skyvue
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,221
- Location
- New York City
NicknNora said:Guinn (Big Boy) Williamson
Guinn Williams looked and often sounded (perhaps not surprising, since he was from Texas) a bit like Geo. W. Bush.
NicknNora said:Guinn (Big Boy) Williamson
dhermann1 said:Margaret Sullavan was a huge star in her day, not much remembered now. See her in "The Little Shop Around the Corner".
dhermann1 said:We talk so much about Keaton, Lloyd and Chaplin. The fourth big name of the era was Harry Langdon. I've never seen much of his work, but I'd like to. Likewise Fatty Arbuckle. He's a very major star.
skyvue said:Guinn Williams looked and often sounded (perhaps not surprising, since he was from Texas) a bit like Geo. W. Bush.
NicknNora said:I'm glad you haven't forgotten!
I haven't forgotten them or the other actors I listed but sadly a lot of people have forgotten them unless they are film buffs like us. The people I listed were most often cast as supporting actors not the star of the film which is why I think a lot of people either don't remember them or are totally unaware of their work. It's a real shame because they did really good work.
Amy Jeanne said:
Karl Dane
HadleyH said:Thank you Amy Jeanne for posting that. Karl Dane is one of the many forgotten actors and also casualties of the advent of sound in the late 20s.
"His film career didn't amount to much until 1925 when he hit the big time in King Vidor's "The Big Parade". after that he appeared with Tom Mix, with Marion Davies and played a shifty arab in "The Son of the Sheik" with Valentino.
"Unfortunately, Karl Dane, the ex MGM star, could not get rid of his heavy accent and he ended up running a hot dog stand near the main entrance to the studio- - .On April 1934 he took all his old press clippings, his rave reviews, his MGM contracts, and spread them out in his tacky furnished room. He stretched out on the clippings and put a bullet to his head".
So sad.