Tall, athletic leading man, the son of a judge. Lowe was initially
slated for the priesthood but switched career paths on several
occasions, at one time studying law, then teaching English and
elocution. The latter led to his involvement in the acting profession.
After briefly appearing in vaudeville, he joined the
Oliver Morosco stock company in 1911 and
made his Broadway debut six years later in 'The Brat'. Motion pictures
soon beckoned. With his imposing physique and debonair manner he
quickly rose to becoming a popular matinée idol, the Tuxedo-attired
star of such A-grade productions as
East of Suez (1925).
In 1926, Lowe was cast, against type, in the role he would be
identified with for the remainder of his career: that of the brash and
profane Sergeant Harry Quirt in
Maxwell Anderson's World War I
drama
What Price Glory (1926).
He also featured in several sequels, invariably co-starring his
on-screen adversary
Victor McLaglen.
After that, Lowe alternated between romantic lead (such as
Dinner at Eight (1933)) and tough
guy. In the latter category, he gave a strong central performance in
the role of Specs Green in
Dillinger (1945), one of the slickest
productions turned out by little poverty row studio Monogram. The film
elicited complaints from a few meekly-inclined civic groups and was
even banned in Chicago for two years because of its 'brutal,
sensational subject matter'. Irrespectively, it was a winner at the box
office.
Edmund Lowe remained much sought-after by producers, having eased
effortlessly into supporting roles once his days as a star were over.
He worked under contract at 20th Century Fox (1924-27, 1929-32,
1934-35), Paramount (1932-33), MGM (1936) and Universal (1938-39). From
the 1940's, he still played leads for smaller studios, free-lanced and
later acted in television. Late in his career, he starred in his own
half-hour series,
Front Page Detective (1951),
as a sleuthing newspaper columnist. In private life, Lowe had a
reputation for impeccable attire and sartorial elegance. Not as well
remembered today as he deserves to be, he is nonetheless immortalized
with a star on the 'Walk of Fame' on Hollywood Boulevard.