Keye Luke Movies and Career Information
Jun 18, 1904
Guangzhou
Actor
Keye Luke (Chinese: 陸錫麟, Cantonese: Luk Sek Lam, Pinyin: Lù Xīlín; June 18, 1904 – January 12, 1991) was a Chinese-born American actor. Luke was born in Guangzhou, China to a father who owned an art shop, but grew up in Seattle. He became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1944. Before becoming an actor he was a local artist in Hollywood, and worked on several of the murals inside Grauman's Chinese Theater. He did some of the original artwork for the 1933 King Kong pressbook. Luke also painted the casino's mural in The Shanghai Gesture. Luke made his film debut in The Painted Veil (1934), and the following year gained his first big role, as Charlie Chan's eldest son in Charlie Chan in Paris. He worked so well with Warner Oland, the actor playing Chan, that "Number One Son" became a regular character in the series, alternately helping and distracting 'Pop' Chan in each of his murder cases. Keye Luke left the Charlie Chan series in 1938, shortly after Oland died. The unfinished Oland-Luke film Charlie Chan at the Ringside was completed as Mr. Moto's Gamble, with Luke now opposite Peter Lorre. Unlike some performers who failed to establish themselves beyond a single role,
- Keye Luke Movies before 2012
- Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955) 2003
- Gremlins 2: The New Batch 1990
- Dead Heat 1988
- Gremlins 1984
- Charlie Chan at the Opera (1937) 1937
- Charlie Chan at the Race Track 1936
- Charlie Chan's Secret (1936) 1936
- Charlie Chan in Shanghai 1935
- First Yank Into Tokyo
- Charlie Chan at the Circus
- Alice (1990)