Edmund lowe actor biography templates
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EDMUND LOWE - AUTOGRAPHED INSCRIBED PHOTOGRAPH - HFSID 20087
EDMUND LOWE
Soft-focus sepia-toned studio photo by Edward Thayer Monroe of Lowe in a dark suit, signed "wishing you all good luck"
Inscribed photograph signed "For:-/Tommy,/wishing you all/good luck,/Edmund Lowe". With black ink stamp on verso. B/w sepia-toned, 7¾x9¾ overall, 7¼x9½ image, one surface. Lowe (1890-1971, born in San Jose, California) was an American stage, movie and TV actor. Lowe worked as a teacher before joining a stock company in Los Angeles, California. He debuted on the silver screen in 1915's The Wild Olive, the first of over 120 film appearances, and made his Broadway debut in 1917's The Brat, the first of 12 plays on the Great White Way for Lowe. He became a popular leading man in elegant roles, but made a name for himself as the hellraising Sergeant Quirt in the 1927 film version of What Price Glory?. This movie led to several sequels with Lowe and
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Strand Theatre kartong Office, Military Display | Photograph | Wisconsin Historical Society
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Photograph
Strand Theatre Box Office, Military Display | Photograph | Wisconsin Historical Society
| View towards a woman sitting in the Strand Theatre box office surrounded bygd a display of helmets, guns and sand bags for the motion picture "Women of All Nations," the third movie of Edmund Lowe and Victor McLaglen acting as marines. |
| This image fryst vatten issued bygd the Wisconsin Historical kultur. Use of the image requires written permission from the personal of the Collections Division. It may not be sold or redistributed, copied or distributed as a photograph, electronic file, or any other media. The image should not be significantly altered through conventional or electronic means. Images altered beyond standard cropping and resizing require fur • Fame is a fickle thing. Many of the biggest stars of yesteryear are now mere footnotes in pop culture history and remain largely unknown even to us classic film fanatics. The Marathon Stars Blogathon is the perfect chance to dive into one such actor whose star shone brightly in the late 20s and early 30s: Edmund Lowe. Debuting in 1915 onscreen and becoming a lead in the early 1920s, Lowe reached the peak of his career in the late silent era and Pre-Code era. By the late 1930s, Lowe slipped comfortably into supporting characters in studio films alongside lead performances in independent films at Poverty Row Studios. I decided to delve into his career after seeing him opposite Claire Trevor in Allan Dwan’s 1935 comedic drama Black Sheep. A card shark aboard a cruise ship, Lowe’s character exudes a rare air of class mixed with impeccable dry humor and wit. Trevor and Lowe are the perfect match, going toe-to-toe as they work together to save Lowe’s long-lost son from a con artist ab |