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Lige Conley
Lige Conley
from Wikipedia

Lige Conley (born Elijah Crommie; December 5, 1897 – December 11, 1937) was an American actor of the silent era. He appeared in 140 films between 1915 and 1938.

Key Information

Biography

[edit]

As Lige Crommie, the curly-haired young comedian joined the stock company of the Mack Sennett studio in 1915. In 1917 he moved to the up-and-coming Hal Roach studio, then producing one-reel comedies with Harold Lloyd, Bebe Daniels, and Snub Pollard. The Roach comedies credited the actor as "Lige Cromley," but since Lloyd and company dominated their pictures, which were limited to single reels, there was little chance for Lige to distinguish himself. He returned to Sennett as a stock player, again as Lige Crommie. When Sennett director Fred Fishback left Sennett for his own unit at Universal Pictures. Lige soon joined him there. [citation needed]

In 1921 the comic finally achieved stardom at Educational Pictures, where he appeared in a long string of brisk, elaborately staged two-reel comedies produced by Jack White. Some of these were directed by Fishback, under the pseudonym of Fred Hibbard. Educational took out trade ads in the mid-1920s, hailing Conley as the next Charlie Chaplin. Conley, with his curly hair and coy grin, did indeed bear a resemblance to the out-of-character Chaplin. [citation needed]

Conley's stock-in-trade was the comedy of embarrassment, as his meek screen character earnestly failed at any occupation he tried. Conley's two most famous comedies are both 1924 releases. Fast and Furious, directed by Norman Taurog, is a fast-moving comedy set in a general store, with Lige doing everything from demonstrating pancake batter to selling shoes. The last half of the film is a spectacular car-motorcycle-and-train chase, some of which was excerpted in the Kevin Brownlow-David Gill silent-film documentary Hollywood (1980). Air Pockets, directed by Fred Hibbard, casts Lige as an inventor about to demonstrate his "folding flivver" automobile to a board of executives. The film shows his accident-prone problems getting to the appointment, then the demonstration (which ends in disaster), and finally his fleeing from the appointment in a runaway airplane.

Educational dropped the Conley comedies in 1926; the last film in the series was Kiss Papa. Conley joined the Fox studio's comedy company, but Fox soon stopped making its own comedy shorts (in favor of releasing Educational's shorts) and Conley was again unemployed. He returned to Educational and Sennett, now playing smaller roles in support of other stars.

Conley did make the transition to the new talking pictures, but only in incidental and bit roles for Educational and Sennett. He continued to play uncredited bits into the 1930s. He died in 1937, struck and killed by the driver of an automobile soon after playing a small role in the Fred Allen comedy Sally, Irene and Mary.

Selected filmography

[edit]

Harold Lloyd comedies featuring Lige Conley:

Starring Lige Conley:

  • Spooks (1922)
  • Cold Chills (1923)
  • This Way Out (1923)
  • Fast and Furious (1924)
  • Air Pockets (1924)
  • Pleasure Bound (1925)
  • Cheap Skates (1925)
  • Matrimony Blues (1926)
  • Kiss Papa (1926)
  • The Battling Kangaroo (1926)
[edit]
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from Grokipedia
Lige Conley is an American silent film actor and comedian known for his fearless execution of dangerous stunts and high-speed action sequences in slapstick short comedies during the 1920s. Born Elijah Crommie on December 5, 1897, in St. Louis, Missouri, he began his career performing in vaudeville and working as a newspaper cartoonist before entering motion pictures in 1915 with bit parts and stunt work at Mack Sennett's Keystone studio. He later appeared in supporting roles at Hal Roach Studios in comedies featuring Harold Lloyd and others, before achieving starring status in a series of two-reel comedies produced by Jack White for Educational Pictures beginning around 1920, often paired with Jimmie Adams. Conley's films were distinguished by their emphasis on frenetic chases, elaborate physical gags, and hazardous set pieces involving vehicles, animals, cliffs, and other perilous elements, earning him promotional nicknames such as "Speed Boy of Comedy" or "High-Speed Boy of Comedy" for his daring approach. Unlike the era's most iconic comedians, he did not cultivate a single highly recognizable screen persona but built a reputation as a versatile and reliable performer willing to undertake extreme physical risks, contributing to well over 100 films across studios including Fox, Sennett, and Educational. In the late 1920s he transitioned to gag writing and occasional directing credits, and with the advent of sound films he largely shifted to uncredited bit parts and supporting roles. Conley died on December 11, 1937, at age 40, after being struck by an automobile.

Early life

Birth and early years

Lige Conley was born Elijah Crommie on December 5, 1897, in St. Louis, Missouri. He later moved to Los Angeles, where he grew up near the Keystone studio. He later became known as Lige Conley.

Vaudeville beginnings

Lige Conley began his performing career in vaudeville under his birth name of Elijah Crommie. He appeared in vaudeville as a child and worked as a newspaper cartoonist for the Los Angeles Express during his teens. He developed his comedy skills through live stage acts, performances in stock companies, and experience in the legitimate stage prior to 1915. Specific details about his vaudeville routines, venues, or duration of involvement remain scarce due to limited surviving records from that era. He later transitioned to motion pictures around 1915.

Silent film career

Entry into films and Keystone roles

Lige Conley began his film career in 1915 at Keystone Studios (then operating as Keystone-Triangle under Mack Sennett), initially taking uncredited bit parts and performing stunt work in the company's signature slapstick shorts. He started under the billing Lige Crommie, derived from his birth name Elijah Crommie, appearing in small ensemble roles that emphasized physical comedy and chaotic group antics typical of Keystone's output. His first credited appearance came in the two-reel comedy Dollars and Sense (1916), directed by Walter Wright, where he played Algy's Valet. He also featured in other Keystone releases such as His Last Laugh (1916), as an accomplice in a theft plot, and His Precious Life (1917), as a telegram boy in a short produced by Mack Sennett and distributed by Triangle. During this early period at Keystone, he adopted the professional name Lige Conley, reportedly petitioning for the change on the grounds that his given name Elijah was unsuitable for a screen performer. These Keystone roles immersed him in the studio's fast-paced slapstick style, allowing him to hone his abilities in physical gags and stunt-driven comedy that would shape his later work as a comedian. Many of these early shorts remain lost or sparsely documented, limiting detailed accounts of his contributions during this formative phase.

Peak years as starring comedian

Lige Conley's peak years as a starring comedian came in the 1920s, when he headlined a series of slapstick two-reel comedies for producer Jack White at Mermaid Comedies and Educational Pictures. Billed as the "Speed Boy of Comedy" or "High-Speed Boy of Comedy," he specialized in fast-paced, frenetic shorts filled with action-oriented mayhem, high-risk stunts, and elaborate physical gags. His films often featured hazardous sequences involving trains, airplanes, Model T automobiles, motorcycles, lions, haunted houses, skyscrapers, and cliff-edge chases, with Conley noted for his willingness to perform any stunt required by the script regardless of danger. Representative starring works from this prolific period include Casey Jones, Jr. (1923), Kick Out (1923), Fast and Furious (1924), Air Pockets (1924), and King of the Kitchen (1926), which showcased his emphasis on physical comedy built around chases, crashes, and inventive slapstick. He maintained a steady output of shorts in the independent and studio system throughout the early-to-mid 1920s, sustaining a reliable presence in the genre even as it produced a high volume of similar two-reelers. While his daredevil approach and consistent work earned him recognition in trade publications of the time, Conley remained a lesser-known figure compared to top silent comedians such as Charlie Chaplin or Buster Keaton, reflecting the crowded field of supporting and mid-tier stars in silent comedy shorts.

Later career and other contributions

Following the end of his starring series in 1926, Lige Conley made occasional starring appearances in shorts for Mack Sennett, Fox, and Educational Pictures, but his lead roles became increasingly infrequent as he shifted toward behind-the-scenes work. He took on gagwriting responsibilities and contributed occasionally as a writer and director for Mack Sennett in 1927 and 1928. During this period he also worked as a gagwriter for Hal Roach. The transition to sound films saw Conley revert to the supporting comedian and bit-player roles that had characterized his earliest screen work, with many appearances in the 1930s going uncredited. His screen activity in that decade was limited and largely minor, culminating in a credited comic routine opposite Fred Allen in the 1938 feature Sally, Irene and Mary. No major sound-era roles or extensive contributions beyond these supporting parts are documented.

Death

Legacy

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