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IMDbPro

Raymond Griffith(1895-1957)

  • Actor
  • Producer
  • Writer
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Raymond Griffith
Raymond Griffith was born on January 23, 1895 in Boston, Massachusetts into a theatrical family. His parents, James Henry Griffith and Mary Guichard, were both actors, as were his grandfather, Gerald Griffith, and his great grandfather, Thomas Griffith. Young Raymond made his stage debut when he was 15 months old and by the age of seven played the eponymous lead in "Little Lord Fauntleroy." By the time he was eight, he was playing a female role in "Ten Nights in a Barroom."

A childhood case of respiratory diphtheria permanently damaged his vocal chords, and when he was a young boy, Raymond lost his voice while playing a part in "The Witching Hour." "Photoplay" magazine's May 1925 issue reported that his voice went out while he was letting out a scream as his character was about to be beaten, as was required by the script.

"The audience heard a piercing shriek from the boy as he cringed before the whip. That was all. The terror on the boy's face was the terror of realism; he was stricken dumb. He could not speak a line after that scream. He has never spoken a line from the stage since then. His recovery was so gradual that he could not speak above a whisper for years, and he has never recovered the full carrying power, which the stage demands."

The loss of voice was permanent. No longer able to act, Raymond joined a circus, then worked as a dancer and dance teacher at New York City's Grand Central Palace. He subsequently joined the vaudeville circuit, eventually undertaking a European tour with a company of French pantomimists.

Eventually, he joined the U.S. Navy in 1910, when he was 15 years old, and served a two year hitch. Many sources claim his both year as 1890, which likely is the date he gave the Navy in order to enlist.

It has been claimed that after his discharge, he went to California in 1914 where he was hired as an extra by Vitagraph while visiting a friend on a set. Another story has him arriving in California as part of a vaudeville tour and staying to appear in the movies, getting his first job with Kalem in 1915. What is known for sure is that he was working for the L-KO Motion Picture Kompany in 1915, and that he left the studio in early 1916 to work for Mack Sennett, probably primarily as a gag man and scenario writer, though he did perform in Sennett's comedy shorts.

Except for a brief stay at Fox, Griffith worked for Sennett until moving to Triangle in 1917, where he worked as a movie comedian as well as a gagman and scenario writer. Drafted for service in World War I, Griffith was not inducted because of his vocal problems.

Griffith returned to Sennett in 1918, and stayed with him for three years. Eventually, he did less acting and focused more on scenario writing. Leaving Sennett in June 1921 for Marshall Neilan, Griffith returned to acting. The association with Neilan lasted until the Fall of 1922, when he signed with Goldwyn Pictures.

Griffith's first movie for his new studio was the mystery-melodrama "Red Lights" (1924). He appeared in Tod Browning's "The Day of Faith (1923)" with Eleanor Boardman and 'Tyrone Power, Sr.' and "The White Tiger" (1923) with Priscilla Dean and Wallace Beery for Goldwyn, though the latter film was ultimately released by Universal. After the Browning picture, Griffith made just one more movie for Goldwyn, "Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak Model" (1924) with Hobart Bosworth and Mae Busch before signing on with Famous Players-Lasky (Paramount).

During his Goldwyn period, Griffith created an acting style uniquely his own that was a hybrid of the comedic and the dramatic. In his Goldwyn films he played detectives & journalists and characters not entirely on the side of the law. His characters were not explicitly comic, but the characterizations were infused with Griffith's panache, spiced with comic business that occasionally crossed the threshold into slapstick. The style often tipped the scenarios over into farce. It was this style that attracted the attention of Paramount.

The first movie Griffith made at Paramount was Cecil B. DeMille's "Changing Husbands" (1924). His turn in "Paths to Paradise" (1925) won him the highest critical praise, and "Screenland" predicted that he would soon become Charles Chaplin's top rival. In 1926, he made the Civil War comedy "Hands Up!" (1926) that is widely considered his best comedy. Movie critic Walter Kerr wrote in his 1975 book "The Silent Clowns "'Hands Up!' contains some work that is daring ­for its period, certainly ­ and some that is masterfully delicate, the work of an inventive, unaggressive, amiably iconoclastic intelligence."

He continued to do highly praised work in 1926, but his two films of 1927 failed to engender positive reviews. Griffith and Paramount subsequently terminated his contract "by mutual consent."

On January 8, 1928, Raymond Griffith married the stage and film actress Bertha Mann, and they spent a six-month honeymoon in Europe. Griffith didn't appear in any movies in 1928, although he reportedly had several projects in development, including one with 'Howard Hughes' (qv. The couple's first child, Raymond, Jr., tragically was stillborn on June 6, 1929. They had a second child, Michael, who was born on July 16, 1931, and adopted a daughter, Patricia, in 1933. They were married almost 29 years, until Griffith's death.

When Griffith returned to movie-making, he was faced with the prospect of sound. He soldiered on despite his vocal handicap, and made two sound short subjects in 1929.

Alas, it was impossible to be a featured actor in the new medium with a voice that barely rose above a whisper. He made one last appearance, uncredited, as the French soldier whom Lew Ayres mortally wounds and then shares his shell-hole for the night in the classic All Quiet on the Western Front (1930). Because of his wounds, the French soldier cannot speak above a whisper, which enabled Griffith to play the role. The scene, in which the French soldier slowly dies, is made harrowing and haunting by Griffith's performance. Griffith's final appearance onscreen turned out to be one of the most memorable in movie history.

Griffith retired from acting, but not from the movies. He continued to work in the movie industry as a production supervisor and associate producer.

Raymond Griffith was dining at Los Angeles' Masquers Club, a private establishment for actors and producers, on November 25, 1957, when he choked on some food and died of asphyxia. He was 62 years old.
BornJanuary 23, 1895
DiedNovember 25, 1957(62)
BornJanuary 23, 1895
DiedNovember 25, 1957(62)
IMDbProStarmeter
See rank
  • Awards

Photos40

Raymond Griffith in How Stars Are Made (1916)
William Austin and Raymond Griffith in The Night Club (1925)
Raymond Griffith and Dan Russell in Mr. McIdiot's Assassination (1916)
Mae Busch and Raymond Griffith in Nellie the Beautiful Cloak Model (1924)
Annette DeFoe and Raymond Griffith in An Aerial Joy Ride (1917)
Raymond Griffith and Anne Sheridan in Wedding Bill$ (1927)
Raymond Griffith and Vera Reynolds in The Night Club (1925)
Raymond Griffith, Eileen Percy, and Alma Rubens in Fine Clothes (1925)
Raymond Griffith, Percy Marmont, and Eileen Percy in Fine Clothes (1925)
Raymond Griffith and Percy Marmont in Fine Clothes (1925)
Raymond Griffith, Percy Marmont, and Eileen Percy in Fine Clothes (1925)
Raymond Griffith in A Regular Fellow (1925)

Known for

Don Ameche, Gloria Stuart, Pauline Moore, Al Ritz, Harry Ritz, Jimmy Ritz, and The Ritz Brothers in The Three Musketeers (1939)
The Three Musketeers
5.9
  • Producer
  • 1939
Kay Francis, Joel McCrea, Eugene Pallette, and Lilyan Tashman in Girls About Town (1931)
Girls About Town
6.9
  • Producer
  • 1931
Raymond Griffith in The Night Club (1925)
The Night Club
7.0
  • Robert White
  • 1925
Forty Winks (1925)
Forty Winks
  • Lord Chumley
  • 1925

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Actor

  • All Quiet on the Western Front (1930)
    All Quiet on the Western Front
    • (uncredited)
  • The Sleeping Porch
  • Marceline Day and Raymond Griffith in Trent's Last Case (1929)
    Trent's Last Case
  • Post Mortems
  • William Powell, Raymond Griffith, and Vera Voronina in Time to Love (1927)
    Time to Love
  • Raymond Griffith and Anne Sheridan in Wedding Bill$ (1927)
    Wedding Bill$
  • The Waiter from the Ritz
  • Raymond Griffith and Dorothy Sebastian in You'd Be Surprised (1926)
    You'd Be Surprised
  • Helene Costello and Bryant Washburn in Wet Paint (1926)
    Wet Paint
  • Raymond Griffith and Marian Nixon in Hands Up! (1926)
    Hands Up!
  • When Winter Went
  • A Regular Fellow (1925)
    A Regular Fellow
  • Percy Marmont, Alma Rubens, and Lewis Stone in Fine Clothes (1925)
    Fine Clothes
  • Betty Compson, Raymond Griffith, and Bert Woodruff in Paths to Paradise (1925)
    Paths to Paradise
  • Forty Winks (1925)
    Forty Winks

Producer

  • Tyrone Power and Linda Darnell in The Mark of Zorro (1940)
    The Mark of Zorro
    • (uncredited)
  • John Barrymore and Mary Beth Hughes in The Great Profile (1940)
    The Great Profile
  • Joan Bennett, Otto Kruger, Francis Lederer, Lloyd Nolan, and Anna Sten in The Man I Married (1940)
    The Man I Married
  • Alice Faye, Richard Greene, Brenda Joyce, and Fred MacMurray in Little Old New York (1940)
    Little Old New York
  • He Married His Wife (1940)
    He Married His Wife
  • Tyrone Power and Linda Darnell in Day-Time Wife (1939)
    Day-Time Wife
  • Henry Fonda and Claudette Colbert in Drums Along the Mohawk (1939)
    Drums Along the Mohawk
  • Hotel for Women (1939)
    Hotel for Women
  • Don Ameche, Gloria Stuart, Pauline Moore, Al Ritz, Harry Ritz, Jimmy Ritz, and The Ritz Brothers in The Three Musketeers (1939)
    The Three Musketeers
  • Always Goodbye (1938)
    Always Goodbye
  • Joel McCrea, Pauline Moore, Marjorie Weaver, and Loretta Young in Three Blind Mice (1938)
    Three Blind Mice
  • Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1938)
    Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm
  • The Baroness and the Butler (1938)
    The Baroness and the Butler
  • Tyrone Power, J. Edward Bromberg, Stuart Erwin, Lyle Talbot, Claire Trevor, Marjorie Weaver, and Loretta Young in Second Honeymoon (1937)
    Second Honeymoon
  • Shirley Temple, Thomas Beck, Jean Hersholt, and Helen Westley in Heidi (1937)
    Heidi

Writer

  • Joe E. Brown in Local Boy Makes Good (1931)
    Local Boy Makes Good
  • Kay Francis, Joel McCrea, Eugene Pallette, and Lilyan Tashman in Girls About Town (1931)
    Girls About Town
  • Dolores Costello in Expensive Women (1931)
    Expensive Women
  • Dorothy Jordan, Paul Lukas, Vivienne Osborne, and Charles Ruggles in Beloved Bachelor (1931)
    Beloved Bachelor
  • Constance Bennett in Bought! (1931)
    Bought!
  • Frank Fay and Laura La Plante in God's Gift to Women (1931)
    God's Gift to Women
  • Douglas MacLean in Never Say Die (1924)
    Never Say Die
  • Douglas MacLean, Vladimir Stenberg, Georgii Stenberg, and Yakov Ruklevsky in The Yankee Consul (1924)
    The Yankee Consul
  • Going Up (1923)
    Going Up
  • The Crossroads of New York (1922)
    The Crossroads of New York
    • (as Ray Griffith)
  • A Small Town Idol (1921)
    A Small Town Idol
    • (as Ray Griffith)
  • Mack Sennett in Down on the Farm (1920)
    Down on the Farm
    • (as Ray Griffith)
  • Louise Fazenda, Harriet Hammond, Ben Turpin, and Teddy the Dog in The Star Boarder (1920)
    The Star Boarder
    • (uncredited)
  • His Foothill Folly
  • Billy Armstrong and Juanita Hansen in A Royal Rogue (1917)
    A Royal Rogue

Personal details

Edit
    • January 23, 1895
    • Boston, Massachusetts, USA
    • November 25, 1957
    • Masquers Club, Los Angeles, California, USA(asphyxia due to partially masticated food)
    • Bertha MannJanuary 8, 1928 - November 25, 1957 (his death, 2 children)
  • Publicity listings
    • 10 Articles

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    Had to quit acting when sound came along due to the fact that his vocal cords had been damaged when he was younger and he could only talk in a whisper.
  • Quotes
    The most difficult, the most delicate, the most interesting, and a very worthwhile job is that of making people laugh.
    • At the height of his popularity, he usually played charming, elegant and somewhat unemotional characters who always wore a silk hat.

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