Known for Acting

Jay Silverheels was born on a reservation in Canada to a Mohawk chief. He was a star lacrosse player and a boxer before he entered films as a stuntman in 1938. He worked in a number of films though the 1940s before he gained some notice as the Osceola brother in Humphrey Bogart's film Key Largo (1948). Most of his roles consisted of bit parts as "Indian." In 1949, he would work in a movie called The Cowboy and the Indians (1949) with another "B movie" actor named Clayton Moore. It was later that same year that Jay would be hired to play the faithful Indian companion, Tonto, in the television series "The Lone Ranger" (1949). This role, while still playing the "Indian," would bring Jay the fame that his motion picture career never did. As Tonto, on his horse Scout, Jay could show up where the Ranger could not and some of the time he would be shot at or beat up for his trouble. Jay would play Tonto in all the episodes except for those that he missed when he had his heart attack. In those episodes, he was replaced by the Ranger's nephew, Dan. However, Clayton Moore would miss the third season when he was replaced by John Hart. Jay would reprise the role of Tonto in two big-screen color movies with Moore, The Lone Ranger (1956) and The Lone Ranger and the Lost City of Gold (1958). After the series ended in 1957, Jay could not escape the typecasting of Tonto. He would continue to appear in an occasional film and television show, but he would become a spokesman to improve the portrayal of Indians on TV.
1950
as Geronimo (uncredited)
1969
as Condemned Man at Hanging (uncredited)
1948
as Indian Guide at Pier (uncredited)
1948
as Tom Osceola (uncredited)
1940
as Native Lookout
1948
as Indian (uncredited)
1941
as Indian
1956
as Tonto
1954
as Yaqui
1951
as Little Crow
1968
as Tonto (archive footage)
1949
as Creek Indian (uncredited)
1943
as Indian (uncredited)
1973
as The Chief
1959
as Tonto (uncredited)
1952
as Geronimo
1947
as Coatl (uncredited)
1944
as Guard at Execution (uncredited)
1954
as Cajou
1949
as Walter