Harry T. Morey
Harry T. Morey | |
---|---|
1920 promotional photograph | |
Born |
1873 Charlotte, Michigan, U.S. |
Died |
January, 24 1936 (aged 62–63) Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Harry Temple Morey (1873 – January 24, 1936) was an American stage and motion picture actor who appeared in nearly two hundred films during his career.
Biography
Born in Charlotte, Michigan, Morey began acting career on the stage.[1] In 1909, Morey joined the Vitagraph Film Company, making him a member the original Vitagraph stock company of actors.[2] He had his first substantial film role in 1910, opposite actors Maurice Costello and Earle Williams in the Van Dyke Brooke-directed dramatic short Capital vs. Labor. He would spend the early 1910s appearing opposite such popular actors of the era as John Bunny, Flora Finch, Julia Swayne Gordon, Florence Turner, Edith Storey and William Shea.
Morey would make his final film appearance in the 1934 Ralph Staub-directed comedy short Very Close Veins opposite actors Ben Blue and Shemp Howard.
Morey died in Brooklyn, New York, USA in 1936 at the age of 62 of a lung abscess.
Selected filmography
- Ben Hur (1907)
- A Cure for Pokeritis (1912)
- All for a Girl (1912)
- Our Wives (1913)
- A Million Bid (1914)
- Wildness of Youth (1922)
- Beyond the Rainbow (1923)
- Where the Pavement Ends (1923)
- The Green Goddess (1923)
- Heart of a Siren (1925)
- Aloma of the South Seas (1926)
- The Fifty-Fifty Girl (1928)
- The Return of Sherlock Holmes (1929)
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harry T. Morey. |