Ralph Forbes

Ralph Forbes

ActorSoundtrack
Born
September 30, 1904
Died
March 31, 1951

Ralph Forbes had other ideas than the family wish for him to seek a career in law or the navy. He became interested in acting and began stage work in England. By 1917, he had come to the US to get his feet wet in the film medium with his first silent that year. But he returned to the UK to work in…

Biography

Ralph Forbes had other ideas than the family wish for him to seek a career in law or the navy. He became interested in acting and began stage work in England. By 1917, he had come to the US to get his feet wet in the film medium with his first silent that year. But he returned to the UK to work in the early British film industry from 1921 to 1926. In the latter year, he joined fellow expatriate and A-list star Ronald Colman to play younger brother John in the first Hollywood rendering of Beau Geste (1926). Through the 1920s, he would work with some familiar names: Lon Chaney, Lillian Gish, Norma Shearer, and John Gilbert among many others in varied roles. His handsome features and bright blues eyes gave him an intense look that could well suit numerous young romantic gentleman characters.

A rich, full voice to boot made the sound transition a smooth one. The unevenness and muffled nature of early sound movies was apparent in his first effort Lilies of the Field (1929) which was an early American-based effort by Alexander Korda. In that year of 1930 Forbes' six films prophesied a busy decade to come. In 1931, he did a sequel to Beau Geste which took up the continuing adventures of youngest Geste brother John, Beau Ideal (1930). By 1933, Forbes was much in demand with five or six movie roles a year through most of the decade. He made the costume rounds: including, the first sound The Three Musketeers (1935), Mary of Scotland (1936), and the classic George Cukor Romeo and Juliet (1936) in which he played Juliet's suitor Paris. With all that "gesting" under his belt. it was perhaps not surprising to find Forbes in the sand dunes again for The Legion of Missing Men (1937), where he played the lead in a "gestique"-sort of script with a younger brother coming to join him in the Legion -- some good finale action. It is, therefore, perhaps a bit of a surprise that he did not play John in the more famous remake of Beau Geste (1939) with Gary Cooper. But Ray Milland got the nod that time. Interestingly, this William A. Wellman directed version is almost a carbon copy of the 1926 effort. After 1940, his work was sporadic to the end of the decade. But he did some early TV playhouse productions in 1950 before his untimely passing the next year.

Actor

Studio OneStudio One(1948)as Eric Krogh
Pulitzer Prize PlayhousePulitzer Prize Playhouse(1950)
Masterpiece Playhouse(1950)
The Chevrolet Tele-TheatreThe Chevrolet Tele-Theatre(1948)as Harry Sims
Neighbor to the North(1948)as The Canadian

Soundtrack

Christopher StrongChristopher Strong(1933)

Archive Footage

The House That Shadows BuiltThe House That Shadows Built(1931)

Known for

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Photos 175

Clara Bow and Ralph Forbes in Her Wedding Night (1930)Ralph Forbes and Edmund Lowe in Bombay Mail (1934)Ralph Forbes and Eva von Berne in The Masks of the Devil (1928)Ronald Colman, Ralph Forbes, and Neil Hamilton in Beau Geste (1926)Lillian Gish and Ralph Forbes in The Enemy (1927)Lillian Gish and Ralph Forbes in The Enemy (1927)

Credit Score: Ralph Forbes

98765
19241925192619271928192919301931193219331934193519361937193819391940
George Tempest
Thu Jan 01 1925
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownWinsNomsVotes
1Comin' Thro' the Rye6.5019258.00042
2Beau Geste4.8819267.100646
3The Hound of the Baskervilles3.7519397.40012930
4Twentieth Century3.7519347.2007850
5The Legion of Missing Men3.0919375.100117
6Shock3.0919345.90049
7The Phantom Broadcast3.0919335.600188
8Romeo and Juliet2.5019366.4042432
9Smilin' Through2.5019326.8011782
10The Three Musketeers2.3819355.800449