Mack Swain Movies and Career Information
Feb 16, 1876
Salt Lake City
Actor
Mack Swain (February 16, 1876 - August 25, 1935) was an American actor and vaudevillian, prolific throughout the 1910s, 1920s and 1930s. Born Moroni Swain to Robert Henry Swain and Mary Ingeborg Jensen in Salt Lake City, Utah, he worked in vaudeville before starting in silent film at Keystone Studios under Mack Sennett. While with Keystone, he was teamed up with Chester Conklin to make a series of comedy films. With Swain as "Ambrose" and Conklin as the grand mustachioed "Walrus", they performed these roles in several films including "The Battle of Ambrose and Walrus" and "Love, Speed and Thrills," both made in 1915. Besides these comedies, the two appeared together in a variety of other films, twenty-six all told. In 1921, Swain began working with Charlie Chaplin at First National, appearing in "The Idle Class", "Pay Day" and "The Pilgrim". He is also remembered for his role as Big Jim McKay in the 1925 film The Gold Rush, for United Artists, written by and starring Chaplin. Swain died in Tacoma, Washington in 1935. For his contribution to the motion picture industry, he received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 1500 Vine Street.
- Mack Swain Movies before 2012
- When Comedy Was King 1960
- Beloved Rogue (1927) 1927
- Gold Rush (1925) 1925
- Tillie's Punctured Romance (1914) 1914
- My Best Girl (1927)