~Roland West~
Born: February 20, 1885 in Cleveland, Ohio, USA Died: March 31, 1952 in Santa Monica, California, USA
|
A former vaudeville and stock actor, Roland West entered films as a performer during the World
War I era. A director from 1918 onward, West specialized in "old dark house" thrillers with an inner
lining of humor, notably The Monster (1925) and The Bat (1926). Appearing in many of West's
silent efforts was his actress wife, Jewel Carmen. In the first three years of the sound era, West
turned out a fascinating body of work: Alibi (1929), The Bat Whispers (1930) and Corsair (1931),
standard melodramas lifted out of the ordinary by the director's innovative camera techniques.
Corsair turned out to be West's last film; his many personal idiosyncrasies had hardly endeared
him with the Hollywood hierarchy: he insisted upon shooting only at night and never permitted
any producers of any kind on his set. If his film career hadn't ended in 1931, it would have been
utterly destroyed in 1935, when West was implicated in the mysterious -- and still unsolved --
death of his former mistress, actress Thelma Todd. During the last two decades of his life, Roland
West managed a popular Hollywood restaurant.
Biography by AllMovie.com
~Director~
The Dove (1927)
The Bat (1926)
The Monster (1925)
Driftwood (1924)
The Unknown Purple (1923)
Nobody (1921)
The Silver Lining (1921)
De Luxe Annie (1918)
The Siren (1917)
A Woman's Honor (1916)
Lost Souls (1916)
~Writer~
The Dove (1927) (adaptation)
The Bat (1926) (adaptation)
The Monster (1925) (adaptation)
Daring Love (1924) (adaptation)
The Unknown Purple (1923) (adaptation)
Nobody (1921) (screenplay) (story)
The Silver Lining (1921) (writer)
~Producer~
The Bat (1926) (producer)
Nobody (1921) (producer)
The Silver Lining (1921) (producer)