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George Walsh

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Occupation
  
Actor

Spouse
  
Seena Owen (m. 1916–1926)

Years active
  
1914-1936

Parents
  
Thomas W. Walsh

Name
  
George Walsh

Children
  
Patricia Walsh Noonan

Role
  
Actor


George Walsh httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
March 16, 1889 (
1889-03-16
)
New York, New York

Died
  
June 13, 1981, Pomona, California, United States

Movies
  
Rosita, The Bowery, The Live Wire, American Pluck, Slave of Desire

Similar People
  
Raoul Walsh, Seena Owen, Ernst Lubitsch, Mitchell Leisen, Dell Henderson

George walsh theatrical reel imdb


George Walsh (March 16, 1889 – June 13, 1981) was an American personality in the early decades of the 20th Century. An all-around athlete, who became an actor and later returned to sport, he enjoyed 40 years of notoriety and was a performer with dual appeal, with women loving his sexy charm and men appreciating his manly bravura.

Contents

George Walsh George Walsh Wikiwand

Known variously as "the Laughing Athletic Thunderbolt," "the Apollo of the Silver Sheet," "the Screen’s Greatest Athlete" and "the King of Smiles", Walsh’s movie career stretched from the start of true US film-making to the Golden Era (20 years) during which time he was featured in approximately 80 productions. He was attached to such studios as Mutual, Chadwick, Triangle, Fox, Universal, Goldwyn, United Artists, and Paramount.

George Walsh George Walsh photo

George Walsh, World War II Veteran (Full Interview)


Beginnings

George Walsh Jim Lanes Cinedrome Movie Playing Cards 5 of Spades George Walsh

Born George Frederick Walsh in Manhattan before New York City was consolidated to Catholic parents of Irish descent. He was the middle child of three siblings. (His older brother was the prolific film director, Raoul Walsh.) At age 16, he was already accomplished at a variety of sports. While studying law, at Fordham and Georgetown Universities, his skill on the football field was such that he became a minor celebrity. He was also briefly with the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Early career

George Walsh George Walsh

While recuperating in California from an injury in late 1914, he entered motion pictures (thanks to Raoul) when he was engaged as an extra for D. W. Griffith’s epic The Birth of a Nation (1915). Various bit parts followed, until a small role in The Fencing Master (1915) proved he was capable. Griffith’s confidence in him was such that he included George in an important scene in his masterpiece, Intolerance (1916). While a cast member he met his first wife, the beautiful actress Seena Owen.

Fox

George Walsh George Walsh

Walsh proved himself at Reliance/Majestic on the west coast and moved to the newly established Fox Film Corporation on the east coast, becoming a serious rival to Douglas Fairbanks there, as well as a national and international star. His output for the studio was characterized by daring stunts, fights, dramatic pursuits, and happy endings with his female co-stars. He also perfected his comedy timing and learned how to get laughs, though it was far from amusing when he quarreled with William Fox about his salary and departed towards the end of 1920. Two years of ups and downs followed which included Serenade (1921), alongside his sister-in-law, Miriam Cooper; varied personal appearances; vaudeville; an unpleasant divorce trial; and an 18-episode historical serial, entitled With Stanley in Africa (1922).

Goldwyn

A single-picture deal Vanity Fair (1923), at Goldwyn Pictures Corporation, led to a long contract and a quick shift from supporting characters to leads. He cemented his return to the big time with the role of Don Diego, opposite Mary Pickford, in Rosita (1923). (Global audiences saw "America’s Sweetheart" get her first grown-up kiss from Walsh in the Ernst Lubitsch-directed vehicle.) More spectacular still was the announcement that June Mathis had selected him to portray Judah Ben-Hur, in the planned picturization of the classic story of Ben-Hur, by Lew Wallace.

Ben-Hur

The word "fiasco" has been attached to Ben-Hur (1925). Early to mid-production was hampered by problems, on location in Italy and in Hollywood – particularly the sudden merger of Goldwyn with Metro, in spring of 1924, to form Metro-Goldwyn (soon afterwards Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer). Despite Mathis’ belief, a strong track record, and his physical suitability, George Walsh was unceremoniously cast aside (in favor of Ramon Novarro), as were June Mathis herself and the director, Charles Brabin. Following the devastating news -- from co-star and friend Francis X. Bushman -- George was soon on his way back to the United States. He would remain vexed that newly formed MGM did little to combat rumors he had not been up to standard.

After Ben-Hur

Despite the loss of the part of a lifetime, George Walsh’s following enabled him to secure a deal with I. E. Chadwick’s independent company (Lionel Barrymore’s employer at the time). From 1925-1926 he was cast in a series of Fox-like entertainments, most of which were well-received and popular. However, broken promises prompted Walsh’s departure for the lower profile, but industrious, Excellent Pictures Corporation. While there, he appeared in several economically produced silents, including The Kick-Off (1926), Broadway Drifter (1927), His Rise to Fame (1927), and Inspiration (1928).

Later career

It was not until 1932 that George Walsh appeared in a talkie, when his brother revived his career by casting him as a criminal in Me and My Gal (1932), with Spencer Tracy and Joan Bennett. The part of ‘Duke’ Castenega convinced himself and others there was life in him yet, and for the next four years he kept busy as a supporting actor and bit part player – a common fate for silent era performers in the age of sound. His retirement was triggered by the fact he was approaching fifty and was no longer in good shape.

After Hollywood

Following the conclusion of his acting career, Walsh returned to horse training and horse breeding, his occupation between silents and talkies. In the 1940s, he married for a second time and enjoyed many years of happy retirement in California. The destruction/loss of two-thirds of his movies meant he could not be included in silent film compilations on TV in the 1960s/70s. Regardless, he was interviewed by historians and journalists who sought him out for profiles, articles and anecdotes.

Death

He died in Pomona, California of pneumonia at the age of 92. He is buried in San Gabriel Cemetery, Los Angeles.

Filmography

Actor
1936
Rio Grande Romance as
Joe Bradley
1936
Pinto Rustlers as
Nick Furnicky
1936
Klondike Annie as
Quartermaster (uncredited)
1936
Murder on the Road as
Mack
1935
The Live Wire as
Bull Dennis
1935
Under Pressure as
Tug (uncredited)
1934
Cleopatra as
Courier
1934
Belle of the Nineties as
Leading Man (scenes deleted)
1933
The Bowery as
John L. Sullivan
1933
The Return of Casey Jones as
Wild Bill Bronson
1933
Black Beauty as
Junk Man
1932
Me and My Gal as
Duke Castenega
1932
Out of Singapore as
Steve Trent
1928
Inspiration as
Gerald Erskine
1927
Back to Liberty as
Jimmy Stevens
1927
Combat as
Jack Hammond
1927
The Winning Oar as
Ted Scott
1927
The Broadway Drifter as
Bob Stafford
1927
His Rise to Fame as
Jerry Drake
1926
Striving for Fortune as
Tom Sheridan
1926
A Man of Quality as
Jack Banning
1926
The Kick-Off as
Tom Stephens
1926
The Test of Donald Norton as
Wen-dah-ben - aka Donald Norton
1926
The Count of Luxembourg as
Rene Duval
1926
The Prince of Broadway as
George Burke
1925
Blue Blood as
Robert Chester
1925
American Pluck as
Blaze Derringer
1923
Reno as
Walter Heath
1923
The Miracle Makers as
Fred Norton
1923
Slave of Desire as
Raphael Valentin
1923
Rosita as
Don Diego
1923
Souls for Sale as
George Walsh (uncredited)
1923
Vanity Fair as
Rawdon Crawley
1922
With Stanley in Africa as
Jack Cameron
1921
Serenade as
Pancho
1921
Dynamite Allen as
'Dynamite' Allen
1920
Number 17 as
Frank Theydon
1920
The Plunger as
'Take a Chance' Schuyler
1920
From Now On as
Dave Henderson
1920
Sink or Swim as
Dick Mason
1920
The Dead Line as
Clay Boone
1920
A Manhattan Knight as
John Fenton
1920
The Shark as
Shark Rawley
1919
The Winning Stroke as
Buck Simmons
1919
The Seventh Person
1919
Putting One Over as
Horace Barney / Jack Trevor
1919
Help! Help! Police! as
George Welston
1919
Never Say Quit as
Reginald Jones
1919
Luck and Pluck as
Joe Grim - aka 'Velvet'
1918
I'll Say So as
Bill Durham
1918
On the Jump as
Jack Bartlett
1918
Brave and Bold as
Robert Booth
1918
Jack Spurlock, Prodigal as
Jack Spurlock
1917
The Pride of New York as
Jim Kelly
1917
This Is the Life as
Billy Drake
1917
The Yankee Way as
Dick Mason
1917
Some Boy as
Joyous Johnson
1917
The Book Agent as
Harry Kelly
1917
High Finance as
Preston Platt
1917
Melting Millions as
Jack Ballantine
1917
The Honor System as
Jack Taylor
1917
The Island of Desire as
Bruce Chalmers
1916
The Mediator as
Lish Henley
1916
Intolerance as
The Bridegroom of Cana
1916
The Beast as
Del Burton
1916
Blue Blood and Red as
Algernon DuPont
1916
The Serpent as
Andrey Sobi
1915
Don Quixote
1915
Queen of the Band (Short) as
Ramar - the Detective
1915
A Bold Impersonation (Short) as
Hawksford
1915
The Way of a Mother (Short) as
Robert Harding
1915
The Pretender (Short) as
Bat Rogers
1915
The Headliners (Short) as
Gabriel - the Headliner
1915
A Bad Man and Others (Short) as
George Hewitt
1915
The Celestial Code (Short) as
Glen Morton
1915
11:30 P.M. (Short) as
Windsor
1915
The Son of the Dog (Short) as
John - The Son of the Dog
1915
The Fencing Master (Short) as
Morode - a Duellist
1915
The Birth of a Nation as
Minor Role (uncredited)
Assistant Director
1932
Wild Girl (assistant director)
1930
The Big Trail (assistant director - uncredited)
Director
1919
The Seventh Person
Writer
1916
The Serpent
Self
1923
Screen Snapshots, Series 4, No. 7 (Documentary short) as
Self
1923
Screen Snapshots, Series 3, No. 23 (Documentary short) as
Self
1918
The Kid Is Clever as
Self / Kirk White
Archive Footage
2022
Davemadson's Fugitive Television: The Rise of Evilestion as
Westinghouse Announcer

References

George Walsh Wikipedia