Harry Fleer (March 26, 1916 – October 14, 1994) was an American actor. He appeared in more than sixty films and television shows between 1955 and 1994. Fleer was cast six times from 1957 to 1960 on the syndicated television anthology series, Death Valley Days, hosted by Stanley Andrews. In "The Camel Train" (1957), he played Secretary of War Jefferson Davis, who commissions an experiment of using camels in the southwestern desert country headed by Lieutenant Edward Fitzgerald Beale, played by Stanley Lachman. Later, he was Wyatt Earp in "Birth of a Boom" (1958).
Shock Corridor
Viva Las Vegas
(Son of the Lone Star State (uncredited))
Atlantis: The Lost Continent
(Governor of Science (uncredited))
Devil's Partner
(John Winters)
The Devil's Hairpin
Divorce American Style
(Bank Guard (uncredited))
The Unearthly
(Harry Jedrow)
The Big Mouth
(Male Nurse (uncredited))
The Cosmic Man
(Bill, the Park Ranger)
The Gun Hawk
(Curly)
Revenge of the Dead
(Wingate Foster)
Tormented
(Frank Hubbard)
The St. Tammany Miracle
(Sam)
Little Giants
(Orville (as Harry J. Fleer))
Famous Ghost Stories
(Frank Hubbard (segment 'Tormented'))
Mirage
The Rare Breed
(Barler (uncredited))
The Comic
(Cop (uncredited))
The Twilight Zone
(Guard)
Quantum Leap
(Older Man in Jail)
Baa Baa Black Sheep
(General Douglas MacArthur)
The Twilight Zone
(1962 Policeman #2 (uncredited))
The Further Adventures of Ellery Queen
The Green Hornet
(Evans)
Adventures of Superman
(Lefty Hook)