Biography
Emerson Treacy is best remembered for his work in a pair of
Little Rascals/
Our Gang shorts from the year 1933, portraying the father of Spanky McFarland. In point of fact, he was a successful, light leading man and character actor on-stage, in movies, and on radio and television, with a career that lasted more than 30 years, and took him from comedy on Broadway to roles in the movies of such directors as
George Cukor and
Alfred Hitchcock. Of slightly diminutive size and with a ready smile, he could also do a good slow burn and turn comically pugnacious, and he had a gift for slapstick comedy as well, all attributes that went into his most well-remembered role, as Spanky's father in the
Little Rascals/
Our Gang shorts
Bedtime Worries and
Wild Poses. As the well-meaning but harried husband and father, he was teamed in both films with
Gay Seabrook, the dark-haired, mousy-voiced, zany actress who played Spanky's mother. Treacy and Seabrook were actually a well-known double-act on radio and in theater during the early '30s, and their casting as Spanky's parents would have been something of an "in" joke at the time. Together they comprised a kind of slightly lower-rent version of
George Burns and
Gracie Allen. Onscreen, they made a delightfully goofy couple, like a slightly twisted Blondie and Dagwood Bumstead; and Treacy was superb as Spanky's father, indulgent and enthusiastic at the start of both films, but slowly showing ever more annoyance and impatience over his son's incessant chatter ("Why does he have to ask so many questions?" he asks, in convincing fatigue about four minutes into
Bedtime Worries, as his son inquires as to the nature of his job as a shipping clerk). And in
Wild Poses, Treacy found his perfect screen nemesis in
Franklin Pangborn, playing a prissy, nervous portrait photographer (named Otto Focus) who spends an entire day trying to get one picture of Spanky, while the latter's parents attempt to help. Treacy played in dozens of other feature films, including small roles in
Adam's Rib and
The Wrong Man, as well as on television programs such as
Perry Mason, but those two
Little Rascals shorts -- in which his character was named Emerson Treacy and Seabrook used her real first name -- are what he is remembered for, thanks to 40 years or more of their being steadily re-shown on television. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide