Hugh Trevor Explained

Hugh Trevor
Birth Date:28 October 1903
Birth Place:Yonkers, New York City, U.S.
Death Place:Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Birthname:Hugh Trevor-Thomas
Occupation:Actor
Yearsactive:1927–1933

Hugh Trevor (born Hugh Trevor-Thomas; October 28, 1903 – November 10, 1933) was an American actor whose short career began at the very end of the silent era in 1927. He would appear in nineteen films in the scant six years during which he was active. He did not fare well with the advent of talking pictures, and retired from the industry in 1931. His life was cut short when he unexpectedly died from complications following appendectomy surgery in 1933.

Early life

Trevor was born on October 28, 1903, in Yonkers, New York.[1] He studied at Harvard University.[2] After college, he began a successful insurance business. In 1925, through his uncle, producer William LeBaron, he went to sell an insurance policy to Richard Dix,[3] the film star. Dix was impressed by Trevor, and arranged for him to screen test, which Dix himself directed.[4]

Film career

Subsequent to his screen test, Trevor made his film debut in the 1927 film, Ranger of the North, where he played second fiddle to the dog star, Ranger. Although he would work for several studios, the bulk of his films were produced by F.B.O. Productions (FBO – also known as FBO Pictures Corporation), and later by RKO Radio Pictures, after FBO was merged with RCA to form RKO. While he never worked with Dix, he did work with other famous film figures of that era, including Mary Astor, Bryant Washburn, Chester Conklin, Noah Beery, the comedy team of Wheeler & Woolsey (Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey), Betty Compson, and Lowell Sherman. In 1929, Trevor was romantically linked with actress Aileen Pringle, following their working together on the film Beau Broadway the prior year.[5] [6] During his film career he was also romantically linked with another co-star, Betty Compson, who at one point was considering marrying him (after her divorce from James Cruze).[7] [8]

After the creation of RKO, Trevor would also work with his relative, William LeBaron.[9] As the film industry transitioned into sound pictures, studios would create films in both sound and silent versions. Trevor's film, Love in the Desert, was one such film, and he and his co-star, Olive Borden, were featured in Photoplay magazine highlighting the new "Photophone" sound process.[10] However, with the onset of talking pictures, his career began to fade, and he retired from the film industry in 1931, his last film being RKO's The Royal Bed.

Later career

After leaving films, he remained in Los Angeles, returning to the insurance industry, where he went into partnership with James Ryan, specializing in policies to those in the film industry. In 1933, less than two weeks after his thirtieth birthday, he suffered from appendicitis. He died of complications from the resulting appendectomy, and was buried in Hollywood Forever Cemetery.

Filmography

(as per AFI's database)

YearTitleRoleSilent (S)/Talkie (T)Notes
1927Ranger of the NorthBob FlemingSLost film
1928Beau BroadwayKiller GordonSLost film
Dry MartiniBobbie DuncanSLost film
Her Summer HeroKenneth HolmesSLost film
Hey Rube!StringSLost film
The Pinto Kid Dan LoganSLost film
Red Lips"Spike" BlairSLost film
Skinner's Big IdeaJack McLaughlinSLost film
Taxi 13Dan ReganS
WallflowersRufusSLost film
1929Love in the DesertBob WinslowS & T
Night ParadeBobby MurrayT
Joe GarvinT
1930ConspiracyJohn HowellT
BillyT
Half Shot at SunriseLieut. Jim ReedT
Midnight MysteryGregory SloaneT
RockyT
1931Crown Prince WilliamT

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hugh Trevor . Theiapolis.com . September 28, 2014.
  2. Web site: The Stars of Hollywood Forever . Turner Classic Movies . Scott . Tony . March 13, 2006 . September 28, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140928173631/http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/person/194067%7C71807/Hugh-Trevor/biography.html . September 28, 2014.
  3. News: Motion Picture Magazine . The Answer Man . January 1931 . 115 .
  4. Web site: Hugh Trevor Biography . Fandango.com . September 28, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140928174421/http://www.fandango.com/hughtrevor/biography/p71762 . September 28, 2014.
  5. News: Photoplay . Hollywood – A Manless Town . September 1929 . 42 .
  6. News: Photoplay . Gossip of all the Studios . November 1929 . 105 .
  7. News: Photoplay . Cal York's Monthly Broadcast from Hollywood . May 1931 . 80 . Cal York was a pseudonym, an amalgam of California and New York.
  8. News: Motion Picture News . They say that – Quaint Quips . September 20, 1930 . 43 .
  9. Web site: Hugh Trevor filmography. American Film Institute . September 28, 2014 .
  10. News: Photoplay . Hello, Readers! . October 1929 . 72 .