Roger Imhof (August 15, 1875-April 15, 1958) Rock Island, Illinois – Hollywood, California) was a film actor, vaudeville, burlesque and circus performer, sketch writer, and songwriter.
Born Frederick Roger Imhoff, he began his career as a circus clown, with the Mills Orton Circus, and as an Irish comic. He "toured in vaudeville and burlesque between 1895 and 1930." By 1897, he was "teamed with Charles Osborne in a comedy contortion and burlesque acrobatics act." Around this time, he dropped an "f" from his name.
In the 1902-1903 season, he first worked with longtime vaudeville partner Hugh Conn, an association that lasted into the 1920s or possibly 1930s. Marcel Corinne (died 1977), sometimes spelled Coreene, joined the act sometime in the 1910s. She and Imhof married in 1913. The trio of Imhof, Conn and Corinne toured in two comic sketches, "The Pest House" and "Surgeon Louder, U.S.A.", the latter "a military comedy" Imhof had written. "The Pest House" was "the most popular and longest running of several sketches starring the portly pair Roger Imhof and Marcel Corinne". According to an October 1920 edition of the Oregon Daily Journal, the sketch involved Imhof playing an Irish peddler who spends a mishap-filled night at an inn. In 1923, he appeared in the Broadway play Jack and Jill.
He reportedly invested in Chicago and Los Angeles real estate, but lost most of his money in the stock market and during the Great Depression.
He became involved early on in the nascent Hollywood film industry, apparently "as a presenter, promoter, or agent". As an actor, he appeared in films from 1932 to 1944, including San Francisco (1936), Drums Along the Mohawk (1939), The Grapes of Wrath (1940) and This Gun for Hire (1942).
Of the songs he composed, 11 are extant, including the 1906 "Old Broadway".
Imhof died on April 15, 1958 and was buried in Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery.