Known for Acting

Denis O'Dea (26 April 1905 – 5 November 1978) was an Irish stage and film actor. He was born in Dublin and attended Synge Street CBS. When very young he and his mother Kathleen (from County Kerry) moved in with her sister, who kept a boarding house at 54 South Richmond Street. He worked in insurance until taking up acting. O'Dea was a leading member of Dublin's Abbey Theatre where he had a great acting career from 1929 to 1953; a list of his performances can be found in the Abbey archives. He also appeared in numerous plays by Irish playwright Teresa Deevy, some of which toured New York and England. His work led to a number of notable film roles, including two mid-1930s John Ford films, The Informer and The Plough and the Stars (1936), and the part of the police inspector in pursuit of IRA man James Mason in Carol Reed's Odd Man Out (1947).
1953
as Inspector Starkey
1950
as Dr. Livesy
1959
as Father Murphy
1953
as Father Josef
1947
as Inspector
1951
as RAdm. Sir Rodney Leighton
1948
as Inspector Crowe
1959
as Father Murphy
1936
as Sean's I.R.A. Friend (Uncredited)
1960
as Mordecai
1949
as Mr. Corrigan
1935
as Street Singer
1951
as Sir Charles Morton
1957
as Police Sergeant Tom O'Hara (segment '1921')
1949
as George Saunders
1949
as Captain Burnaby
1949
as Prosecuting Counsel
1953
as Lethierry
1936
as The Covey
1955
as Regis Donnell