Anthony Dexter

Anthony Dexter

actor

Anthony Dexter was born on Jan 19, 1913 in USA. Anthony Dexter's big-screen debut came with Side Street directed by Anthony Mann in 1950, strarring Radio Clerk (uncredited). Anthony Dexter is known for The Gay Cavalier directed by Lance Comfort, Christian Marquand stars as Captain Claude Duval and Larry Burns as Dinny O'Toole. The upcoming new movie Anthony Dexter plays is Thoroughly Modern Millie which will be released on Mar 22, 1967.

Sporting the name Walter Craig when out of the limelight and the stage name Anthony Dexter when in it, he rounded out his years teaching high school English, Speech, and Drama classes at Eagle Rock High School (circa 1968-78) in the Los Angeles area. His best-known role as an actor, however, occurred when he landed the part of Rudolph Valentino in the actor's biopic Rudolph Valentino, le grand séducteur (1951). He was reputed to have won the role from a competitive field of 75,000 aspiring Valentinos. The film's producer, 'Edward Small', claimed to have made 400 screen tests for the part until discovering Dexter--the perfect fit. So much alike was Dexter in appearance to Valentino that Valentino fan clubs, upon learning of Dexter, applauded the choice of him to play their star. Even the press lauded Dexter as "incredible. The same eyes, ears, mouth--the same grace in dancing" (according to a 1950 Los Angeles Times article quoting George Melford, who directed Valentino in Le Cheik (1921). Although "Valentino" was not the success its producers had hoped for, Dexter managed to garner future parts in movies similar to the roles the real Valentino had played: John Smith in Les flèches de feu (1953); Captain Kidd in Le trésor du Capitaine Kidd (1954); a pirate leader in Les pirates noirs (1954); Christopher Columbus in The Story of Mankind (1957). After these roles, his career gradually diminished until ultimately he was cast in a bit part in Julie Andrews' vehicle Millie (1967).Dexter grew up on a farm in Talmadge, Nebraska, where he played such good football in high school that he earned a scholarship to St. Olaf's College in Minnesota. There he began his pursuit of stage and screen, singing first in the college's choir before going on to the University of Iowa to get his M.A. in speech and drama. Even during World War II, Dexter--then a sergeant with the Army Special Services--toured England and other parts of the European theater of war doing the show "Claudia." Having not limited himself to movies, he did at least one notable run at summer theatre in San Francisco in "The King and I" and added to his credits parts in the Broadway shows "The Three Sisters," "Ah, Wilderness" and "The Barretts of Wimpole Street." He died at the age of 88 in Greeley, Colorado.

  • Birthday

    Jan 19, 1913
  • Place of Birth

    Talmage, Nebraska, USA

Known For

Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies
TV Shows