Tyler Brooke

Tyler Brooke (born Victor Hugo de Bierre, June 6, 1886 – March 2, 1943) was an American film actor.

[2] He began on the stage at the Globe Theatre, New York City in 1912.

He went to Los Angeles in 1925 with No, No, Nanette as a comedian and was captured for screen.

He worked for Hal Roach for a year and a half before going into other films.

In 1929, he sued Oliver Hardy for $109,570 damages, alleging that Hardy struck him across the arm with a billiard cue, fracturing it and preventing him working for 12 weeks.