- Date de naissance
- Date de décès26 août 1930 · Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis (hémorragie de la gorge)
- Nom de naissanceLeonidas Frank Chaney
- Surnoms
- The Man of a Thousand Faces
- The Master of Horror
- Taille1,70 m
- Lon Chaney est né le 1 avril 1883 dans le Colorado, États-Unis. Il était acteur et réalisateur. Il est connu pour Le club des trois (1930), Larmes de clown (1924) et Le Fantôme de l'opéra (1925). Il était marié à Hazel Hastings et Frances Chaney. Il est mort le 26 août 1930 en Californie, États-Unis.
- ConjointsHazel Hastings(novembre 1914 - 26 août 1930) (son décès)Frances Chaney(31 mai 1905 - avril 1914) (divorcé, 1 enfant)
- Enfants
- ParentsFrank H. ChaneyEmma Alice Kennedy
- ProchesRon Chaney(Great Grandchild)
- Known as the Man of a Thousand Faces. Master of early screen make-up techniques.
- Macabre, menacing characters who nonetheless always have an undercurrent of pathos and melancholy
- Extremely expressive performances in silent horror films
- A quiet soul by nature, he valued his privacy highly. Granting few interviews and disliking the Hollywood social whirl, he much preferred spending quiet time with his family and a few close friends, often at his cabin in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. This avoidance of publicity led to his being unfairly labeled by some as strange and unfriendly. However, those who knew him best always described him as a good, loving husband, father, and friend. Similarly, his co-stars, among them Loretta Young and Joan Crawford, remembered him as being very cooperative and helpful, especially to those performers without much experience.
- Were it not for his death, he rather than Bela Lugosi would have been Tod Browning's choice for the starring role in Dracula (1931).
- A popular joke of the era was "Don't step on it; it might be Lon Chaney!".
- His knowledge of make-up was so vast that he wrote the entry on the subject for an edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica.
- A child of deaf parents, he became a master of pantomime and understanding people who were born different.
- Between pictures, there is no Lon Chaney.
- My whole career has been devoted to keeping people from knowing me.
- When a makeup is as painful as that which I wore as Blizzard in Satan (1920), when I had my legs strapped up and couldn't bear it that way more than 20 minutes at a time - when I have to be a cripple, as in Le Miracle (1919) or have to keep a certain attitude of body, as I did in Le repentir (1922), it sometimes takes a good deal of imagination to forget your physical sufferings. Yet, at that, the subconscious mind has a marvelous way of making you keep the right attitudes and make the right gestures when you are actually acting.
- I wanted to remind people that the lowest types of humanity may have within them the capacity for supreme self-sacrifice. The dwarfed, misshapen beggar of the streets may have the noblest ideals. Most of my roles since Notre-Dame de Paris (1923), such as Le Fantôme de l'opéra (1925), Larmes de clown (1924), Le club des 3 (1925), etc., have carried the theme of self-sacrifice or renunciation. These are the stories which I wish to do.
- There's nothing funny about a clown in the moonlight.
- Le club des trois (1931) - $3,750 Per Week
- Satan (1920) - $500
- Le Miracle (1922) - $150 /week
- Riddle Gawne (1918) - $125 per week
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