Dwight Frye
Actor/Actriz
56
Movies
0
TV Shows
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Dwight Iliff Frye (February 22, 1899 – November 7, 1943) was an American stage and screen actor, noted for his appearances in the classic horror films Dracula, Frankenstein and Bride of Frankenstein.
Frye was born in Salina, Kansas. Nicknamed "The Man with the Thousand-Watt Stare," and "The Man of a Thousand Deaths," he specialized in the portrayal of mentally unbalanced characters, including his signature role, the madman Renfield in Tod Browning's 1931 version of Dracula. Later that same year he also played the hunchbacked assistant in the film Frankenstein. (This character, named Fritz, is often mistakenly referred to as Ygor, a character originated by Béla Lugosi in the later film Son of Frankenstein.)
Frye had a prominent role in the 1933 horror film The Vampire Bat, starring Lionel Atwill, Melvyn Douglas, and Fay Wray, in which he played Herman, a half-wit suspected of being a killer. He also had a memorable role in the classic Bride of Frankenstein, in which he played Karl. The part of Karl was originally much longer and many extra scenes of Frye were shot as a sub plot but were edited out of the final version to shorten the running time as well as to appease the censor boards. The most memorable of these "cut scenes" was that of Karl killing the Burgomaster portrayed by E. E. Clive. No known prints of these scenes survive today, but photographs of the scene were used to illustrate the scene's synopsis and are included in the recent Universal DVD release of the film.
During the early 1940s, Frye alternated between film roles and appearing on stage in a variety of productions ranging from comedies to musicals, as well as appearing in a stage version of Dracula. In 1924 he played the Son in a translation of Luigi Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author.[1] There was a Dwight Frye Fan Club at one time,[2] but it is currently dormant. He also made a contribution to the war effort by working nights as a tool designer for Lockheed Aircraft. Frye's strong resemblance to former Secretary of War Newton D. Baker helped land him what would have been a substantial role in the biographical film Wilson, based on the life of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, but he died of a heart attack while riding on a bus in Hollywood a few days before filming was to have begun.
Frye was interred in Glendale's Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Dwight Frye, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia
As Actor/Actress
Drácula
Renfield
Frankenstein
Fritz
El hombre invisible
Reporter (uncredited)
La novia de Frankenstein
Karl
Frankenstein y el hombre lobo
Rudi a Vasarian
Mystery Ship
Rader
Drácula
Renfield (archive footage) (uncredited)
El Fantasma de Frankenstein
Villager at Meeting / Grave Robber (flashback) (uncredited)
The Man in the Iron Mask
Fouquet's Valet
Los verdugos también mueren
Hostage
Fast Company
Sidney Z. Wheeler
Drums of Fu Manchu
Prof. Anderson
Sea Devils
SS Paradise Radio Operator (uncredited)
The Vampire Bat
Herman Gleib
The Man Who Found Himself
Hysterical patient
Something to Sing About
Mr. Easton (makeup supervisor)
The Son of Monte Cristo
Pavlov's Secretary (Uncredited)
Dead Men Walk
Zolarr
Phantom Raiders
Eddie Anders
Dangerous Blondes
Hoodlum (uncredited)
The Maltese Falcon
Wilmer Cook
Submarine Alert
Haldine (uncredited)
Legacy of Screams: The Evolution of Horror Movies
Self - (archive footage)
Atlantic Adventure
Spike Jonas
The Shadow
Vindecco
The Night Hawk
John Colley
Who Killed Gail Preston?
Mr. Owen
Devil Pays Off
Radio Operator
The Doorway to Hell
Monk, Gangster
The Black Camel
Jessop the Butler (uncredited)