All but forgotten today, Fred Thomson was a silent movie westerner who
at one time rivaled 1920s heroes
Tom Mix and
Hoot Gibson in popularity.
Unlike the early, myth-inducing demise of a
Rudolph Valentino or
Jean Harlow, Fred's
untimely death of tetanus prevented the actor, who was at one time
billed "The World's Greatest Western Star," from creating a durable
Hollywood legacy. Christened Frederick Clifton Thomson, he was born in
Pasadena, California, in 1890 and proved a natural athlete, playing
football at Occidental College in Los Angeles, and then at Princeton
Theological Seminary, and breaking all sorts of various records while a
student. Initially interested in the ministry, he became a pastor in
both Washington, DC, and in Los Angeles, and subsequently married his
college sweetheart, Gail Jepson, in 1913. Following her tragic death of
tuberculosis in 1916, he left his fellowship and enlisted in the
military.
During his duty as a serviceman, he served as a technical adviser for
the film
Johanna Enlists (1918), a
Mary Pickford war feature. It was through Pickford that
he met his second wife, pioneer screenwriter/director
Frances Marion. They
married in 1919 following his WWI overseas duty as an Army chaplain.
Initially interested in directing, he ended up standing in front of the
camera for one of Frances' films
Just Around the Corner (1921) when an actor failed to show
up for a shoot. The movie was a hit, and the handsome, highly appealing
Fred was signed. Following a co-starring role in another Pickford
movie,
The Love Light (1921), which was also directed and written by Frances, Fred
was off and running with his own action serial
The Eagle's Talons (1923), in which he
performed his own stunts. Over the years, he provided heroics in such
oaters as
The Dangerous Coward (1924),
Ridin' the Wind (1925),
The Lone Hand Texan (1924) and the title role in
Lone Hand Saunders (1926).
Towards the end of his career, he was seen playing the legendary Jesse
James and Kit Carson. With his cowboy reputation solidified alongside
faithful horse Silver King, Fred became the No. 2 box office star for
1926 and 1927.
In 1928, the unthinkable happened. Fred, who was in his movie prime at
age 38, was just making his the transition into talkies. He apparently
broke the skin of his foot stepping on a nail while working at his
stables. Contracting tetanus, which the doctors initially misdiagnosed,
he died in Los Angeles on Christmas Day in 1928. His wife and two young
sons survived him.