Ralph Faulkner

Ralph Faulkner (July 20, 1891 January 28, 1987) was an American fencer and film actor. He competed in the team sabre event at the 1932 Summer Olympics.[1]

Ralph Faulkner
Personal information
NationalityAmerican
Born(1891-07-20)July 20, 1891
Abilene, Kansas, United States
DiedJanuary 27, 1987(1987-01-27) (aged 95)
Burbank, California, United States
Spouse(s)Edith Jane
Sport
CountryUnited States
SportFencing

Post-college career

After graduating from college Faulkner became a forest ranger. The majority of his time was spent in the wilderness of Washington (state).[2] He then moved to New York, where he established himself as a stage performer and silent film actor.[3]

Introduction to fencing

During the filming of the 1922 film The Man from Glengarry, in which he portrayed a lumberjack, Faulkner fell and broke his left knee. Faulkner underwent surgery and move to Los Angeles.[4] It was here he joined the Los Angeles Athletic Club and took up fencing as a way of recovering. Faulkner reportedly fenced for 50 hours a week until his knee had healed completely. After which, he began competing in organized amateur fencing tournaments around Southern California where he got the opportunity to learn from many accomplished fencers, including Lucien Gaudin, Philippe Cattiau, Oreste Puliti, and Roger Ducret.[5] During this time in his life, Faulkner was making a living selling real estate.[6]

International fencing career

Faulkner won his first major sabre championship in 1928[7] and went on to compete in the 1928 Summer Olympics and the 1932 Summer Olympics. In the 1932 Los Angeles games the United States took fourth place in team sabre. It was the highest finish in the nation's history.[8]

Coaching

Faulkner opened Falcon Studios, a theatre and fencing school with his wife, Edith Jane.[9] He coached many notable actors and actresses for staged swordplay and, himself returned to film in the mid 1930s.[10] Additionally, Faulkner trained a number of fencers for competition including Polly Craus, Sewall Shurtz, and Janice Romary.[11] He taught a classical French style which stressed form, bladework, and finger strength over agility and athleticism, characteristic of the Italian school.[12] Eventually, he retired from film work but continued to teach all three weapons until he suffered a stroke following a Saturday fencing class. He died two weeks later on January 27, 1987 at the age of 95.[13]

Partial filmography

gollark: That sounds about as sensible as daylight saving time.
gollark: There are quite a lot of laws *in general*, enough that you can't practically know what they all are.
gollark: It's an "autonomous commune" in... Seattle or something.
gollark: It's apparently big enough that you would need something like 20 high-end compute GPUs, so... quite a lot of raspberry pis.
gollark: The trouble with this is that scaling it up like this requires ridiculous amounts of computing resources, and now it's so big that individuals probably can't even tractably run it.

References

  1. "Ralph Faulkner Olympic Results". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on April 17, 2020. Retrieved May 3, 2010.
  2. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  3. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  4. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  5. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  6. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  7. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  8. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  9. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  10. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  11. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  12. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
  13. [Evangelista, Nick. The Art and Science of Fencing. Masters, 1999.]
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