Silent Era Information*Progressive Silent Film List*Lost Films*People*Theaters
Taylorology*Articles*Home Video*Books*Search
 
Pandora's Box BD
 
Silent Era Home Page  >  People  >  Actors  >  Wallace Beery
 
Silent Era People
People active in the silent era and people who keep the silent era alive.
Copyright © 1999-2024 by Carl Bennett and the Silent Era Company.
All Rights Reserved.
 
 
Photograph: Silent Era image collection.

Wallace Beery

Born 1 April 1885 in Kansas City, Missouri, USA, as Wallace Fitzgerald Beery.
Died 15 April 1949 in Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA, of heart failure.

Brother of actor Noah Beery; uncle of actor Noah Beery Jr.

Married actress Gloria Swanson, 27 March 1916; divorced, 12 December 1918.
Married actress Mary Areta Gilman (screen name Rita Gilman), 4 August 1924; divorced, 1 May 1939;
daughter, Carol Ann Beery, born 1 September 1930.

Wallace Beery was raised in Kansas City, Missouri, and left home at age 16 to join the Ringling Brothers Circus as an assistant animal handler but at age 18 he was significantly clawed by a leopard, which signalled the end of his circus career. With his older brother Noah working in New York as a stage actor, Wallace pursued acting as well and eventually worked on Broadway and in typical touring companies of the day.

In Chicago in 1913, Wallace Beery secured film work for the Essanay Film Manufacturing Company. While starring in comedy shorts for the same production company, Wallace met his future wife, Gloria Swanson, and the two were married and soon working in Los Angeles making short comedies at the Keystone Film Company. Gloria went into dramatic parts for Triangle Film Corporation and left to act for Cecil B. DeMille by 1918, and Wallace transitioned from short comedies to feature film character roles in 1917, and the couple were eventually divorced in 1919.

By the 1920s, Wallace Beery was a respected character actor specializing in heavies and he appeared in The Last of the Mohicans (1920), The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921), Robin Hood (1922), Richard the Lion-Hearted (1923), The Sea Hawk (1924), The Pony Express (1925) and The Lost World (1925). His versatility at both drama and comedy led to a series of military buddy-buddy comedies beginning with Behind the Front (1926) and continuing with We’re in the Navy Now (1926) and Now We’re in the Air (1927).

Beery continued his successful career into the golden era and won a Best Actor Academy Award for The Champ (1931).

References: Website-IMDb.

 
Silent Era Home Page  >  People  >  Actors  >  Wallace Beery
 
Pioneers of Africian American Cinema
Become a Patron of Silent Era

LINKS IN THIS COLUMN
WILL TAKE YOU TO
EXTERNAL WEBSITES

SUPPORT SILENT ERA
USING THESE LINKS
WHEN SHOPPING AT
AMAZON

AmazonUS
AmazonCA
AmazonUK

Old Ironsides BD

Little Rascals Vol 1 BD

Beloved Rogue BD

Hitchcock: Beginning BD

Cat and the Canary Standard BD

Charley Chase 1927 BD

Capra at Columbia UHD/BD

Seven Chances/Sherlock Jr BD

L&H Year 2 BD

Anna Boleyn BD