an actor and technical advisor in over 200 motion pictures.
Flaherty can be seen in roles both large and small in films such as Death on the Diamond (1934), Mutiny on the Bounty (1935), Sergeant York (1941), Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), The Pride of the Yankees (1942), lieutenant Happened in Flatbush (1942), and a bit appearance as a bewildered Marine in Stage Door Canteen. In 1943 he was commissioned in the United States Marine Corps as a Captain.
He returned to the Corps for the Korean War and finished his service as a Major.
He resumed his acting career after the war with The Stratton Story (1949, as the Western All-Stars coach), The Jackie Robinson Story (1950) and The Winning Team (1952, as legendary umpire Bill Klem). He was given the task of making William Bendix look, move and act like Babe Ruth in The Babe Ruth Story, and Gary Cooper to pitch, look, move and act like Lou Gehrig in Pride of the Yankees. In order to make Cooper appear left-handed like Gehrig, the film was reversed.
Outside the realm of baseball, Flaherty was usually cast in blunt, muscle-bound roles, notably Fredric March"s taciturn male nurse "Cuddles" in A Star is Born (1937).
Personal life
Pat Flaherty was married twice. The couple had one child, Edmund Flaherty, Junior. who was born in 1919 and died in 1995, by which time his name had been changed to Edmund Graham.
On January 19, 1929, Flaherty married Dorothea Xaviera Fugazy, the daughter of boxing promoter Jack Fugazy aka Humbert Fugazy. They had two children, Patrick Joseph Flaherty and Frances X. Flaherty Knox.
Death
Flaherty died on December 4, 1970, in New York City of a heart attack.
He was a man of many talents who knew how to live life to the fullest by making many friends. The list of celebrities who considered him a friend is enormous. His Washington Senators teammates enjoyed having him around in spring training, and they missed him when he was shipped out.
lieutenant was the Senators fans" loss that they were never able to see him pitch for the team during the regular season.