Known for Acting

Watson was a member of the Watson Family, famous in the early days of Hollywood as being a houseful of child actors. He was brother to Coy Watson Jr., Harry, Billy, Delmar, Garry, Vivian, Gloria, and Louise, all of whom acted in motion pictures. The family, known as "the first family of Hollywood", lived by the Echo Park area of Los Angeles and Bobs attended nearby Belmont High School. They were honored by the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce by placing the Watson family star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 6674 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, California. Watson was best known for his role as "Pee Wee" in the 1938 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film Boys Town and its sequel Men of Boys Town (1941), both starring Spencer Tracy and Mickey Rooney. Tracy and Watson became good friends during the making of the first film, and Watson was reportedly Tracy's last visitor before his death in 1967. In 1939, Watson delivered a fine, tear-jerking performance as Pud, Lionel Barrymore's grandson, in the MGM film, On Borrowed Time. Watson later made guest appearances in many television programs, including The Twilight Zone, Lou Grant, The Beverly Hillbillies, Green Acres, and The Fugitive. In addition to working in the motion pictures business, Watson went to Claremont School of Theology to become a Methodist minister, inspired from the movie Boys Town. He retired after 30 years of serving in Burbank and La Cañada, California. He died of prostate cancer in 1999 at Laguna Beach, California.
1962
as Clerk in Newspaper Department
1939
as Harry Cole
1977
as Minister
1936
1938
as Pee Wee
1963
as Western Union Messenger (uncredited)
1938
as Peter Goodwin - 1861
1939
as George Sanders
1939
as Tommy Benson (uncredited)
1940
as Jimmy Kincaid
1938
as Bob O'Leary (as a boy)
1936
as Waif (uncredited)
1935
as Jimmy's Boxing Partner
1938
as Little Boy (uncredited)
1967
as Sergeant Maypole
1993
as Judge Ezra Frank
1935
as Meriwhether Son
1941
as Pee Wee
1932
as Edgar, Harry’s Son (uncredited)
1937
as Boy (uncredited)