William R. Dunn (May 23, 1888 – March 24, 1946) was an American actor on film and stage and in vaudeville.
William R. Dunn | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | March 24, 1946 Los Angeles, California | (aged 57)
Occupation | Actor |
Spouse | Sabel Johnson Dunn[1] |
Children | 1 |
Dunn was born in Astoria, Long Island, the son of William R. Dunn, a ferry captain, and Martha Wentz. He had two brothers, Eddie and Stanley, who were also actors. He graduated from public schools there.[2]
Dunn debuted as an actor in 1900 with the Corse Payton Stock Company in Brooklyn. He went on to perform in vaudeville.[3]
He appeared along Mary Maurice, Earle Williams, James Morrison, Robert Gaillard, Tefft Johnson, Ralph Ince and Wallace Reid in The Seventh Son (1912), directed by Hal Reid;[4] and along Evelyn Nesbitt, Russell Thaw, Henry Clive, Alphonse Ethier and Jane Jennings in I Want to Forget (1918), directed by James Kirkwood.[5]
Dunn was married to Sabel Johnson, who performed in, and wrote for, vaudeville sketches. They had a son, William Welcome Dunn.[2]
Filmography
edit- Sundown (1941) as Kipsang's Victim
- Stanley and Livingstone (1939) as Chuma
- Too Hot to Handle (1938) as Native Chief
- White Hunter (1936) as Minor Role
- Roberta (1935) as Wabash Indianian
- Black Moon (1934) as Langa
- King of the Jungle (1933)
- Nagana (1933) as Mukovo
- Painted Ponies (1927) as Pinto Pete
- Devil's Island (1926) as Guillet
- Vanishing Hoofs (1926) as Jack Slade
- The Redeeming Sin (1925) as Gaston
- The Forbidden Valley (1920) as Dave
- The House of the Tolling Bell (1920) as Jules La Rocque
- The Blood Barrier (1920) as Eugene Solari
- Respectable by Proxy (1920) as Clinton Hale
- The Undercurrent (1919) as Ivan
- Woman, Woman! (1919) as Bud Hickson
- I Want to Forget (1918) as Helgar
- The Buyer from Cactus City (1918)
- Social Quicksands (1918) as Jim
- The Little Runaway (1918) as Peter Dowd
- Nemesis and the Candy Man (1918)
- Beyond the Law (1918) as Grat Dalton
- The Wooing of Princess Pat (1918) as Count Ladislaus
- His Own People (1917) as Percival Cheltenham
- I Will Repay (1917) as Steve
- The Princess of Park Row (1917) as Kronski
- Mary Jane's Pa (1917) as Barrett Sheridan
- Clover's Rebellion (1917) as Bucky Raine
- The Gift of the Magi (1917)
- Babette (1917) as Guinard
- The Secret Kingdom (1917) as Juan
- The Scarlet Runner (1916) as Fitzgerald
- The Man Behind the Curtain (1916) as Mr. Gardner
- Artie, the Millionaire Kid (1916) as The detective
- Beaned by a Beanshooter (1916) as The Villainous Count
- Mrs. Dane's Danger (1916) as Jasper Dicey
- The Human Cauldron (1916) as Jack
- For a Woman's Fair Name (1916) as Bolles
- The Man He Used to Be (1916) as Robert Landy
- In Arcadia (1916) as The Clerk
- The Surprises of an Empty Hotel (1916) as Alfred the Count
- On Her Wedding Night (1915) as Carlo
- The Kidnapped Stockbroker (1915) as Alan Oldham – MacLaren's Partner
- My Lost One (1915) as Henri Durcharme – the Orchestra Conductor
- The Return of Maurice Donnelly (1915) as Gang Member
- The Juggernaut (1915) as Phillip Hardin
- For Another's Crime (1915) as Steve Harney – Deputy Sheriff
- The Right Girl? (1915) as Mr. Newlywed
- In the Latin Quarter (1915)
- Love and Law (1915)
- Love Will Out (1914)
- Out of the Past (1914) as Cyril Benton
- COD (1914) as Wallie Walton
- The Spirit of the Poppy (1914) as Jack Murray
- The Locked Door (1914) as Harold Forsythe, Arnold's Son
- The Heart of Sonny Jim (1914)
- The Spitfire (1914) as Beasley
- The Bar Cross Liar (1914) as The Bar Cross Liar
- The Caballero's Way (1914) as The Cisco Kid
- A Modern Jekyll and Hyde (1913) as Bill Hykes – Jethro's Henchman
- The Wreck (1913) as John Squires – the Secretary's Son
- The Whimsical Threads of Destiny (1913) as Pietro, Circus Director
- Why I Am Here (1913)
- When Glasses Are Not Glasses (1913)
- The Line-Up (1913) as Harvey Livingston, Edith's Brother
- An Imp Romance (1913) as 2nd Rival Sculptor
- Gold Is Not All (1913) as Mr. Rich
- The New Magdalen (1912) as Horace Holmcroft – a War Correspondent
- The Old Folks' Christmas (1912) as Frank Dobson
- The Long Strike (1912) as Richard Readley
- Lass o' the Light (1912) as The Assistant Lighthouse Keeper
- No Greater Love (1912) as Paul's Brother
- Vengeance (1912) as James Ridley
- Human Hearts (1912)
- Making Good (1912) as Bert Austin – Billy's Rival
- The Widow's Claim (1912) as Jack – the Gambler
- The High Cost of Living (1912) as Mr. Mailman
- Chamber of Forgetfulness (1912) as The Young Man from the West
- Saved from the Titanic (1912) as Jack's pal
- Her Week of Anguish (1912) as The Husband
- The Red Ink Tragedy (1912) as An Innocent Suspect
- A Son's Ingratitude (1912) as Robert Gray – the Son
- The Seventh Son (1912) as One of the Beecham Brothers
- The Black Wall (1912)
- A Cure for Pokeritis (1912)
- The Hobo's Redemption (1912) as Jim Donovan – Manager of the Mine
- For the Honor of the Family (1912) as Maj. Jarvis
- Love Finds the Way (1912) as Wallace Hardy – Jack's Rival
- Love Will Find a Way (1912) as The Rival
- Alma's Champion (1912) as Stephen Bradish
- Vanity Fair (1911)
- The Sick Man from the East (1911) as 1st Thief
- His Wife's Secret (1911) as Jackson
- Saving the Special (1911) as Pete Black – the False Friend
- His Last Cent (1911)
- The Voiceless Message (1911) as The Burglar
- Her Cowboy Lover (1911) as Harry Brady
- The Gossip (1911)
- The Foolishness of Jealousy (1911) as Lou Carson
- The Mate of the 'John M' (1911) as Jim – the Mate of the John M
- The Wager (1911) as Masters
- In the Philippines; or, By the Campfire's Flicker (1911)
- How Millie Became an Actress (1911) as Dick Graham – Millie's Sweetheart
- The Thumb Print (1911) as Martini – Case's Partner
- The Second Honeymoon (1911) as Sadie's Sweetheart
- Birds of a Feather (1911) as Dick – Agnes's Sweetheart
- Billy the Kid (1911)
- The Long Skirt (1911)
References
edit- ^ "Affidavit of Sabel Johnson Dunn, Read in Opposition to Motion". Supreme Court. 1916.
- ^ a b "Harry T. Morey and W. R. Dunn Have Made History in 'Movies'". Tampa Bay Times. February 25, 1917. p. 2J. Retrieved July 2, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Won't let him play nice men". The Tacoma Daily Ledger. November 7, 1920. p. 58. Retrieved July 2, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Fleming, E.J. (October 25, 2013). Wallace Reid: The Life and Death of a Hollywood Idol. McFarland Publishing. p. 32. ISBN 9780786477258.
- ^ Mavis, Paul (June 8, 2015). The Espionage Filmography: United States Releases, 1898 through 1999. McFarland Publishing. p. 150. ISBN 9781476604275.