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Leo White

Biography

Leo White

Edit

Overview

  • Born
    November 10, 1882 · Grudziadz, Kujawsko-Pomorskie, Poland
  • Died
    September 20, 1948 · Glendale, California, USA (coronary thrombosis)
  • Birth name
    Leo Weiss
  • Height
    1.68 m

Biography

    • Leo White started in comedy on the boards of English music hall in the late 1890's. He accompanied theatrical producer Daniel Frohman (later a partner of Adolph Zukor in Famous Players Lasky) to Hollywood in 1910. From 1914, he appeared in Essanay comedies and filmed the 'Sweedie' series with Wallace Beery. He then became a regular supporting player in Charles Chaplin's films at Essanay and, later Mutual, playing dapper, moustachioed continental (particularly French) villains and pompous aristocrats. That image remained with him, as he was contracted by Essanay to play the comic foil to their new French star comedian Max Linder.

      White's major dramatic film credits of the silent period included Arènes sanglantes (1922) with Rudolph Valentino and the biblical epic Ben-Hur (1925). He successfully made the transition to talking pictures and had supporting roles in two Marx Brothers comedies, Monnaie de singe (1931) and the classic Une nuit à l'opéra (1935), as well as playing a barber in Chaplin's Le dictateur (1940). In the years just prior to his death, he worked as an extra in several films for Warner Brothers.
      - IMDb mini biography by: I.S.Mowis

Family

  • Spouses
      Maxine Louise Foreman(July 26, 1934 - September 20, 1948) (his death, 3 children)
      Blanche White(? - 1931) (divorced, 2 children)

Trivia

  • Played a wax-moustached villain in early silent movies, including some of the very first Charlie Chaplin shorts.
  • He had a personal log that indicated that he had worked in almost 2,000 films by the late 1930s, most not credited or recorded.

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