Joe King (actor)
Joe King (February 9, 1883 – April 11, 1951) was an American actor of silent films and talkies as well as a director and writer.
Joe King | |
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Who's Who in the Film World, 1914 | |
Born | Austin, Texas, USA | February 9, 1883
Died | April 11, 1951 68) Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA | (aged
Years active | 1912–1946 |
Biography
King was born in Austin, Texas as Joseph Sayer King and acted in 211 films from 1912 to 1946. He appeared in his later years mainly in minor, uncredited roles. He directed two films, both in 1916 and wrote one script in 1915. Joe King was married to actress Hazel Buckham and he died in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California.
Selected filmography
- The Battle of Gettysburg (1913) - Jack Lamar - the Confederate Brother
- Her Bounty (1914, Short) - David Hale
- The Pipes o' Pan (1914, Short) - Stephen Arnold
- The Eternal Feminine (1915) - John Strong
- Big Timber (1917)
- The Rose of Blood (1917)
- Madame Du Barry (1917)
- The Last Rebel (1918)
- Everywoman's Husband (1918)
- Shifting Sands (1918)
- The Hand at the Window (1918)
- The Secret Code (1918)
- Love's Prisoner (1919)
- The Imp (1919)
- The Way of the Strong (1919)
- False Evidence (1919)
- The Broadway Bubble (1920)
- Man and Woman (1920)
- The Idol of the North (1921)
- The Girl with the Jazz Heart (1921)
- Salvation Nell (1921)
- Anne of Little Smoky (1921)
- The Face in the Fog (1922)
- The Daring Years (1923)
- Twenty-One (1923)
- Unguarded Women (1924)
- Tin Gods (1926)
- The Laughing Lady (1929)
- Broadway Hostess (1935)
- Moonlight on the Prairie (1935)
- The Walking Dead (1936)
- Road Gang (1936)
- Bullets or Ballots (1936) as Captain Dan "Mac" McLaren (credited as Joseph King)
- Fly-Away Baby (1937)
- White Bondage (1937)
- Hot Water (1937)
- You Can't Get Away with Murder (1939) as Principal Keeper (P.K.) (credited as Joseph King)
- Destry Rides Again (1939)
- Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum (1940)
- Butch Minds the Baby (1942)
- The Big Shot (1942)
- She Has What It Takes (1943)
- Magnificent Doll (1946) (uncredited)
gollark: They can just send JSON-serialized messages or whatever, it's just slower than using one binary.
gollark: Not really.
gollark: I mean, programs are written in Java, C(++), Rust, Python, whatever else, some of them run in browsers with their own totally different system, and none of them are particularly binary-compatible.
gollark: What, so then you introduce piles of overhead communicating between them?
gollark: Plus, how do you deal with the myriad of different frameworks each one uses?
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