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Lynn Reynolds
Lynn Reynolds
from Wikipedia

Lynn Reynolds, Director ad in The Film Daily, 1926

Key Information

Lynn Fairfield Reynolds (May 7, 1889 – February 25, 1927) was an American director and screenwriter. Reynolds directed more than 80 films between 1915 and 1928. He also wrote for 58 films between 1914 and 1927. Reynolds was born in Harlan, Iowa and died in Los Angeles, California,[1] from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Death

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Returning home in 1927 after being snowbound in the Sierras for three weeks, Reynolds telephoned his wife, actress Kathleen O'Connor, to arrange a dinner party at their Hollywood home with another couple. During the dinner, Reynolds and O'Connor engaged in a heated quarrel in which each accused the other of infidelity. With his guests following in an attempt to calm him down, Reynolds left the table to retrieve a pistol from another room where he shot himself in the head.[2][3]

Selected filmography

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It Happened in Honolulu (1916)

References

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from Grokipedia
Lynn Fairfield Reynolds (May 7, 1889 – February 25, 1927) was an American film director and screenwriter known for his prolific career in the silent film era, directing more than 80 films between 1915 and 1927, primarily for Universal Studios. Born on May 7, 1889, in Harlan, Iowa, Reynolds began as a newspaper reporter before entering the film industry, initially acting in several productions for the Burton King Company and then joining Universal as a writer and director. His work encompassed a range of genres during Hollywood's early years, contributing to the development of narrative filmmaking in the 1910s and 1920s. Reynolds died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound on February 25, 1927, in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 37.

Early life

Iowa origins and newspaper work

Lynn Reynolds was born on May 7, 1889, in Harlan, Iowa. He spent his early years in this small Midwestern town in Shelby County. Reynolds began his professional career as a newspaper reporter in Iowa, where he gained experience in journalism before entering the motion picture industry. Details of his specific newspaper employment and early assignments remain limited, but sources consistently describe him as a former Iowa newspaper reporter whose work in journalism laid the foundation for his later storytelling in film. This period in Iowa marked his initial foray into narrative writing and reporting community events prior to his relocation to California around 1914.

Entry into film

Acting and early writing credits

Lynn Reynolds began his film career with minor acting roles in silent short films during the mid-1910s. He appeared as Reginald Smythe in The Rival Stage Lines (1914). In 1915, he played Edna's Father in Roses and Thorns and an uncredited role as Sales Girl in Cactus Jim's Shop Girl. These early performances were in Western-themed shorts, some featuring or directed by Tom Mix. Following these acting credits, which were associated with the Burton King Company and similar early independent productions, Reynolds transitioned to screenwriting and joined Universal Film Manufacturing Company as a writer/director. He contributed scenarios and stories to films starting around 1916, often in the Western and drama genres that characterized his early work at the studio. For example, he wrote the scenario for Miss Blossom (1916) and for Lonesomeness (1916). He also provided the scenario for God's Crucible (1917). Reynolds accumulated 61 writing credits over the course of his career, with his early scenarios helping establish his position at Universal before his work shifted primarily to directing.

Directing career

Universal Pictures and initial films

Lynn Reynolds joined Universal Pictures as a writer-director in 1915, establishing the studio as the primary base for his directing career in the silent film era. He began his directing work with short films that year, starting with the melodramatic romance Both Sides of Life, and completed nine additional shorts in 1915 alone, demonstrating immediate productivity. His first feature-length film was the 1916 romantic melodrama It Happened in Honolulu, followed by other early features such as The Girl of Lost Lake (1916) and Broadway Arizona (1917), which marked his initial foray into Western themes. Reynolds' early output at Universal focused primarily on melodramas, tragedies, and romances centered on love, friendship, and cross-class relationships, and he frequently served as writer-director on these projects. Reynolds proved highly prolific from the outset, contributing to his overall total of 81 directed films between 1915 and 1927, though his initial phase emphasized non-Western genres before a gradual shift toward Westerns. Universal remained central to his work during this formative period, and he later began notable collaborations with stars such as Tom Mix.

Tom Mix collaborations

Lynn Reynolds collaborated closely with Western star Tom Mix in the early 1920s at Fox Film Corporation, directing several action-packed silent Westerns that highlighted Mix's athleticism and charismatic cowboy persona. These films typically featured thrilling stunts, horseback chases, and heroic exploits, reinforcing Mix's image as one of the era's premier cowboy heroes. Reynolds often contributed as writer on these projects, shaping stories that emphasized adventure and moral clarity in rugged Western settings. The collaborations produced notable titles including The Big Town Round-Up (1921), Sky High (1922), Just Tony (1922), For Big Stakes (1922), Tom Mix in Arabia (1922), and Up and Going (1922). Sky High, which Reynolds also scripted, earned an IMDb user rating of 6.1/10 and centered on Mix as a forest ranger combating smugglers in a high-stakes adventure. Just Tony, rated 6.8/10 on IMDb, adapted a Max Brand novel and focused on the bond between a cowboy and a wild horse, showcasing Mix's rapport with his screen companion Tony the Wonder Horse. These vehicles exemplified the fast-paced, stunt-driven Western formula that defined Mix's popularity during this prolific period of his career.

Zane Grey adaptations and later works

In the mid-1920s, Lynn Reynolds directed notable adaptations of Zane Grey novels, contributing significantly to the silent Western genre through faithful renderings of the author's popular stories. These projects, produced by Fox Film Corporation and often starring Tom Mix, highlighted Reynolds' expertise in translating literary Westerns to the screen. He directed Riders of the Purple Sage (1925), an adaptation of Zane Grey's 1912 novel, with Tom Mix in the lead role of the vengeful former Texas Ranger Jim Lassiter, supported by Mabel Ballin as Jane Withersteen and Warner Oland as the antagonist Judge Dyer. The film condensed the novel's themes of revenge, romance, and conflict in the Utah wilderness while retaining key elements like the Surprise Valley climax. Directed with verve, it exemplified Reynolds' status as Tom Mix's favored collaborator for such material. The same year, Reynolds helmed The Rainbow Trail (1925), adapting Zane Grey's 1915 sequel novel and again starring Tom Mix in the continuing saga, alongside actors such as Anne Cornwall and George Bancroft. These two films formed a connected pair of high-profile Zane Grey adaptations that reinforced the appeal of Western literary properties in silent cinema. In his subsequent works, Reynolds continued directing Western features, including Durand of the Bad Lands (1925), The Buckaroo Kid (1926), and Chip of the Flying U (1926). The latter two starred Hoot Gibson and drew from popular Western fiction, maintaining Reynolds' prolific output in the genre during the later phase of his career. These projects underscored his versatility in handling action-oriented Western narratives beyond the Zane Grey adaptations.

Personal life

Marriage to Kathleen O'Connor

Lynn Reynolds married silent film actress Kathleen O'Connor in June 1921. O'Connor had previously worked with Reynolds professionally, appearing in his 1918 Western films Ace High and Mr. Logan, U.S.A., both starring Tom Mix. O'Connor continued her acting career for several years after the marriage, appearing in films through 1924 before retiring from the screen to focus on her home life. Their marriage lasted until Reynolds' death in 1927.

Death

Suicide in 1927

Lynn Reynolds died by suicide on February 25, 1927, in Los Angeles, California, by shooting himself. The incident occurred at his home during or after a welcome-home party held following his return from an on-location film shoot. After an argument with his wife Kathleen O'Connor, Reynolds shot himself in front of guests attending the party. He was 37 years old at the time of his death.
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