:
This article is about the actor. For the rugby league player, see Ben Alexander (rugby league), for the rugby union player see Ben Alexander (rugby union).Ben Alexander (May 26, 1911 – July 5, 1969) was an
Emmy-nominated American motion picture actor, who started out as a
child actor in 1915.
Life and career
Born
Nicholas Benton Alexander IV in
Goldfield, Nevada and raised in
California, Alexander made his screen debut at age of five in
Every Pearl a Tear. He went on to portray
Lillian Gish's young brother in
D.W. Griffith's
Hearts of the World. It was in another
World War I classic,
All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), that Alexander made his first positive impression as an adult actor in the role of
Kemmerick, the tragic amputation victim.
When Alexander's acting career slowed down in the mid-1930s, he found a new career as a successful radio announcer, and in 1952,
Jack Webb chose him to replace
Herbert Ellis in the role of
Officer Frank Smith in the TV series
Dragnet. In 1966, Alexander returned to police work as Sergeant Dan Briggs on the weekly
ABC cop series
Felony Squad.
For his contribution to the entertainment industry Ben Alexander has one star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame for television.
His acting career was supplemented by the ownership/operation of his Ford dealership in downtown L.A., currently a BMW/Mini dealership (until recently owned by his son, Nick, now operated by Nick's daughter) in the mid-late 1960s.
Filmography
- Little Orphant Annie (1918)
- The Lady of the Dugout (1918)
- The Heart of Rachael (1918)
- The Mayor of Filbert (1919)
- The Notorious Mrs. Sands (1920)
- Through Eyes of Men (1920)
- In the Name of the Law (1922)
- A Self-Made Failure (1924)
- The Shining Adventure (1925)
- Scotty of the Scouts (1926)
- Are These Our Children (1931)
- Tom Brown of Culver (1932)
- The Vanishing Frontier (1932)
- Alias the Professor (1933)
- What Price Innocence? (1933)
- The Most Precious Thing in Life (1934)
- The Life of Vergie Winters (1934)
- Annapolis Farewell (1935)
- The Legion of Missing Men (1937)
- Mr. Doodle Kicks Off (1938)
Television
- On Trial (1 episode, 1957)
Writer
- Dragnet (Co-writer, 6 episodes)