Walter Walker
Born
13 March 1864 (162)
Place of Birth
New York City, New York, USA
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Walter Walker (March 13, 1864 – December 4, 1947) was an American actor of the stage and screen during the first half of the twentieth century. Born in New York City, Walker would have a career in theater prior to entering the film industry. By 1915 he was appearing in Broadway productions, his first being Sinners, written by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Owen Davis. His film debut was in a leading role in 1917's American – That's All. He had a lengthy ...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Walter Walker (March 13, 1864 – December 4, 1947) was an American actor of the stage and screen during the first half of the twentieth century. Born in New York City, Walker would have a career in theater prior to entering the film industry. By 1915 he was appearing in Broadway productions, his first being Sinners, written by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Owen Davis. His film debut was in a leading role in 1917's American – That's All. He had a lengthy career, in both film and on stage, appearing in numerous plays and over 80 films. From 1915 through 1930 Walker would appear over a dozen times on the Great White Way, with some of his more notable plays being An American Tragedy, taken from the best-selling novel of the same name by Theodore Dreiser, and Holiday, produced and directed by Arthur Hopkins. During the late 1910s, and through the 1920s, Walker would combine his stage career with appearances in several films, having mostly starring or featured roles in over half a dozen. He appeared in his last Broadway production in 1930, with a featured role in Rebound, written by Academy Award winner Donald Ogden Stewart. In 1931, Walker would devote his acting energies to the big screen, appearing in over 75 films throughout the rest of the decade. In one of his first films during this decade, he would reprise his role of Henry Jaffrey in the film version of Rebound, which starred Ina Claire, Robert Ames and Myrna Loy. Some of the more notable films in which Walker had either a featured or supporting role include 1933's Flying Down to Rio, the original version of Imitation of Life in 1934, the 1935 version of Magnificent Obsession, the Mae West vehicle Go West, Young Man in 1936, and as Benjamin Franklin in the 1938 film Marie Antoinette. Walker would reprise the role of Franklin for the 1938 short The Declaration of Independence. His final screen appearance in a feature film was in a supporting role in The Cowboy and the Lady in 1938. Walter Walker died on December 4, 1947 while visiting his daughter and her husband in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Filmography (40)
The Declaration of Independence
1938
The Cowboy and the Lady
1938
You Can't Take It with You
1938
Marie Antoinette
1938
The Women Men Marry
1937
Topper
1937
Let Them Live
1937
We Who Are About to Die
1937
Go West Young Man
1936
Yours for the Asking
1936
Everybody's Old Man
1936
Dangerous
1935
She Couldn't Take It
1935
Front Page Woman
1935
Age of Indiscretion
1935
While the Patient Slept
1935
One New York Night
1935
The Gay Bride
1934
Sons of Steel
1934
Babbitt
1934
Strange Wives
1934
Imitation of Life
1934
Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch
1934
A Lost Lady
1934
The Count of Monte Cristo
1934
Sadie McKee
1934
I Believed in You
1934
Bedside
1934
You Can't Buy Everything
1934
The House on 56th Street
1933
Flying Down to Rio
1933
The World Changes
1933
Female
1933
I'm No Angel
1933
I Loved a Woman
1933
Mary Stevens, M.D.
1933
I Love That Man
1933
Hello, Sister!
1933
The Great Jasper
1933
From Hell to Heaven
1933