Known for Acting

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Charles Robert Starrett (March 28, 1903 – March 22, 1986) was an American actor best known for his starring role in the Durango Kid western series. When he retired he held the record for starring in the longest-running string of feature films (131 titles, half of them being "Durango Kid" films, for Columbia Pictures). A graduate of Worcester Academy in 1922, Starrett went on to study at Dartmouth College. While on the Dartmouth football team he was hired to play a football extra in the film The Quarterback (1926). Bitten by the acting bug, Starrett played minor roles in films and leading roles in stage plays. In 1928, he was a member of the Walker Company, a repertory theatre troupe headed by Stuart Walker. He played the romantic lead in Fast and Loose (1930), which also featured Miriam Hopkins, Carole Lombard, and Frank Morgan. He also starred in the Canadian production The Viking (1931), filmed on location in Newfoundland, which had begun as a Paramount Pictures project. After that he was very active for the next two years but his roles were unremarkable. He was featured in Our Betters (1933), Murder on the Campus (1933). and in his most charming role as a young doctor named Orion in "Along Came Love", with the vivacious co-star Irene Hervey. Offscreen, he helped organize the Screen Actors Guild.
1932
as Terence Granville
1938
as Ted Crosley
1940
as Bill Lowry
1934
as Stephen Hornblow
1930
as Perry
1934
as Russell Gray
1946
as Steve Harmon / Durango Kid
1976
as (archive footage)
1933
as Fleming Harvey
1932
as Ted Streaver
1939
as Tom Randall
1934
as Michael Tracy
1949
as Steve Wood - The Durango Kid
1945
as Jeff Waring / The Durango Kid
1930
as Henry Morgan
1950
as Steve Drake / Durango Kid
1943
as Steve Kendall
1942
as Steve Rideen
1931
as Dudley Crome
1950
as Steve Armitage / The Durango Kid