Carlyle Blackwell(1884-1955)
- Actor
- Director
- Producer
Carlyle Blackwell was a popular American matinee idol and occasional
director of the silent cinema. Debonair and darkly handsome, he made
his debut with Vitagraph in
Uncle Tom's Cabin (1910)
and was seldom out of work as a romantic lead, progressing from one-
and two-reelers to feature films by 1914. He was Kalem's number one
star until 1915, when Jesse L. Lasky
poached him for Famous Players. In 1921, Blackwell embarked on a
European tour and opted to remain in England for the remainder of the
decade, which turned out to be a good career move. He became the first
actor to portray
Bulldog Drummond (1922) in a
British/Dutch co-production, following this box-office success with
another, as Lord Robert Dudley in the period drama
The Virgin Queen (1923). He
retained his popularity until the arrival of sound, which abruptly
ended his career. Blackwell had the final distinction of being the last
silent actor to play Sherlock Holmes at the head of an international
cast in the German production
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1929).