

Harold Lloyd
Acting
April 18, 1893
Burchard, Nebraska, USA
March 8, 1971
Harold Lloyd (April 18, 1893 –March 8, 1971) was an American actor. He has been called the cinema’s “first man in space.” His comedy wasn’t imported from Vaudeville or the British Music Hall like his contemporaries, Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton. Harold learned to use the camera the way other comics used a bowler hat or a funny walk. In 1917 he shed the comedic clown personas prevalent in comedy for hundreds of years and pioneered romantic comedy by the ordinary guy up on the screen –- a guy with faults, and fears, “the boy next door.” With his young man in horned-rimmed glasses, he created classic films.
The Filmography


His Royal Slyness

From Hand to Mouth

Bumping Into Broadway

Don't Shove

Chop Suey & Co.

Count Your Change

Billy Blazes, Esq.

The Marathon

A Sammy in Siberia

Next Aisle Over

Take a Chance

Somewhere in Turkey

Two-Gun Gussie

The Non-Stop Kid

Hey There

It's a Wild Life

Pipe the Whiskers

Here Come the Girls
