[2] After the war, he played in Chicago nightclubs during the Prohibition years: the Chez Paris, Colosimo, the Paramount, and the Follies; he knew many of the racketeers of the period, including Al Capone.
[8][9] In the 1950s, he played Mike Spears in the revival of Pal Joey (1952–1953),[10][11][12] a salesman in The Pajama Game (1954–1956),[13][14] Myron H. Hubbard in The Vamp (1955),[15][16] and Schatzie Harris in Say, Darling (1959).
[17] As a comedic actor, he was known for his short films for Vitaphone Varieties: A Breath of Broadway (#2691, September 5, 1928) and Radio and Relatives (December 30, 1938).
[18] Waldron died of cardiac arrest, suddenly and quietly during the night on November 21, 1969, in the arms of his wife Harriet.
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