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Lon Chaney

Lon Chaney

Highest Rated: 100% Outside the Law (1920)

Lowest Rated: 50% A Blind Bargain (1922)

Birthday: Apr 1, 1883

Birthplace: Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA

Lon Chaney was an American actor, director, writer, and makeup artist who revolutionized acting on film through his groundbreaking use of makeup and prosthetics, which he utilized to play a wide array of often grotesque and tortured characters, and still remains an icon of the silent film era to this day. Born Leonidas Frank Chaney on April 1, 1883 in Colorado Springs, CO, Chaney's interest in acting began out of necessity: both of his parents were deaf, so communicating with them was in essence an act of pantomime. Chaney was nineteen years old when he began acting professionally, traveling the country as a Vaudeville and theater performer. In 1905, the 22-year-old Chaney married 16-year-old singer Cleva Creighton; the next year their only child, a son they named Creighton Tull Chaney, was born. Eventually the family settled in California, but their marriage began to flounder. The breaking point came in 1913, when Cleva attempted suicide by swallowing mercuric chloride at the Majestic Theater in downtown Los Angeles, where Chaney was producing a vaudeville revue. Cleva survived, but she was unable to continue singing as a result of the poisoning. Soon afterwards, the couple divorced, young Creighton was placed in protective care, and Chaney was forced out of the theater scene. He would focus on working in film for the rest of his life. From 1912-1917, Chaney worked exclusively under contract for Universal Studios, doing bit parts, sadly, the majority of these films have since been lost to time. During this time, Chaney made some important connections, beginning a collaboration with the husband and wife director team of Joe DeGrasse and Ida May Park, who gave him substantial roles and encouraged him to play darker characters, and in 1915, marrying a chorus girl named Hazel Hastings. This pairing would prove to be much happier than Chaney's first marriage, and the new couple were able to gain custody of Creighton, who was now 10 years old, and had been raised in various homes and boarding schools since his parents' divorce. Chaney then began a collaboration with fellow actors Dorothy Phillips and William Stowell, which began with the trio starring in "The Piper's Price" (1917). Between that and their final film together, "Paid in Advance" (1919), they would appear alongside one another in a whopping fourteen films. However, it was his role in "The Miracle Man" (1919) that would make Chaney a star. Critics and audiences were wowed by Chaney's acting ability, but also by his use of makeup. Before Chaney, makeup in cinema was almost non-existent, aside from a fake beard or goatee used to denote a villain. There were no professional makeup artists, so actors were expected to do their own makeup. Chaney's skills with makeup earned him the nickname "The Man of a Thousand Faces," and gave him a huge advantage professionally: he could play any role given to him, and sometimes, like in the case of "Outside the Law" (1920), he could play multiple characters. Many of the characters he inhabited, such as Quasimodo in "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" (1923) Erik, the deformed ghoul who haunts the Paris Opera House in "The Phantom of the Opera" (1925), and the ghastly Man in the Beaver Hat from "London After Midnight" (1927), are still iconic to this day (which is remarkable, considering that "London After Midnight" is one of the most sought after lost films ever), largely because the horror of their visage is tinged with a degree of sympathy and pathos that Chaney was able to exude. Audiences may have been frightened and enraptured by Chaney's onscreen appearance, but they knew very little of the man offscreen. Chaney was notoriously private; he did almost no promotional work for any of his movies, gave very few interviews, intentionally avoided the social scene in Hollywood, and by all accounts lived a quiet life of domestic bliss with Hazel and young Creighton when he wasn't working. Despite this reticence to socialize, he was beloved by his fellow actors, known for mentoring young aspiring thespians, and always willing to share his professional observations with both cast and crew. Sadly, Chaney's reign as a Hollywood superstar would prove to be short-lived. While filming the melodrama "Thunder" (1929) in the winter of 1929, he came down with pneumonia. When his condition didn't improve, Chaney returned to the doctor, and was diagnosed with bronchial lung cancer. Despite this, he continued working on the film, which proved to be a grave mistake: during filming, artificial snow, made out of cornflakes, became lodged in Chaney's throat, creating a serious infection. On August 26, 1930, mere weeks after the release of his lone "talkie" picture, "The Unholy Three" (1930), Lon Chaney died of a throat hemorrhage at the age of 47. Even in death, Chaney remained mysterious: for reasons unknown, his crypt at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, CA remains unmarked. Three years later, his wife Hazel passed away, and was interred next to her beloved husband. As for young Creighton, he would continue his father's legacy of playing grotesque and tortured characters. Audiences came to know him as Lon Chaney Jr.

Highest rated movies

100% The Unknown
100% Outside the Law
100% The Kaiser, the Beast of Berlin
95% The Miracle Man
93% The Hunchback of Notre Dame
90% The Phantom of the Opera
88% The Unholy Three
83% The Penalty

Photos

THE WOLF MAN, Evelyn Ankers, Lon Chaney Jr., 1941 THE UNHOLY THREE, Lon Chaney, Sr., 1930 ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN, (aka ABBOTT & COSTELLO CONTRE FRANKENSTEIN), Bud Abbott, Glenn Stange, Lou Costello, Bela Lugosi (back left), Lon Chaney, Jr. (back right), 1948 THE GHOST OF FRANKENSTEIN, Lon Chaney Jr., 1942 THE UNHOLY THREE, Lila Lee, Lon Chaney, 1930 WHILE THE CITY SLEEPS, Lon Chaney, Sr., 1928 THE UNHOLY THREE, Lila Lee, Lon Chaney, 1930 WHILE THE CITY SLEEPS, Lon Chaney, 1928, window HOUSE OF DRACULA, Lon Chaney Jr., 1945 ROAD TO MANDALAY, Lon Chaney, Sr., 1926 THE UNHOLY THREE, Lon Chaney, 1930 PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, Lon Chaney, Mary Philbin, 1925, menacing THE WOLF MAN, Lon Chaney Jr., Evelyn Ankers, 1941 WEST OF ZANZIBAR, Lon Chaney, Mary Nolan, 1928 LONDON AFTER MIDNIGHT, Lon Chaney, Sr., 1927 THE WOLF MAN, Lon Chaney, Jr., 1941 UNHOLY THREE, THE, Harry Earles, Ivan Linow, Lon Chaney, 1930 THE WOLF MAN, Lon Chaney, Jr., 1941 OUTSIDE THE LAW, Lon Chaney, Sr., 1921 THE UNHOLY THREE, from left: Lila Lee, Lon Chaney, 1930

Filmography

Movies

Credit
No Score Yet 100% Lon Chaney: A Thousand Faces Unknown (Character) - 2000
No Score Yet 59% The Unholy Three Echo (Character) - 1930
No Score Yet 57% Where East Is East Tiger Haynes (Character) - 1929
75% No Score Yet Thunder Grumpy Anderson (Character) - 1929
No Score Yet 81% West of Zanzibar Phroso (Character) - 1928
No Score Yet No Score Yet While the City Sleeps Dan Coghlan (Character) - 1928
No Score Yet 93% Laugh, Clown, Laugh Tito Beppi (Character) - 1928
No Score Yet 43% Mr. Wu Mr. Wu/Wu's Grandfather (Character) - 1927
No Score Yet 30% Mockery Sergei (Character) - 1927
75% 44% London After Midnight Unknown (Character) - 1927
100% 88% The Unknown Alonzo (Character) - 1927
No Score Yet 31% The Blackbird The Blackbird/The Bishop (Character) - 1926
No Score Yet 64% Tell It to the Marines Sergeant O'Hara (Character) - 1926
No Score Yet No Score Yet The Road to Mandalay Singapore Joe (Character) - 1926
No Score Yet 36% The Monster Dr. Ziska (Character) - 1925
90% 84% The Phantom of the Opera Erik, The Phantom (Character) - 1925
88% 79% The Unholy Three Professor Echo, the Ventriloquist (Character) - 1925
No Score Yet 86% He Who Gets Slapped Paul Beaumont, aka HE (Character) - 1924
No Score Yet 38% The Shock Wilse Dilling (Character) - 1923
93% 76% The Hunchback of Notre Dame Quasimodo (Character) - 1923
No Score Yet 47% Shadows Yen Sin (Character) - 1922
No Score Yet 64% Oliver Twist Fagin (Character) - 1922
50% No Score Yet A Blind Bargain Unknown (Character) - 1922
No Score Yet No Score Yet Flesh and Blood David Webster (Character) - 1922
No Score Yet 66% The Ace of Hearts Farallone (Character) - 1921
No Score Yet 29% Nomads of the North Raoul Challoner (Character) - 1920
100% 57% Outside the Law Black Mike Sylva/Ah Wing (Character) - 1920
83% 77% The Penalty Blizzard (Character) - 1920
82% No Score Yet Treasure Island Blind Pew / Merry (Character) - 1920
No Score Yet No Score Yet The Gift Supreme Unknown (Character) - 1920
No Score Yet 50% The Wicked Darling Stoop Connors (Character) - 1919
No Score Yet 50% Victory Ricardo (Character) - 1919
No Score Yet No Score Yet The False Faces Unknown (Character) - 1919
95% No Score Yet The Miracle Man Unknown (Character) - 1919
No Score Yet No Score Yet Broadway Love Elmer Watkins (Character) - 1918
100% No Score Yet The Kaiser, the Beast of Berlin Unknown (Character) - 1918
No Score Yet No Score Yet The Scarlet Car Paul Revere Forbes (Character) - 1917