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Charles Ray (actor)

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Actor

Name
  
Charles Ray

Years active
  
1911–1943


Charles Ray (actor)

Born
  
March 15, 1891 (
1891-03-15
)
Jacksonville, Illinois, U.S.

Cause of death
  
Mouth and throat infection

Occupation
  
Actor, director, producer, screenwriter

Died
  
November 23, 1943, Los Angeles, California, United States

Spouse
  
Yvonne Guerin (m. 1941–1942), Clare Grant (m. 1915–1935)

Movies
  
The Coward, The Garden of Eden, The Busher, Paris, The Wolf Woman

Similar People
  
Thomas H Ince, Victor Schertzinger, Reginald Barker, Edmund Goulding, Lewis Milestone

Resting place
  
Forest Lawn Memorial Park

Charles Edgar Ray (March 15, 1891 – November 23, 1943) was an American actor, director, producer, and screenwriter. Ray rose to fame during the mid-1910s portraying young, wholesome hicks in silent comedy films.

Contents

Early life

Ray was born in Jacksonville, Illinois and moved to Springfield as a child where he attended elementary school. He then moved to Needles, California for a time before finally relocating to Los Angeles where he finished his education. He initially began his career on the stage before working for director Thomas H. Ince as a film extra in December 1912. He appeared in several bit parts before moving on to supporting roles. Ray's break came in 1915 when he appeared opposite Frank Keenan in the historical war drama The Coward.

Career

Ray's popularity rose after appearing in a series of films which cast him in juvenile roles, primarily young, wholesome hicks or naive "country bumpkins" that foiled the plans of thieves or con men and won the heart of his dream girl. In March 1917, he signed with Paramount Pictures and resumed working with director Thomas H. Ince. By 1920, he was earning a reported $11,000 a week (approximately $132,000 today) . Ray had also earned a reputation for being egomaniacal and difficult to work with. In 1920, he left Paramount after studio head Adolph Zukor refused to give him a substantial pay raise. Zukor later wrote in his autobiography, The Public Is Never Wrong, that Ray's ego and behavior had become problematic and that he "... was headed for trouble and [I] did not care to be with him when he found it." After leaving Paramount, Ray formed his own production company, Charles Ray Productions, and used his fortune to purchase a studio on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles (now known as the KCET Studios) where he began producing and shooting his own films.

Ray's first independent production, 45 Minutes from Broadway, was released in August 1920 and was fairly successful. In February 1921, he produced and starred in The Old Swimmin' Hole, the only full length, American silent film that did not have intertitles to further the plot. The film drew critical acclaim for going against convention and for featuring a simple plot that was easy to follow without intertitles. Despite the acclaim, the film was only shown for a short time in theaters in larger cities (where such experimental films would likely be more accepted) because the film featured Ray in a country bumpkin role. In February 1922, he signed a long term contract with United Artists.

By the time Ray signed with United Artists, he had grown tired of playing young country bumpkin characters and decided to go against type by casting himself as a romantic leading man. In November 1922, he announced plans to produce an epic historical drama film based on The Courtship of Miles Standish, an 1858 narrative poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The poem centers around a love triangle between early American settlers John Alden, Miles Standish, and Priscilla Mullens. Ray cast himself as John Alden stating that, "There will be immense satisfaction to me in playing a real character, not the puppet of some author's invention."

In her book Off With Their Heads!: A Serio-Comic Tale Of Hollywood, screenwriter Frances Marion wrote that numerous people attempted to dissuade Ray from making the film because lengthy costume dramas were not box office draws at the time. Ray chose not to listen to the advice and, after failing to secure financial backing from a major studio, he put up $500,000 (approximately $7,028,000 today) of his own money to finance the film. Ray began filming The Courtship of Miles Standish in January 1923 at his namesake studio on Sunset Boulevard. Production costs quickly rose as Ray spent money with abandon. In addition to the $65,000 (approximately $914,000 today) 180-ton replica of the Mayflower that was set on a mechanism to simulate it being on rough seas, Ray also had full sized log cabins built solely for exterior shots. By the end of filming, Ray had invested all of his saving, nearly $2 million (approximately $28,113,000 today), and borrowed additional funds at a 30% interest rate to finish the film. The film's final budget was estimated at $3 million (approximately $42,170,000 today).

Released to theaters on December 30, 1923, The Courtship of Miles Standish received some critical acclaim, mainly for its cinematography, but received generally lukewarm reviews and was a box office failure. Ray lost all of the money he invested in the film and his popularity quickly declined. Thomas Ince attempted to help Ray's career by casting him in the drama Dynamite Smith, directed by Ince's brother Ralph. The film did little to help Ray's popularity and Ince died a month after the film's release in November 1924. Ray continued working in films but never regained the popularity he once attained. For the remainder of his career, he was relegated to supporting and uncredited extra work.

Decline and later years

In December 1925, Ray was forced to file for bankruptcy after being sued by more than a dozen creditors for monies owed and back taxes. His production company also declared bankruptcy. Actress Jane Novak later recalled that Ray's wife Clara Grant (whom he married in November 1915) contributed to Ray's egomania and spendthrift ways. The couple lived in a lavish Beverly Hills home equipped with gold doorknobs, several lacquered pianos, black marble bathtubs with gold fixtures and a full sized tree made of semi-precious stones that sat in their bathroom. They employed a full staff of servants and owned a fleet of luxury cars. Grant bought expensive dresses that she refused to wear more than once and traveled in a Rolls Royce with an ermine floor rug. The day before Ray was to file for bankruptcy, the couple held a dinner party with a personal butler for each of their guests at their home that reportedly cost $30,000. Film executive Pat Powers attended the party and asked Ray, "... how can you do this if you're going bankrupt tomorrow? Who will pay the bills? And he [Ray] said, 'we thought it was the thing to do.'"

In 1928, Ray appeared in his final silent film, The Count of Ten, in which he had a supporting role. From 1929 to 1931, he appeared in stage roles in off-Broadway productions but found little success. He returned to the screen in 1932's The Bride's Bereavement; or, The Snake in the Grass, a comedy short and his first sound film. In July 1934, Ray filed for bankruptcy for a second time. He and wife Clara, whom he had been separated from since 1930, divorced in May 1935.

In an attempt to earn money, Ray began writing. In 1935, he released a collection of short stories entitled Hollywood Shorts. In September 1936, he began publishing a magazine called Charles Ray's Hollywood Digest. The magazine featured a mixture of humorous stories, film reviews, jokes, editorials and movie industry news. In the magazine's first issue, Ray wrote a story which poked fun at journalist Walter Winchell. The magazine folded in 1937 due to a lack of public interest.

Ray returned to film work again where he earned a reported $11 a day as a featured extra. On June 4, 1941, he married for a second time to French actress Yvonne Guerin. Guerin died the following year. During his final years, Ray struggled with poor health but continued to work in bit roles. He ended his career in uncredited bit roles in Slightly Dangerous (1943) and An American Romance, which was released a year after his death.

Death

On November 23, 1943, Ray died of a systemic infection caused by an impacted wisdom tooth at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles for which he had been hospitalized six weeks prior. He is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in an unmarked grave in Glendale, California.

For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Charles Ray received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on February 8, 1960, located at 6355 Hollywood Boulevard.

Filmography

Actor
1944
An American Romance as
Graduation Ceremony Attendee (uncredited)
1943
Slightly Dangerous as
Opera Patron (uncredited)
1942
Tennessee Johnson as
Senator (uncredited)
1942
The Postman Didn't Ring as
Juror (uncredited)
1942
The Magnificent Dope (uncredited)
1942
Mrs. Miniver as
Man getting on Bus (uncredited)
1942
The Mad Martindales as
Barbershop Customer (uncredited)
1942
Sunday Punch as
Reporter (uncredited)
1942
Rio Rita as
Hotel Guest (uncredited)
1942
The Vanishing Virginian as
Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)
1941
Harvard, Here I Come! as
Reporter (uncredited)
1941
Appointment for Love as
Butler (uncredited)
1941
Married Bachelor as
Man in Lounge Room Getting Bagpipes (uncredited)
1941
A Yank in the R.A.F. as
American Business Executive (uncredited)
1941
We Go Fast as
Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)
1941
Hurry, Charlie, Hurry as
Newspaper Photographer (uncredited)
1941
The Lady from Cheyenne as
Bit Role (uncredited)
1941
The Man Who Lost Himself (uncredited)
1940
A Little Bit of Heaven as
Uncle Wes
1936
Hollywood Boulevard as
Charlie Smith - Assistant Director
1935
Just My Luck as
Homer Crow
1935
Welcome Home as
Andrew Carr
1934
Ticket to a Crime as
Courtney Mallory
1934
By Your Leave as
Leonard Purcell
1934
Ladies Should Listen as
Henri - House Porter
1934
School for Girls as
Duke
1933
Stolen by Gypsies or Beer and Bicycles (Short) as
Elmer Updike
1932
The Bride's Bereavement; or, the Snake in the Grass (Short) as
Richard
1928
The Count of Ten as
Johnny McKinney
1928
The Garden of Eden as
Richard Dupont
1927
The American as
Bill Smith
1927
Vanity as
Lt. Lloyd Van Courtland
1927
Getting Gertie's Garter as
Ken Walrick
1927
Nobody's Widow as
Honorable John Clayton
1926
The Fire Brigade as
Terry O'Neil
1926
Paris as
Jerry
1926
The Auction Block as
Bob Wharton
1926
Sweet Adeline as
Ben Wilson
1925
Bright Lights as
Tom Corbin
1925
Some Pun'kins as
Lem Blossom
1925
Percy as
Percival Rogeen
1924
Dynamite Smith as
Gladstone Smith
1923
The Courtship of Myles Standish as
John Alden
1923
The Girl I Loved as
John Middleton
1922
Robin Hood as
Extra (uncredited)
1922
A Tailor-Made Man as
John Paul Bart
1922
Alias Julius Caesar as
Billy Barnes
1922
Smudge as
Stephen Stanton
1922
Double Crossed (Short)
1922
The Deuce of Spades as
Amos
1922
Mystery of the Mission (Short)
1922
After the Storm (Short)
1922
Gas, Oil and Water as
George Oliver Watson
1922
African Love (Short)
1922
Saved from the Depths (Short)
1922
The Barnstormer as
Joel
1921
R.S.V.P. as
Richard Morgan
1921
Two Minutes to Go as
Chester Burnett
1921
A Midnight Bell as
Martin Tripp
1921
Scrap Iron as
John Steel
1921
The Old Swimmin' Hole as
Ezra Hull
1920
Nineteen and Phyllis as
Andrew Jackson Cavanaugh
1920
An Old Fashioned Boy as
David Warrington
1920
Peaceful Valley as
Hosiah Howe
1920
The Village Sleuth as
William Wells
1920
45 Minutes from Broadway as
Kid Burns
1920
Paris Green as
Luther Green
1920
Homer Comes Home as
Homer Cavender
1920
Alarm Clock Andy as
Andrew Gray
1919
Red Hot Dollars as
Tod Burke
1919
Crooked Straight as
Ben Trimble
1919
The Egg Crate Wallop as
Jim Kelly
1919
Bill Henry as
Bill Henry Jenkins
1919
Hay Foot, Straw Foot as
Ulysses S. Grant Briggs
1919
The Busher as
Ben Harding
1919
Greased Lightning as
Andy Fletcher
1919
The Sheriff's Son as
Royal Beaudry
1919
The Girl Dodger as
Cuthbert Trotman
1918
Staking His Life as
Frank Hamilton
1918
String Beans as
Toby Watkins
1918
A Liberty Bond Plea (Short) as
A farm boy
1918
The Law of the North as
Alain de Montcalm
1918
A Nine O'Clock Town as
David Clary
1918
The Claws of the Hun as
John Stanton
1918
His Own Home Town as
Jimmy Duncan
1918
Playing the Game as
Larry Prentiss
1918
The Family Skeleton as
Billy Bates
1918
The Hired Man as
Ezry Hollins
1917
His Mother's Boy as
Matthew Denton
1917
The Son of His Father as
Gordon Carbhoy
1917
Sudden Jim as
James Ashe, Jr.
1917
The Clodhopper as
Everett Nelson
1917
The Millionaire Vagrant as
Steven Du Peyster
1917
The Pinch Hitter as
Joel Parker
1917
Back of the Man as
Larry Thomas
1917
Skinner's Dress Suit (unconfirmed)
1917
The Weaker Sex as
Jack Harding
1916
The Honorable Algy as
The Honorable Algy
1916
A Corner in Colleens as
Richard Taylor
1916
Plain Jane as
Mr. 'John Sophomore Adams'
1916
The Wolf Woman as
Rex Walden
1916
Honor Thy Name
1916
Home as
Bob Wheaton
1916
The Deserter as
Lieutenant Parker
1916
The Dividend as
Frank Steele
1916
Peggy as
Colin Cameron
1915
The Painted Soul as
Barnard
1915
City of the Dead (Short) as
Cecil Weatherby
1915
The Coward as
Frank Winslow
1915
The Lure of Woman as
Captain Lane (unconfirmed)
1915
The Ace of Hearts (Short) as
Jean Desmond (as Charles E. Ray)
1915
The Conversion of Frosty Blake (Short) as
Reverend Horace Brightray
1915
The Shoal Light (Short) as
John Coates
1915
The Renegade (Short) as
Captain Marley
1915
The Cup of Life as
John Ward
1915
The Spirit of the Bell (Short) as
Pedro Romez
1915
The Wells of Paradise (Short) as
Tom Dolan
1915
The Grudge (Short) as
Dick Wayne
1915
In the Tennessee Hills (Short) as
Jim Carson
1914
The Fortunes of War (Short) as
Carlos Romez
1914
Not of the Flock (Short) as
Rev. David Boylan
1914
The City of Darkness (Short) as
Donald Warner - the Governor's Brother
1914
The Friend (Short) as
Grant Keller
1914
The Power of the Angelus (Short) as
Juan Puyan
1914
The Word of His People (Short) as
Lieutenant Drake Scranton
1914
One of the Discard (Short) as
Jack Denning
1914
The Silver Bell (Short) as
Captain Gometz
1914
The Gangsters and the Girl (Short) as
Detective John Stone
1914
The Thunderbolt (Short) as
David Corson
1914
The City (Short) as
John Hodges
1914
The Curse of Humanity (Short) as
Roger Collins
1914
Desert Thieves (Short) as
Dave Graham
1914
The Latent Spark (Short) as
Tom Loomis
1914
In the Cow Country (Short) as
Jack Mason
1914
The Card Sharps (Short) as
Harris
1914
The Rightful Heir (Short) as
Phelim O'Neil
1914
Shorty's Sacrifice (Short) as
Tom Simms
1914
The Squire's Son (Short)
1914
Desert Gold (Short) as
Jim Hardy
1914
The Path of Genius (Short) as
John Ruskin
1914
For the Wearing of the Green (Short) as
Michael Finn
1914
Repaid (Short) as
Pedro
1914
For Her Brother's Sake (Short) as
John Frye - the Brother
1914
The Cure (Short) as
James Murphy (unconfirmed)
1914
The Narcotic Spectre (Short)
1914
A Military Judas (Short) as
Jack Warren
1913
Eileen of Erin (Short) as
Dennis Morrissey
1913
The Open Door (Short) as
The Brother
1913
The Soul of the South (Short) as
Jim Page
1913
The Buried Past (Short) as
Tom Winters - the Lover
1913
The Witch of Salem (Short) as
John Hastings
1913
For Mother's Sake (Short)
1913
The Black Sheep (Short) as
Jim Foster
1913
Exoneration (Short)
1913
The Judge's Son (Short)(Unknown)
1913
The Bondsman (Short) as
The Bondsman
1913
The Gambler's Pal (Short)
1913
The Quakeress (Short) as
John Hart - The Schoolmaster
1913
The House of Bondage (Short) as
Nathan Cabot - Hope's Sweetheart
1913
The Red Mask (Short) as
Red Mask
1913
Old Mammy's Secret Code (Short) as
David
1913
The Transgressor (Short) as
Jim
1913
The Boomerang (Short) as
Lt. Calhoun
1913
Joe Hibbard's Claim (Short) as
Joe Hibbard
1913
A Slave's Devotion (Short) as
John Craig
1913
Bread Cast Upon the Waters (Short) as
Lt. Stone
1913
The Grey Sentinel (Short) as
Hal Peters
1913
The Sinews of War (Short) as
John Herzog
1913
The Sergeant's Secret (Short) as
Lt. Jim Brice
1913
The Lost Dispatch (Short) as
Bill Hartman - Nell's Brother
1913
The Barrier (Short) as
Wade - the Young Lieutenant
1913
The Sharpshooter (Short) as
Jack Krone - a Young Blacksmith
1913
The Favorite Son (Short) as
Jim King
1911
The Fortunes of War (Short)
Producer
1923
The Courtship of Myles Standish (producer)
1923
The Girl I Loved (producer)
1922
A Tailor-Made Man (producer)
1922
Alias Julius Caesar (producer)
1922
The Deuce of Spades (producer)
1922
Gas, Oil and Water (producer)
1922
The Barnstormer (producer)
1921
Two Minutes to Go (producer)
1921
A Midnight Bell (producer)
1921
The Old Swimmin' Hole (producer)
Director
1922
Alias Julius Caesar
1922
Smudge
1922
The Deuce of Spades
1922
Gas, Oil and Water
1922
The Barnstormer
1921
R.S.V.P.
1921
Two Minutes to Go
1921
A Midnight Bell
1921
Scrap Iron
Writer
1922
Smudge (scenario)
1921
Scrap Iron (scenario)
1920
Dangerous Business (additional scenes)
1914
The Gangsters and the Girl (Short)
Self
1941
Meet the Stars #8: Stars Past and Present (Documentary short) as
Self
1931
Stars of Yesterday (Short documentary) as
Self
1925
Screen Snapshots, Series 6, No. 2 (Documentary short) as
Self
1925
Twinkle Twinkle (Documentary short) as
Self
1923
Screen Snapshots, Series 3, No. 17 (Documentary short) as
Self
1922
Screen Snapshots, Series 3, No. 14 (Documentary short) as
Self
1921
Screen Snapshots, Series 1, No. 22 (Documentary short) as
Self
1921
Screen Snapshots, Series 1, No. 17 (Documentary short) as
Self
1920
Screen Snapshots, Series 1, No. 2 (Documentary short) as
Self
1920
Screen Snapshots, Series 1, No. 1 (Documentary short) as
Self
Archive Footage
1961
The Legend of Rudolph Valentino (Video documentary) as
Self
1939
Screen Snapshots Series 18, No. 12 (Documentary short) as
Self
1937
Screen Snapshots Series 17, No. 1 (Documentary short) as
Self
1934
The Camera Speaks (Short) as
Self - Silent Film Actor
1933
March of the Movies as
Self - film clip (uncredited)
1931
The House That Shadows Built (Documentary)
1923
Little Miss Hollywood (Short) as
Self in Film Clip

References

Charles Ray (actor) Wikipedia