Slim Cole
Slim Cole | |
|---|---|
| Born | Nathan Cole Hebert May 6, 1892 St. Louis, Missouri, U.S. |
| Other names | King Cole |
| Occupations | Actor, stuntman |
| Years active | 1915–1932 |
| Spouse | Katherine Fay (m. 1915-1921) |
| Family | Nathan Cole (grandfather) |
Nathan Cole Hebert (born May 6, 1892, date of death unknown), known as Slim Cole and sometimes credited as King Cole,[1] was an American actor and stuntman who appeared in a string of B-movie westerns during Hollywood's silent era.[2]
Biography
[edit | edit source]Early years
[edit | edit source]Slim was born in St. Louis, Missouri, to Joseph Hebert and Hallie Cole.[3] His mother's father, Nathan Cole, was once mayor of St. Louis.[4] Joseph Hebert, Slim's father, died when Slim was a toddler, and he was raised by his mother in the Los Angeles area.[5][6][7]
Career as a forest ranger
[edit | edit source]While working as a forest ranger in the San Bernardino Mountains, he learned how to ride a motorcycle, a skill that would serve him well when he entered the motion picture industry around 1915.[8] "They laughed at me when I started patrolling the forests on motorcycle, but after I got the knack for following old trails and making new ones, I showed them that I could cover as much territory as four rangers on mounted horses."[1]
Career in Hollywood
[edit | edit source]After being spotted by a motion picture director, Slim was soon in demand for his willingness to perform all sorts of death-defying stunts. He often worked with fellow stunt performer and actress Grace Cunard. Early on, he was employed by Charlie Chaplin's studio.[9]
In 1922, he briefly returned to St. Louis with the ambition of starting a motion picture industry in his hometown. He also aimed to give his body a rest after years of being roughed up on the job. "I'm getting too old for the business," he told a reporter with The St. Louis Post Dispatch. "I'm only 29, but I've been through a lot, and I don't have to wait for a psychic hunch."
He did continue to act, but his roles got smaller and smaller until he was pretty much only landing bit parts.[6]
Personal life
[edit | edit source]Cole married Katherine Fay in 1915; the couple divorced in 1921.[10] After his last film was released in 1932, it's unknown what happened to Cole.
Partial filmography
[edit | edit source]- His Day Out (1918)
- A Dog's Life (1918)
- Shoulder Arms (1918)
- Smashing Barriers (1919)
- Where Is This West? (1923)
- Beasts of Paradise (1923)
- The Ghost City (1923)
- Reckless Speed (1924)
- Ridin' Pretty (1925)
- The Great Circus Mystery (1925)
- The Fighting Ranger (1925)
- Prowlers of the Night (1926)
- Desert Dust (1927)
- The Texas Bad Man (1932)
- The Last Frontier (1932)
- Gold (1932)
References
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