Ernest Torrence
Actor/Actriz
51
Movies
0
TV Shows
He was the man you loved to hiss. This towering (6' 4"), highly imposing character star with cold, hollow, beady eyes and a huge, protruding snout would go on to become one of the silent screen's finest arch villains. Born Ernest Thayson Torrence-Thompson on June 26, 1878, in Edinburgh, Scotland, he was, unlikely enough, an exceptional pianist and operatic baritone. A graduate of the Stuttgart Conservatory, Edinburgh Academy before earning a scholarship at London's Royal Academy of Music, he toured with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company in such productions as "The Emerald Isle" (1901) and "The Talk of the Town" (1905) before serious vocal problems set in. Both Ernest and his actor brother David Torrence came to America directly from Scotland prior to WWI. Focusing instead on a purely acting career, both brothers developed into seasoned players on the New York stage. Ernest made his Broadway bow with "Modest Suzanne" in 1912 and a standout role in "The Night Boat" in 1920 brought him to the attention of Hollywood filmmakers.
He earned superb marks playing the despicable adversary Luke Hatburn in Tol'able David (1921) opposite Richard Barthelmess, and immediately settled into films for the rest of his career. Adept at both comedy and drama, Ernest avoided what could have been a damaging stereotype with his sympathetic portrayal of a grizzled old codger in the classic western The Covered Wagon (1923). He further bolstered his celebrity with plum, lip-smacking roles alongside Lon Chaney in The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923) as Clopin, king of the beggars, and Betty Bronson in Peter Pan (1924) as the dastardly Captain Hook. In an offbeat bit of casting he paired up with Clara Bow in Mantrap (1926) as a gentle, bear-like backwoodsman in search of a wife, and participated in other silent classics such as The King of Kings (1927) (as Peter) and Steamboat Bill, Jr. (1928) as Buster Keaton's steamboat captain Dad.
Despite his celluloid villainy, Ernest was known as a courtly and cultivated gentleman in private. He made the transition into talking films intact and was able to play a marvelous nemesis, Dr. Moriarty, to Clive Brooks ' Sherlock Holmes (1932) before his untimely death. Ernest died following his filming as a smuggler in I Cover the Waterfront (1933) starring Claudette Colbert in New York on May 15,1933, at the relatively young age of 54. It seems that while en route to Europe by ship, Torrence suffered an acute attack of gall stones and was rushed back to a New York hospital. He died of complications following surgery. Looking and usually playing much older than he was, Hollywood lost a marvelously talented and robust character player who had dozens of films ahead of him.
As Actor/Actress
Steamboat Bill, Jr.
William 'Steamboat Bill' Canfield Sr.
Peter Pan
Captain James Hook
The Cossacks
Ivan
The Wanderer
Tola
Fighting Caravans
Bill Jackson
The Tingler
Luke Hatburn (archive footage) (uncredited)
Captain Salvation
Captain of the 'Panther'
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Clopin
The King of Kings
Peter
Sporting Blood
Mr. Jim Rellence
Mantrap
Joe Easter
Untamed
Uncle Ben Murchison
The Bridge of San Luis Rey
Uncle Pio
The Fighting Coward
Gen. Orlando Jackson
The Unholy Night
Dr. Ballou
The Cuban Love Song
Romance
Twelve Miles Out
Red McCue
Clara Bow: Discovering the "It" Girl
Self (from Mantrap [1926]) (archive footage)
The Brass Bottle
Fakresh-el-Aamash
Tol'able David
Luke Hatburn
Screen Snapshots (Series 22, No. 10)
Self (archive footage)
Strictly Unconventional
Lord Porteous
I Cover the Waterfront
Eli Kirk (Julie's father)
The Rainmaker
Mike
Across to Singapore
Captain Mark Shore
Speedway
Jim MacDonald
Sherlock Holmes
Professor James Moriarty
West of the Water Tower
Rev. Adrian Plummer
Singed Wings
Emilio
Hypnotized
Prof. Horace S. Limberly - Hypnotist