Known for Acting

It was Lionel Barrymore who gave Louis Wolheim his start as an actor. Wolheim had had his face more or less smashed in and his nose nicely fractured while playing on a scrub Cornell football team. Later as a Cornell Instructor he found life none too easy. He had worked off and on as an extra in the Wharton studio but never received much attention. Barrymore had only to look at him once to realize that Wolheim's face was his fortune. Through Barrymore, Wolheim gained an entree into New York theatrical life. On the legitimate stage he made a great success in "Welcome Wing" and "The Hairy Ape", climaxing these plays by his triumph in "What Price Glory". Louis Wolheim died in Los Angeles, California on 18 February 1931, the result of stomach cancer.
1930
as Stanislaus 'Kat' Katczinsky
1920
as Music Hall Proprietor
1921
as Executioner (uncredited)
1928
as Nick Scarsi
1930
as Ted
1927
as Peter O'Gaffney
1930
as George Balt
1923
as Laird
1928
as Sergeant Bulba
1931
as Dan Thorn
1923
1929
as Gullion
1922
as Craigin
1929
as Jacques Duval
1929
as Slag
1921
as Crime
1928
as Le Bete
1918
as Patch-eye Pete
1929
as Duke
1931
as Captain Sam McVey