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Fred Church est un Acteur Américain né le 17 octobre 1889

Fred Church

Fred Church
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Nom de naissance Fred Rosell Church
Nationalité Etats-Unis
Naissance 17 octobre 1889
Mort 7 janvier 1983 (à 93 ans) à Blythe (Etats-Unis)

Fred Rosell Church (né à Ontario dans l'Iowa, le 17 octobre 1889, et mort le 7 janvier 1983 à Blythe, en Californie) est un acteur, réalisateur et scénariste américain du cinéma muet.

Biographie

Fred Church apparaît dans 225 films entre 1908 et 1935.

Il fut le mari de Lillian Christy, qu'il épousa en 1913.

Le plus souvent avec

Source : Wikidata

Filmographie de Fred Church (18 films)

Afficher la filmographie sous forme de liste

Acteur

Madame Du Barry
Réalisé par J. Gordon Edwards
Origine Etats-Unis
Genres Drame, Historique
Acteurs Theda Bara, Charles Clary, Willard Louis, Fred Church, Herschel Mayall, Hector Sarno
Rôle Cossé-Brissac
Note60% 3.0466253.0466253.0466253.0466253.046625
As described in a film magazine, Madame Jeanne Du Barry (Bara) becomes the reigning favorite of Louis XV (Clary) and enjoys this distinction until the sudden death of the king. The lavish mode of living by the king and Jeanne Du Barry arouse the wrath of the peasant class, and after the death of the king a revolution breaks out. Jeanne is made to suffer through the revolution and pays the ultimate price on the guillotine.
The Clever Mrs. Carfax, 50minutes
Réalisé par Donald Crisp
Origine Etats-Unis
Genres Comédie
Acteurs Julian Eltinge, Noah Beery Sr., Jennie Lee, Fred Church, Rosita Marstini
Rôle Billy Wise

Billy Wise met au défi son ami Temple Trask de s'habiller en femme et de prendre un déjeuner avec lui au club. Trask relève le défi et habillé comme Mme Carfax rencontre Helen Scott.
Across the Plains
Réalisé par Gilbert M. Anderson, Thomas H. Ince
Origine Etats-Unis
Genres Western
Acteurs Gilbert M. Anderson, Gladys Field, Arthur Mackley, John B. O'Brien, Fred Church, Harry Todd

A summary of the plot was provided in The Nickelodeon states, "Jennie Lee and her father are on their way to Golden California, from a little Kansas farm, traveling in a prairie schooner. At the last settlement, visited by the two, the old man, who has a weakness for drink, purchases several bottles of [whiskey], which he begins drinking when they have made camp for the night. A lone cowboy calls upon them and finds the old man in a jovial mood and cautions him to beware: of a hostile tribe of Indians, through whose country they are now traveling. Unmindful of the warning, Lee continues to drink until thoroughly intoxicated, despite the pleadings of his daughter. Suddenly, over the brow of a hill a scouting Indian is seen to appear, sees the wagon and the drunken white, and slipping cautiously away, goes to his Indian village where he informs the other braves of the trespassing settlers. The Indians leap astride their shaggy ponies and with war whoops ride off to make short work of the whites. The girl sees them coming and implores her father to get into the wagon, but he refuses and the girl, knowing that she must act quickly if she would save her own life, springs into the wagon, seizes the reins and urges the horses to their utmost speed. After a long and thrilling ride in which the Indians gradually gain on her, she is joined by the friendly cowboy, who sends a crony who was with him, to a neighboring ranch for help. The girl and cowboy race the Indians and pull up at a deserted shack in which they protect themselves against the Indians until the arrival of the ranchmen, who disperse the Indians. The girl expresses her great joy at being rescued and upon proposal of her cowboy protector that she marry him, she readily agrees.