Charles Farrell
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Charles Farrell | |
Birth name | Charles Farrell |
Born | August 9, 1901 Wareham, Massachusetts, USA |
Died | May 6, 1990 Palm Springs, California, USA |
Spouse(s) | Virginia Valli |
Charles Farrell (b. August 9, 1901, Wareham, Massachusetts – d. May 6, 1990, Palm Springs, California) was a notable American film actor of the 1920s silent era and into the 1930s and later a television actor. Farrell is probably best recalled for his onscreen romances with actress Janet Gaynor in more than a dozen films, including Seventh Heaven, Street Angel, and Lucky Star.
Farrell began his career in Hollywood taking bit parts in the early 1920s. His first film appearance was in an uncredited role in the 1923 film The Cheat starring the Polish-born screen vamp Pola Negri and actor Jack Holt. Farrell's second film role was in the enormously popular Wallace Worsley-directed 1923 film adaptation of the Victor Hugo novel The Hunchback of Notre Dame starring Lon Chaney.
Farrell continued to work throughout the 1920s in relatively minor roles without much success until the 1927 onscreen pairing with actress Janet Gaynor in the romantic drama Seventh Heaven. The film was a public and critical success and Farrell and Gaynor would go on to star opposite one another in more than a dozen films throughout the late 1920s and into the talkie era of the early 1930s. Unlike many of his silent screen peers, Farrell had little difficulty with "voice troubles" and remained a publicly popular actor throughout the sound era.
During the early 1950s, after his career in motion pictures began to slow, Farrell began appearing on the popular television series My Little Margie. The series ran from 1952 to 1955 and Farrell starred opposite actress Gale Storm, who played his daughter. In 1956 Farrell hosted in his own television program, The Charles Farrell Show.
Farrell married former actress Virginia Valli on February 14, 1931 and the couple were married until Valli's death from a stroke on September 24, 1968.
After retiring from his acting career, Farrell became a lifelong resident of Palm Springs, California and opened the popular Palm Springs Racquet Club in the city with fellow actor Ralph Bellamy.
A major factor in the prosperity of Palm Springs in the 1950s, Farrell was elected mayor of the community in 1953, a position he held for seven years. Farrell died from a heart attack in 1990 at the age of 88 and was interred at the Welwood Murray Cemetery in Palm Springs.
For his contribution to both motion pictures and television, Charles Farrell was awarded two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Hollywood, California at the following locations: 7021 Hollywood Blvd. (motion pictures), and 1617 Vine Street (television).
[edit] Partial Filmography
- Clash of the Wolves (1925) with Rin Tin Tin
- A Trip to Chinatown (1926) with Margaret Livingston and Anna May Wong
- Old Ironsides (1926) with George Bancroft and Wallace Beery
- Seventh Heaven (1927) with Janet Gaynor (first film with Gaynor)
- The Rough Riders (1927) with Noah Beery, George Bancroft, and Mary Astor
- Street Angel (1928) with Janet Gaynor
- Lucky Star (1929) with Janet Gaynor
- The River (1929) with Mary Duncan
- Sunny Side Up (1929) with Janet Gaynor
- High Society Blues (1930) with Janet Gaynor
- The Man Who Came Back (1931) with Janet Gaynor
- Body and Soul (1931) with Humphrey Bogart and Myrna Loy
- Merely Mary Ann (1931) with Janet Gaynor
- Delicious (1931) with Janet Gaynor
- Wild Girl (1932) with Joan Bennett and Eugene Pallette
- The First Year (1932) with Janet Gaynor
- Tess of the Storm Country (1932) with Janet Gaynor
- Girl Without a Room (1933) with Charles Ruggles and Marguerite Churchill
- Change of Heart (1934) with Janet Gaynor, Ginger Rogers, and Shirley Temple (final film with Gaynor)
- Moonlight Sonata (1937) with Paderewski
- Just Around the Corner (1938) with Shirley Temple, Bill "Bojangles" Robinson, and Bert Lahr
- The Deadly Game (1941)
- My Little Margie (1952-1955; television series)