Known for Acting

Thin, fidgety James Millholin made a career out of playing dyspeptic bureaucrats, nervous hotel clerks and other officious authority types. Somewhat reminiscent of Edward Everett Horton or Franklin Pangborn, Millhollin's pinched face, somewhat pop eyes and flighty mannerisms fit those roles like a glove, one of the best examples being the army psychiatrist driven to distraction trying to give Andy Griffith a psychological examination in No Time for Sergeants (1958) (a role he also played on Broadway). Born in Peoria, IL, Millhollin had a career on the Broadway stage and did much television in the early 1950s before breaking into films. After retiring from the industry he moved to Mississippi, where he died in 1993. - IMDb Mini Biography By: [email protected]
1972
as Dr. Rolland
1962
as Mr. Beckman (uncredited)
1974
as Judge Advocate
1966
as Mr. Maxwell
1966
as Proprietor of Costume Shop (uncredited)
1966
as Rollie Butter
1962
as Ship's Librarian
1968
as Museum Director
1963
as Thin Man (uncredited)
1958
as Maj. Royal B. Demming
1971
as Funeral Director
1961
as Imhoff
1962
as R.A. Kroner
1967
as Manager
1973
as Principal Peters
1964
as Gordon
1967
as Stafford
1962
as Mr. Kramer