- Nacimiento
- Defunción21 de septiembre de 1947 · Brentwood, California, Estados Unidos (trombosis coronaria, cáncer de pulmón y enfisema pulmonar)
- Nombre de nacimientoHenry DeWitt Carey II
- Altura1.83 m
- Harry Carey nació el 16 de enero de 1878 en El Bronx, Nueva York, EE.UU.. Fue un actor y escritor, conocido por Caballero sin espada (1939), Trader Horn (1931) y Río Rojo (1948). Estuvo casado con Olive Carey, Fern Foster y Clara Enola Clarkson. Murió el 21 de septiembre de 1947 en California, Estados Unidos.
- CónyugesOlive Carey(5 de enero de 1920 - 21 de septiembre de 1947) (su muerte, 2 niños)Fern Foster(8 de noviembre de 1916 - 15 de julio de 1919) (divorciado)Clara Enola Clarkson(June 26, 1901 - ?) (divorciado)
- NiñosEllen
- Harry Carey Jr.'s wife posted the circumstances of Harry Sr.'s demise on the Internet: "Though reported as such in books, Harry Sr. was never bitten by a black widow spider. He died from a combination of lung cancer and long ongoing emphysema from cigarettes, and pneumonia as a young man. At the Woodlawn Cemetery [Bronx, New York] are Dobe's grandfather [who had the building built], his grandmother, a few other relatives, the stable boy, and Old Joe Harris. Joe Harris was an actor who was in the early plays that Harry did. He and Harry were working on a movie in the late twenties, and Joe said he wanted to get some exercise. Harry had just gotten the Saugus ranch so he told Joe to come up and help pull out tree stumps. Joe came and, like the 'man who came to dinner', stayed for 35 years. He died in our home in Brentwood in the fifties. He sits on the windowsill in an urn next to Harry.".
- After many years of struggle, Carey had finally paid off the mortgages and improvements to his 2,200-acre ranch in the San Fernando Valley and was preparing to sell it to director William Beaudine, when on March 12, 1928, the nearby St. Francis Dam collapsed. More than 400 people were killed and Carey's ranch was completely wiped out.
- The film Tres hijos del diablo (1948) by John Ford is dedicated to him.
- Both Harry and his son Harry Carey Jr. were honored with stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and the Golden Boot Award from the Motion Picture & Television Fund Foundation.
- Inducted into the Hall of Great Western Performers of the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in 1976.
- The Devil Horse (1932) - $10,000
- The Last of the Mohicans (1932) - $10,000
- Trader Horn (1931) - $600 per week
- The Trail of '98 (1929) - $2,500 per week
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