- Vaudeville comedian with 'Bobby Clark' as Clark and McCullough.
- In 1935, having completed their last short for R.K.O., McCullough and his partner Bobby Clark went on tour in a version of "George White's Scandals." The frenetic pace of touring emotionally discombobulated McCullough and, suffering from nervous exhaustion, he entered a sanitarium in Medford, Massachusetts. In March 1936, he was released. As he was driving home with a friend, he decided to have a shave. They stopped at a local barber shop where McCullough struck up a friendly conversation with the barber. Without warning, as the barber's back was turned, McCullough grabbed a straight razor and slashed his own throat and wrists. In critical condition, he was taken to a nearby hospital where he died several days later. Clark, who was emotionally devastated by the loss of his old friend, made only one film appearance as a solo performer, in The Goldwyn Follies (1938).
- The great comedy team of Clark & McCullough are little known in the 21st century, despite their great popularity in the first half of the 20th Century. One of the reasons likely is the fact that their short films were not packaged and sold to television in the 1950s, unlike The Three Stooges and Laurel & Hardy, who then went on to entertain new generations of fans. Bobby Clark wrote much of the dialogue, and it was very risque and was considered borderline in the more liberal 1930s. Clark & McCullough shorts were geared towards adults, and thus would have been inappropriate on television in the 1950s as the comedy shorts of the Stooges and Laurel & Hardy were programmed for children. The short films of the equally famous-in-the-1930s and now-almost-forgotten comedy team Wheeler & Woolsey were never released to commercial television either as they were considered too vulgar. Though many had disintegrated by then, several of their shorts were on TV in the 1950's, along with other RKO short subjects long duration series like Edgar Kennedy and Leon Errol, and short duration ones like "The Blondes & Redheads" and Clark & McColloughs by distributors like C &C Tv and Guild Films. Wheeler & Woolsey were Feature stars, and in only about five short subjects, and were just cameos in most of them. "Vulgarity" was not an issue.
- Biography in: "Who's Who in Comedy" by Ronald L. Smith. Pg. 105-106 (article "Clark and McCullough"). New York: Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 0816023387
- Bobby Clark coined the motto of the Clark & McCullough comedy duo: "Omnia Cafeteria Rex" ("We Eat All We Can Carry").
- Father: Cyrus Brower McCullough; Mother: Ellen M. McKeough.
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