Winter Hall
Winter Hall was an actor who had a successful Hollywood career. Hall's early acting career consisted of roles in various films, such as "The Squaw Man" (1918) with Elliott Dexter, the comedy "The Affairs of Anatol" (1921) with Wallace Reid and the Barbara Castleton drama "The Child Thou Gavest Me" (1921). He also appeared in "East Is West" (1922), "Saturday Night" (1922) and "Husbands and Lovers" (1924). He kept working in film throughout the twenties and the thirties, starring in the Ramon Novarro historical feature "Ben Hur, A Tale of the Christ" (1925), "The Lost Zeppelin" (1929) and the adaptation "The Love Parade" (1929) with Maurice Chevalier. He also appeared in "The Racketeer" (1929) and "Girls Demand Excitement" (1931). Toward the end of his career, he continued to act in "Tomorrow and Tomorrow" (1932), the historical romance "The Pursuit of Happiness" (1934) with Francis Lederer and "The Invisible Ray" (1936) with Boris Karloff. He also appeared in the Loretta Young drama "Four Men and a Prayer" (1938) and the adventurous drama "If I Were King" (1938) with Ronald Colman. Hall was most recently credited in the Armin Mueller-Stahl drama sequel "Avalon" (1990). Hall passed away in February 1947 at the age of 75.