Jack Raymond
Jack Raymond (1886–1953) was an English actor and film director.[1] Born in Wimborne, Dorset in 1886, he began acting before the First World War in A Detective for a Day.[2] In 1921 he directed his first film and gradually he wound down his acting to concentrate completely on directing - making more than forty films in total before his death in 1953.[3][1]
Jack Raymond  | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1886 | 
| Died | 20 March 1953 (aged 66–67) London, England  | 
| Occupation | Actor; Film Director | 
He was associated with the Hepworth Studios of Walton on Thames, since his portrait appears on a studio publicity postcard when he was probably in his early twenties.
He had a major success in 1930 with The Great Game, one of the earliest films devoted to football and followed it up with Up for the Cup a year later. He remade Up for the Cup in 1950.[4]
Partial filmography
    
    Director
    
- The Vicar of Wakefield (1913)
 - Red, White and Blue Blood (1917)
 - The English Rose (1920)
 - The Flat (1921)
 - A Woman Misunderstood (1921)
 - Tilly of Bloomsbury (1921)
 - The Curse of Westacott (1921)
 - Second to None (1927)
 - Lonesome (1928)
 - Sally of the Scandals (1928)
 - Three Weekends (1928)
 - A Peep Behind the Scenes (1929)
 - Splinters (1929)
 - The Great Game (1930)
 - Mischief (1931)
 - Almost a Divorce (1931)
 - Tilly of Bloomsbury (1931)
 - Up for the Cup (1931)
 - Life Goes On (1932)
 - Say It with Music (1932)
 - Up to the Neck (1933)
 - It's a King (1933)
 - Night of the Garter (1933)
 - Girls, Please! (1934)
 - Come Out of the Pantry (1935)
 - Where's George? (1935)
 - Streamline Express (1935)
 - The Preview Murder Mystery (1936)
 - Talk of the Devil (1936)
 - When Knights Were Bold (1936)
 - Chick (1936, producer)
 - The Frog (1937)
 - Blondes for Danger (1938)
 - A Royal Divorce (1938)
 - You Will Remember (1941)
 - Up for the Cup (1950)
 - Take Me to Paris (1951)
 - Reluctant Heroes (1951)
 
Actor
    
- The Vicar of Wakefield (1913) - Moses Primrose
 - The Lights of Home (1920) - Mark
 - The English Rose (1920)
 - His Other Wife (1921) - Dick Riviere
 - The Dinkum Bloke (1923) - John Gilder
 - Dope (1924)
 - The Only Way (1925) - Jacques
 - Up for the Cup (1931) - Railway clerk (final film role)
 
References
    
- "Jack Raymond". British Film Institute. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
 - "A Detective for a Day (1912)". British Film Institute. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
 - "Jack Raymond". IMDb. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
 - "Jack Raymond - Movies and Filmography - AllMovie". AllMovie. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
 
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