MINNEAPOLIS -- Gordon Lee, the chubby child actor who played Spanky McFarland's little brother, ''Porky," in the ''Little Rascals" comedies, has died. He was 71.
Mr. Lee died Sunday in a Minneapolis nursing home after battling lung and brain cancer, said Janice McClain, his partner of 13 years.
Mr. Lee played one of the younger members in the ''Our Gang" shorts in the 1930s, appearing in more than 40 of them from 1935 to 1939. The comedies, produced by Hal Roach, became known as ''The Little Rascals" when shown on television in the 1950s.
Among the films Mr. Lee appeared in were ''Bored of Education," which won the Oscar for best one-reel short subject in 1937; ''Our Gang Follies of 1936"; ''The Awful Tooth"; and ''Roamin' Holiday."
In a 1998 interview with the Star
''My memories are not about making movies. We played with our toys and the adults played with theirs," the cameras, he said.
He and Billie ''Buckwheat" Thomas teamed up against older boys Spanky and Alfalfa in many of the comedies. The Porky character is credited with originating the catchphrase ''otay."
In the interview, Mr. Lee recalled a warm friendship with his black costar when they were children and praised their interracial relationship on screen, saying, ''Buckwheat played an absolute equal part in the Gang."
Mr. Lee told friends his career ended when a growth spurt made him thinner. ''They wanted Porky to be a chunky fellow, so they looked for someone else," McClain said.
He was born Eugene Lee in Fort Worth in 1933. His adoptive parents began calling him Gordon after Gordon Douglas, who directed many of the films in which Mr. Lee appeared. He kept the first name as an adult.
Mr. Lee was a schoolteacher, living in Colorado for a time. He moved to Minnesota after he retired to be closer to his only son, Douglas, said a friend, Tracy Tolzmann. In recent years, Mr. Lee sold autographed photos of himself as Porky, Tolzmann and McClain said.
''Before that he felt like he was forgotten," McClain said. ''It really made him feel good about himself."![]()