Jack Perrin(1896-1967)
- Actor
- Stunts
- Producer
Jack Perrin was born in Three Rivers, MI, on July 25, 1896. His father,
a real estate investor, had an eye on the burgeoning prospects in Los
Angeles and moved his family there when Perrin was about four. Jack
literally grew up witnessing the birth of the film industry, which
exploded there in 1913, after Universal and Famous Players (later known
as Paramount) moved out in an attempt to escape
Thomas Edison's patent war. Perrin entered
films in 1915, reportedly with Mack Sennett
(these details are in dispute), before enlisting in the Navy in World
War I. Discharged in 1919, he returned to Hollywood and landed a
contract with Universal, which lasted until 1921. He was cut loose from
what was then the largest studio in the world and made the rapid
descent into the world of low-budget westerns by outfits like Rayart
(later to become Monogram), Aywon and Arrow Pictures. During this
period he would work for companies at the very bottom of the Hollywood
food chain, headed by ultra-low-budget specialists like
Harry S. Webb and the legendary cheapskate
Robert J. Horner.
By the latter part of the 1920s Perrin's fortunes rose to the point where he returned to Universal for a series of Canadian Mountie adventure pictures (on a personal level, he met and married Universal star Josephine Hill in 1920 and the marriage would last until 1937). Although he seemed to possess all the assets necessary for cowboy stardom, fate would not be particularly kind to Jack Perrin. At the beginning of the "talkie" period he left Universal and went back to working for the likes of Webb and Horner again. Things got so bad that in the mid-'30s he wound up having to sue Horner in order to get paid for appearing in several of Horner's films (he won). The quality of these productions was, to be charitable, dismal and Jack's popularity correspondingly suffered. He bowed out as a leading man under an ostensible partnership with veteran low-budget producer William Berke in 1936.
By the latter part of the 1920s Perrin's fortunes rose to the point where he returned to Universal for a series of Canadian Mountie adventure pictures (on a personal level, he met and married Universal star Josephine Hill in 1920 and the marriage would last until 1937). Although he seemed to possess all the assets necessary for cowboy stardom, fate would not be particularly kind to Jack Perrin. At the beginning of the "talkie" period he left Universal and went back to working for the likes of Webb and Horner again. Things got so bad that in the mid-'30s he wound up having to sue Horner in order to get paid for appearing in several of Horner's films (he won). The quality of these productions was, to be charitable, dismal and Jack's popularity correspondingly suffered. He bowed out as a leading man under an ostensible partnership with veteran low-budget producer William Berke in 1936.