Ray Hallor
Ray Hallor (January 11, 1900 – April 16, 1944)[1] was an actor in films in the United States. Actresses Edith Hallor (1896-1971) and Ethel Hallor (1992 - 1982) were his siblings.[2] He starred in the 1927 film Driven from Home.
He was killed in a head-on auto collision in Palm Springs, California, on April 16, 1944.[3]
Filmography
- Kidnapped (1917)
- Storm Breaker (1925)
- Learning to Love (1925)
- Tropical Nights (1928)
- Driven from Home (1927)
- Fast Life (1929)
- Black Butterflies (1928)
- Circumstantial Evidence (1929)
- Man Crazy (1927)
- Red Dice (1926)
- Thundergod (1928)
- Nameless Men (1928)
- The Last Edition (1925)
- The Haunted Ship (1927)
- Driven from Home (1927)[4]
- It Must Be Love (1926)
- The Trail of '98 (1928)
- The Avenging Shadow (1928)
- An Amateur Orphan (1917)
- The Circus Cowboy (1924)
- The Black Pearl (1928)
- Green Grass Widows (1928)
- The Dangerous Maid (1923)
- Blackbirds credited as assistant director
- Hidden Valley (1932)
Further reading
- Ray Hallow Signed, Motion Picture World January 16, 1926, page 241
gollark: Knowing Trump, something incredibly stupid.
gollark: Wait and see what?
gollark: It would be ... simultaneously quite neat and worrying ... if we got AI stuff which could solve a lot of tasks at human level or better while not working with remotely human-like mental patterns.
gollark: Yes. But they're still annoying.
gollark: And have "rights" and stuff.
References
- Vazzana, Eugene Michael (June 22, 2001). "Silent Film Necrology". McFarland – via Google Books.
- "Edith Hallor: Follies Girl Who Lost Her Boy". March 26, 2018.
- "Desert Sun 21 April 1944 — California Digital Newspaper Collection". cdnc.ucr.edu.
- Lussier, Tim (October 17, 2018). ""Bare Knees" Flapper: The Life and Films of Virginia Lee Corbin". McFarland – via Google Books.
External links
- Ray Hallor on IMDb
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