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Billy Fay

Acting

Known For

Pistols for Breakfast
9.0

A young man goes out to eat breakfast with his friend. As a restaurant "regular" with a pistol threatens to eat everyone's bacon, the two friends flee.

Pistols for Breakfast

1919
Clubs Are Trump
5.2

In pre-historic times (dream sequence), our hero, in a loin cloth, battles other cavemen over the opposite sex.

Clubs Are Trump

1917
Footprints
N/A

No description available.

Footprints

1920
Bashful
6.9

In order to claim his inheritance, our hero must first produce a wife and family.

Bashful

1917
Luke Joins the Navy
5.0

The beginning of the film you find Harold Lloyd playing his "Lonesome Luke" character. Out of the blue, Lloyd decides he's going to join the navy and you really wonder if part of the film leading to it is missing. After all, the decision seemed to come from no where and why Snub Pollard would also join is unclear. And, oddly, they seem to skip all training and are stationed on a navy ship. Soon Pollard's wife comes to the boat looking for him and she's put off the boat as the movie ends very, very anticlimactically.

Luke Joins the Navy

1916
A Gasoline Wedding
5.8

A rich man's daughter has more suitors than she's interested in, and he's going to marry her off -- even if she doesn't know about it.

A Gasoline Wedding

1918
Hey There
6.7

In this early short Harold Lloyd sneaks into a movie studio in order to locate an attractive young lady he's just met at a snack bar. He's retrieved a letter she dropped and wants to return it to her, but it's pretty clear that his interest extends beyond mere politeness. (She's the adorable young Bebe Daniels, so this is easy to understand.) The movie studio setting provides Harold with lots of opportunities to do what comedians do in comedies like this one: flirt with actresses, anger the studio brass, and dash through sets disrupting everything.

Hey There

1918
Pinched
5.0

Harold's checked cap, blown from his head by a freakish wind, gets him into trouble. First he comes into conflict with the police as a highwayman, then the cap serves to identify him as a housebreaker and lands him in jail, while the innocent cause of his trouble becomes his cellmate for another reason. Eventually a distracted wife rescues both her husband and Harold from the clutches of the law, the cap this time aiding him to regain his freedom.

Pinched

1917
Luke's Society Mixup
N/A

Luke, a mechanic, stands in for a famous violinist. At first, his bad manners and rough behavior are accepted as the eccentricities of genius. Then matters get out of hand.

Luke's Society Mixup

1916
The Flirt
3.9

A man takes a job in a café, hoping to get to know the pretty waitress working there.

The Flirt

1917
Over the Fence
5.9

Snitch steals Ginger's (stolen) baseball tickets and takes Ginger's girl to the game. Finding himself without tickets, Ginger dresses as a baseball player and wins the game. A possible debut of the "Glasses" or "Boy" character.

Over the Fence

1917
All Aboard
4.9

In order to get his daughter away from her suitors, her father decides to spirit her away to Bermuda. Our hero, however, stows away on the ship. When discovered, he is credited with catching a crook, thus winning a reward and the girl.

All Aboard

1917
Here Come the Girls
2.0

Bebe and girlfriend go shopping for new corsets. Harold sneaks into the corset shop and a customer asks him to take her measurements - a ticklish task, as the brash young man suddenly becomes playfully bashful.

Here Come the Girls

1918
Rainbow Island
5.0

After finding a note in a floating bottle, our hero is off to resue the heroine. He runs into a tribe of cannibals.

Rainbow Island

1917
Beat It
N/A

Harold Lloyd starred in the successful Lonesome Luke series. However, he soon grew tired of the obvious Charlie Chaplin imitation. In an attempt to reinvent himself, Lloyd donned a pair of horn-rimmed glasses, and thus, a new comedy legend was born. Setting himself against Chaplin, Lloyd's "glasses character" was an everyman, a resourceful go-getter who embodied the ambitious, success-seeking attitude of 1920s America.

Beat It

1918
Birds of a Feather
N/A

Luke, running a chili parlor, inherits a million dollars and joins high society.

Birds of a Feather

1917
Luke, Patient Provider
N/A

When a doctor is forced, because of a lack of patients, to dismiss his pretty nurse, Luke comes to the rescue and uses his flivver to supply a ready supply of accident cases.

Luke, Patient Provider

1916
Luke's Speedy Club Life
N/A

Luke is a bellboy at a fancy club.

Luke's Speedy Club Life

1916
The Non-Stop Kid
5.1

Bebe is surrounded by suitors, but her father wants her to marry Professor M. T. Noodle. Harold makes his move by impersonating the professor.

The Non-Stop Kid

1918
Lonesome Luke Loses Patients
N/A

Luke operates a sanatarium, which he has naturally staffed with a bevy of attractive nurses.

Lonesome Luke Loses Patients

1917