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Curtis Benton
Curtis Benton
from Wikipedia

Horatio Curtis Benton (August 26, 1885 – September 14, 1938) was an American actor and screenwriter for silent films and early talkies.

Key Information

Biography

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Born in Toledo, Ohio, Benton, attended Vanderbilt University and embarked upon a stage career in 1903, appearing with Robert Hilliard in A Fool There Was, and two seasons with Cohan and Harris' company where he played parts in The Fortune Hunter, Broadway Jones, and others. His film career included supporting roles in The Pursuit Eternal (1915), Conscience (1915) (which he also wrote), 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1916), Jealousy (1916), The Siren (1917), Fireman, Save My Child (1932) and Kid Galahad (1937).[1][2][3] His writing credits include The Uninvited Guest (1924), It Is the Law (1924), and The Phantom Bullet (1926). In his later years he was a boxing announcer at the Hollywood Stadium.

Death

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He died in Hollywood in 1938 after a six-months illness.[4]

Filmography

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Year Title Role Actor Writer Note
1915
The Story the Silk Hats Told N/a No Yes Short film
Everygirl Love Yes No
The Mystery of the Man Who Slept Jack Christie Yes No
The Honor of the Ormsbys Varden Yes No
The Girl Who Had a Soul undetermined role Yes No
A Witch of Salem Town The Governor Yes No
The Pursuit Eternal Stanlon Leeds Yes No
Conscience undetermined role Yes Yes
The Wrong Label Detective Farnum Yes No Short film
Not a Lamb Shall Stray The Husband Yes No
Capital Punishment No Yes
1916
Madame Cubist Tom Decker Yes No
The Strength of the Weak Tom Dare Yes No
Scorched Wings Robert Blair Yes No Short film
The Girl Who Feared Daylight Bruce Hilton Yes No
Just Kitty George Jennings Yes No
The Devil's Image James Mortimer Yes No
A Stranger in His Own Home Percival Green Yes No
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea Ned Land Yes No
Jealousy Roland Carney Yes No
1917
The Siren undetermined role Yes No
1922
The Fast Freight N/a No Yes
1923
Mighty Lak' a Rose N/a No Yes
1924
Half-A-Dollar-Bill N/a No Yes
The Uninvited Guest N/a No Yes
It Is the Law N/a No Yes
1925
Sporting Life N/a No Yes
1926
The Phantom Bullet N/a No Yes
The Runaway Express N/a No Yes
1927
Down the Stretch N/a No Yes
The Sunset Derby N/a No Yes
The Life of Riley N/a No Yes
Clancy's Kosher Wedding N/a No Yes
1928
Bachelor's Paradise N/a No Yes
United States Smith N/a No Yes
A Dumb Waiter N/a No Yes Short film
Freedom of the Press N/a No Uncredited
A Jim Jam Janitor N/a No Yes Short film
1929
Clunked on the Corner N/a No Yes
A Close Shave N/a No Yes
1931
Slide, Speedy, Slide Radio Announcer Yes No Short film, uncredited
The Pottsville Palooka Yes No
Local Boy Makes Good Announcer at Track Meet Yes No uncredited
1932
Fireman, Save My Child! Radio Announcer Yes No
High Speed Car Racing Announcer Yes No uncredited
The Animal Kingdom Radio Announcer Yes No voice role, uncredited
1933
Thru Thin and Thicket, or Who's Zoo in Africa Yes No Short film
1934
Manhattan Melodrama Announcer Yes No uncredited
1935
Don't Bet on Blondes Announcer of Caprice Race Yes No
1936
It Had to Happen Radio Announcer Yes No
Cain and Mabel Fight Radio Announcer Yes No
Three Men on a Horse Racetrack Announcer Yes No voice role, uncredited
1937
Kid Galahad Announcer Yes No uncredited, final film role

References

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from Grokipedia
Curtis Benton is an American actor and screenwriter known for his role as Ned Land in the 1916 silent film adaptation of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and for his contributions as a writer to numerous silent and early sound films during the 1920s. Born Horatio Curtis Benton on August 26, 1885, in Toledo, Ohio, he began his entertainment career in stage acting before entering the film industry in the mid-1910s, where he appeared in several silent pictures primarily as an actor until around 1917. After stepping away from on-screen acting, he worked as a boxing match announcer at Hollywood Legion Stadium and transitioned into screenwriting, contributing scenarios, adaptations, and stories to several films between the early 1920s and late 1920s, including The Runaway Express (1926), The Sunset Derby (1927), and Down the Stretch (1927). In the sound era, Benton returned to films in uncredited capacities, frequently cast as radio announcers, fight commentators, or similar voice roles in pictures such as Manhattan Melodrama (1934), Cain and Mabel (1936), and Kid Galahad (1937), marking his final contributions to cinema. He died on September 14, 1938, in Los Angeles, California.

Early life

Birth and background

Horatio Curtis Benton was born on August 26, 1885, in Toledo, Ohio, United States. Information about his family background, childhood, or early personal life prior to his professional activities is not well-documented in available reliable sources.

Early stage career

Curtis Benton began his professional career as a stage actor before transitioning to silent films. His early theatrical work included supporting roles in touring productions. Notably, he appeared in the cast of the national touring company production of George M. Cohan's Broadway Jones in 1913, performing in cities such as Richmond. This stage experience preceded his entry into cinema around 1916, where he adapted his theatrical skills to silent film acting. Limited specific details survive about his pre-film theater engagements beyond such touring credits, reflecting the often ephemeral nature of early 20th-century regional stage work.

Silent film career

Acting roles in silent films

Curtis Benton had a brief acting career in silent films from 1915 to 1917, appearing in numerous short films and one notable feature. He often played character roles such as husbands, detectives, and governors in these early productions. His most prominent role was as Ned Land in the 1916 Universal Pictures feature 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, an adaptation of Jules Verne's novel in which he portrayed the skilled Canadian harpooner who joins the expedition aboard Captain Nemo's submarine. Other credits that year included the role of Roland Carney in Jealousy and supporting parts in short films such as The Strength of the Weak as Tom Dare, Scorched Wings as Robert Blair, and Just Kitty as George Jennings. Benton also appeared in several short films in 1915, including Everygirl as Love, The Mystery of the Man Who Slept as Jack Christie, The Wrong Label as Detective Farnum, and Conscience as James Sprague. His silent film acting concluded with an undetermined role in The Siren (1917). After 1917, he shifted focus away from on-screen acting.

Screenwriting credits

Curtis Benton contributed to the silent film industry as a screenwriter, beginning with credits in the mid-1910s and becoming particularly active in the 1920s after largely shifting away from acting. His early writing work included providing the scenario for the short film The Story the Silk Hats Told (1915) and authoring Capital Punishment (1915). After a hiatus, Benton returned to screenwriting in the early 1920s and amassed a substantial body of work over the decade, often serving as scenario writer, adapter, story author, or screenplay contributor on both features and shorts. His credits from this period include The Fast Freight (1922), Mighty Lak' a Rose (1923), The Uninvited Guest (1924), It Is the Law (1924), Sporting Life (1925), The Phantom Bullet (1926), The Runaway Express (1926), Down the Stretch (1927), The Sunset Derby (1927), and The Life of Riley (1927). In the late 1920s, Benton focused on shorter formats, contributing stories and scripts to comedy shorts such as A Jim Jam Janitor (1928), Bachelor's Paradise (1928), United States Smith (1928), Clunked on the Corner (1929), and A Close Shave (1929). Some of his later contributions involved adaptations or uncredited work, reflecting his versatility in supporting silent-era productions across various genres.

Sound era and announcing career

Film appearances as announcer

Curtis Benton made several uncredited appearances in sound films during the 1930s, typically in cameo or voice roles as fight announcers or racetrack announcers, roles that drew directly from his real-life experience as a boxing commentator. These brief parts often involved narrating events within the film's plot, such as sports matches or dramatic broadcasts. Among his notable appearances, Benton portrayed the Radio Announcer in Fireman, Save My Child! (1932) and provided the voice of the Radio Announcer in The Animal Kingdom (1932). He later appeared as the Announcer in Manhattan Melodrama (1934) and as the Fight Radio Announcer in Cain and Mabel (1936). Other roles included the Racetrack Announcer (voice) in Three Men on a Horse (1936) and the Radio Announcer in It Had to Happen (1936). Benton concluded his on-screen career with an uncredited appearance as the Announcer in Kid Galahad (1937). These film roles, though minor and often vocal cameos, reflected the typecasting common for boxing personalities transitioning to early sound cinema.

Boxing announcing work

In the 1930s, Curtis Benton worked as a boxing announcer at Hollywood Legion Stadium. This occurred later in his professional life, alongside his minor film appearances. Benton announced matches at the venue during this period. Specific events or broadcasts he announced remain unverified in available sources.

Death

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