Charles Ray
Actor/Actriz
92
Movies
0
TV Shows
From Wikipedia
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.
Ray was born in Jacksonville, Illinois and moved to Springfield as a child where he attended elementary school. He then moved to Arizona 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.
Ray's popularity increased after appearing in a series of films which cast him in juvenile roles, primarily young hicks or "country bumpkins" that foiled the plans of thieves or con men. 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. Around this time, he left Paramount after studio head Adolph Zukor refused to give him a pay raise. Zukor later wrote in his autobiography The Public Is Never Wrong, that Ray's ego had gotten out of hand and that Ray "...was headed for trouble and did not care to be with him when he found it." After leaving Paramount, Ray formed his own production company, Charles Ray Productions, and also used his fortune to purchase a studio in Los Angeles where he began producing and shooting his own films.
On November 23, 1943, Ray died of a mouth and throat infection at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles for which he had been hospitalized six weeks prior.
For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Charles Ray has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 6355 Hollywood Boulevard.
As Actor/Actress
Rosa de abolengo
Man getting on Bus (uncredited)
Rio Rita
Hotel Guest (uncredited)
Peggy
Colin Cameron
The Clodhopper
Everett Nelson
Dynamite Smith
Gladstone Smith
Home
Bob Wheaton
The Renegade
Captain Marley
Vanity
Lt. Lloyd Van Courtland
The Coward
Frank Winslow
The Dividend
Frank Steele
The Deserter
Lieutenant Parker
Bill Henry
Bill Henry Jenkins
Slightly Dangerous
Opera patron (uncredited)
Hollywood Boulevard
Charlie Smith - Assistant Director
String Beans
Toby Watkins
Sudden Jim
James Ashe, Jr.
The Legend of Rudolph Valentino
Self (archive footage)
Appointment for Love
Butler (uncredited)
The Mad Martindales
Barbershop Customer (uncredited)
Hay Foot, Straw Foot
Ulysses S. Grant Briggs
School for Girls
Duke
An Old Fashioned Boy
David Warrington
Paris Green
Luther Green
The Garden of Eden
Richard Dupont
Nobody's Widow
Honorable John Clayton
Scrap Iron
John Steel
Welcome Home
Andrew Carr
The Man Who Lost Himself
(uncredited)
Ticket to a Crime
Courtney Mallory
The Son of His Father
Gordon Carbhoy