Niles Welch
American actor
Niles Welch
Niles Welch in 1920
Born Niles Eugene Welch
(1888-07-29 ) July 29, 1888Died November 21, 1976(1976-11-21) (aged 88) Nationality American Occupation Actor Years active 1913–1940 Spouse Elaine Baker
Niles Eugene Welch (July 29, 1888 – November 21, 1976) was an American performer on Broadway , and a leading man in a number of silent and early talking motion pictures from the early 1910s through the 1930s.
Early life
A native of Hartford, Connecticut , after graduating from St. Paul's School ,[ 1] Welch attended Yale and Columbia University .[ 2] Later he joined a stock company, and from there toured the U.S. in vaudeville . The first film he worked in was The Stranger in Grey with the Eastern Vitagraph Studios .
Career
After spending four years on the legitimate stage, Welch started his screen career appearing with World Film Corporation , Universal , Pathé Studios and Goldwyn Pictures . Among his earliest works were two Thomas Ince productions, Stepping Out and The Cup of Life , followed in rapid succession by Miss George Washington, with Marguerite Clark ; The Courage of Marge O'Doone, with Pauline Starke ; and with Grace Darmond [citation needed ] in The Gulf Between (1917), the first feature film produced in the two-strip version of Technicolor.[ 3] His career continued well into the sound era but mainly in bit roles.
Welch was the announcer for Columbia's American School of the Air on CBS radio in 1939.[ 4] During World War II, he made foreign-language broadcasts for the Voice of America (VOA), using his fluency in French and German. He had his own program on VOA in addition to participating in daily broadcasts on the short-wave broadcasts to Europe. In 1945, a door at the VOA studio in New York hit Welch on his forehead, causing both retinas to detach. He lost sight in one eye and had partial vision in the other eye for one year, after which he became totally blind.[ 5] [ 6]
On Broadway, Welch portrayed David Cornish in The Donovan Affair (1926).[ 7]
Personal life and death
Welch was married to actress Elaine Baker.[ 5] He died in Laguna Niguel, California, on November 21, 1976, at age 88.[ 4]
Selected filmography
One Good Joke Deserves Another (1913, Short)
Love's Quarantine (1913, Short) - False Policeman
The Carpenter (1913, Short)
The Only Way (1913, Short)
Our Wives (1913, Short) - Stanton
A Royal Family (1915)
Emmy of Stork's Nest (1915) - Benton Cabot
A Yellow Streak (1915) - Tom Austin
Merely Mary Ann (1916)
The Kiss of Hate (1916, *lost film) - Paul Turgeneff
The Crucial Test (1916, *lost film) - Vance Holden
Behind the Veil (1916, Short) - Wilbur Steele
The Garden of Shadows (1916, Short) - The Father
Miss George Washington (1916, *lost film) - Cleverley Trafton
One of Many (1917) - Harold Templeton
The Gulf Between (1917, *lost film, only very short fragments survive) - Richard Farrell
The Secret of the Storm Country (1917, *lost film) - Frederick Graves
Shame (1917) - Donald Strong
The Gates of Gladness (1918) - Myron Leeds
Her Boy (1918, *lost film) - David Morrison
The Face in the Dark (1918) - Richard Grant
Jane Goes A-Wooing (1919, *lost film) - Monty Lyman
The Winning Girl (1919, *lost film) - Stanley Templeton
Reclaimed: The Struggle for a Soul Between Love and Hate (1919) - Frank Truman
Little Comrade (1919, *lost film) - Bobbie Hubbard
The Law of Men (1919, *lost film) - Denis Connors
The Virtuous Thief (1919, *lost film) - Bobbie Baker
Stepping Out (1919, *unknown/presumably lost) - Robert Hillary
Beckoning Roads (1919) - Humphrey Wells
The Luck of Geraldine Laird (1920, *lost film) - Dean Laird
The Courage of Marge O'Doone (1920, *lost film) - David Raine
The Spenders (1921) - P. Percival Bines
Reputation (1921, *lost film) - Jimmie Dorn
Who Am I? (1921) - Jimmy Weaver
The Cup of Life (1921) - Roy Bradley or Warren Bradford
Remorseless Love (1921) - Enoch Morrison
The Sin of Martha Queed (1921) - Arnold Barry
The Way of a Maid (1921) - Thomas Lawlor
Why Announce Your Marriage? (1922) - Jimmy Winthrop
Reckless Youth (1922) - John Carmen
Evidence (1922) - Phillip Rowland
Under Oath (1922) - Hartley Peters
Rags to Riches (1922) - Dumbbell - aka Ralph Connor
Who Are My Parents? (1922) - Ken (her son)
What Wives Want (1923) - David Loring
Sawdust (1923) - Phillip Lessoway
The Six-Fifty (1923, *lost film) - Mark Rutherford
The Whispered Name (1924) - John Manning
My Man (1924) - Dicky Reynolds
The Right of the Strongest (1924) - Austin Jr.
Wine of Youth (1924) - Robert (1897 prologue)
Virtue's Revolt (1924) - Steve Marbridge
Dangerous Pleasure (1924) - Alan Gordon
Scandal Street (1925) - Neil Keenly / Harrison Halliday
Fear-Bound (1925) - Tod Vane
The Girl on the Stairs (1925) - Frank Farrell
Lying Wives (1925) - Wallace Graham Jr
A Little Girl in a Big City (1925) - Jack McGuire
Ermine and Rhinestones (1925) - Billy Kershaw
The Substitute Wife (1925) - Lawrence Sinton
In Borrowed Plumes (1926) - Philip Dean
The Virgin Wife (1926) - Thomas Lattimer
The Men Women Love (1926) - Keith
Faithful Wives (1926) - Charles Austin
Spider Webs (1927) - Bert Grantland
Carry on, Sergeant! (1928, Canadian) - Donald Cameron
Hell Divers (1931) - Lt. Commander Standing Next to Captain (uncredited)
The Phantom (1931) - Sam Crandall
Convicted (1931) - Roy Fenton
Manhattan Parade (1931) - Frank Harriman (uncredited)
The Rainbow Trail (1932) - Willets
Cross-Examination (1932) - Warren Slade
Border Devils (1932) - Tom Hope
The Famous Ferguson Case (1932) - Jeff Haines—Reporter (uncredited)
Cornered (1932) - Moody Pierson
McKenna of the Mounted (1932) - Morgan
The Night Club Lady (1932) - Dr. Baldwin (uncredited)
Come On, Tarzan (1932) - Steve Frazier
A Scarlet Week-End (1932) - The Wife's Former Fiancée
Silver Dollar (1932) - Congressman William Jennings Bryan (uncredited)
Sundown Rider (1932) - Houseman - Banker
The Mysterious Rider (1933) - John Foster
The Constant Woman (1933) - Hotel Clerk (uncredited)
Zoo in Budapest (1933) - Mr. Vandor
The Lone Avenger (1933) - Martin Carter
Dangerous Crossroads (1933) - Gang Member
The Wolf Dog (1933) - Mason
The Women in His Life (1933) - Pinball Spectator (uncredited)
Let's Fall in Love (1933) - Archie Frost (uncredited)
The Fighting Code (1933) - Crosby (uncredited)
Massacre (1934) - Arena Announcer (uncredited)
This Side of Heaven (1934) - Druggist (uncredited)
The Show-Off (1934) - Ship #2 Officer (uncredited)
I Believed in You (1934) - Painter (uncredited)
Cross Streets (1934) - Jerry Clement
Whom the Gods Destroy (1934) - Forrester Associate (uncredited)
We're Rich Again (1934) - Guest on Yacht (uncredited)
Here Comes the Navy (1934) - USS Arizona Officer (uncredited)
The Count of Monte Cristo (1934) - De Villefort's Agent (uncredited)
Tomorrow's Youth (1934) - Mr. Hall's Attorney
Jealousy (1934) - Police Doctor (uncredited)
The Secret Bride (1934) - Senate Clerk (uncredited)
Death Flies East (1935) - Simpson (uncredited)
Living on Velvet (1935) - Major's Aide (uncredited)
Stone of Silver Creek (1935) - Rev. Timothy Tucker
The Miracle Rider (1935) - Metzger
Air Hawks (1935) - McCoy - Dispatcher (uncredited)
Stranded (1935) - Safety Engineer (uncredited)
Riding Wild (1935) - Clay Stevens
Shipmates Forever (1935) - Naval Academy Entrance Examiner (uncredited)
Music Is Magic (1935) - Film Director (uncredited)
The Ivory-Handled Gun (1935) - Pat Moore as a young man
The Singing Vagabond (1935) - Judge Forsythe Lane
The Story of Louis Pasteur (1935) - Courier with Letter (uncredited)
Wife vs. Secretary (1936) - Tom Axel (uncredited)
Foolproof (1936, Short) - John Harwood
The First Baby (1936) - Father in Park (uncredited)
Gentle Julia (1936) - Book Salesman (uncredited)
The Country Beyond (1936) - Party Guest (uncredited)
For the Service (1936) - Parson (uncredited)
Mary of Scotland (1936) - Minor Role (uncredited)
To Mary – with Love (1936) - Secretary
What Becomes of the Children? (1936) - Thomas Scott
Empty Saddles (1936) - Jasper Kade
Thirst Aid (1937, Short) - Nails Dolan
The Purple Vigilantes (1938)
Boy in Court (1940, Short) - Narrator (final film role)
References
^ Fox, Charles Donald; Silver, Milton L. (1920). Who's Who on the Screen . Ross publishing Company. p. 256. Retrieved July 25, 2020 .
^ Lowrey, Carolyn (1920). The First One Hundred Noted Men and Women of the Screen . Moffat, Yard. p. 194. Retrieved July 25, 2020 .
^ "Niles Welch" . AllMovie . Archived from the original on July 25, 2020. Retrieved July 25, 2020 .
^ a b "Niles Welch, Actor of Broadway And 20's and 30's (sic) Motion Pictures" . The New York Times . December 21, 1976. p. 36. ProQuest 122799665 . Retrieved July 25, 2020 – via ProQuest .
^ a b Walton, Bob (December 23, 1973). "A Time To Live" . The Sacramento Bee . California, Sacramento. Universal Press Syndicate. p. 40. Retrieved July 25, 2020 – via Newspapers.com .
^ "Bob Walton's Time to Live" . Syracuse Post Standard . December 25, 1973. p. 45. Retrieved April 17, 2017 .
^ "Niles Welch" . Internet Broadway Database . The Broadway League. Archived from the original on July 25, 2020. Retrieved July 25, 2020 .
External links
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