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(23 January 1900, Cleveland, Ohio -
18 February 1977, Santa Barbara, California)
Birth
Name - Ralph Horsburgh
In films from the age of 17, American actor Ralph Graves was a
handsome, strapping young man who was most comfortable in comedy.
Graves enjoyed a long-term contract with Mack Sennett studios in the
early '20s, where he was one of the few stars that wasn't a
"grotesque." Indeed, many of Graves' Sennett two-reelers are
romantic comedy-dramas, with virtually no slapstick.
During his Sennett stint, Graves befriended studio gagman Frank
Capra. Upon graduating to director, Capra reciprocated Grave's
kindnesses by casting him in leading-man roles in several Columbia
silent features. From 1928 through 1931, Graves was co-starred with
Jack Holt in a group of rugged Capra-directed adventure films, in
which the two stars were usually at each other's throats over a
pretty girl. Capra continued top-billing Graves in his earliest
talking films, even though the actor's flat, colorless speaking
voice didn't match his "up and at 'em" screen personality.
But Graves was never fully dedicated to acting anyway; a frustrated
writer, he was forever pushing his story ideas upon studio
executives. Occasionally he'd be allowed to direct as well as write
his own silent vehicles (Rich Men's Sons [1926], Fatal Warning
[1928]); Graves also contributed the script for one of his Capra
films, Flight (1928).
In talkies, Graves continued pursuing his writing career, turning
producer for a few minor features towards the end of the '30s. In
his last screen appearances, which he accepted in order to finance
his producing assignments, it is apparent that Ralph Graves had lost
most of his enthusiasm for reciting lines. Playing the lead in the
serial The Black Coin (1935), Graves at one point says "The plane's
on fire!" in a tone of bored disinterest, just as if the plane
caught fire every day around this time. |