
Actor
Dell Henderson
Born 1877 · St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia George Delbert "Dell" Henderson (July 5, 1877 – December 2, 1956) was a Canadian-American actor, director, and writer. He began his long and prolific film career in the early days of silent film. Born in the Southwestern Ontario city of St. Thomas, Dell Henderson started his acting career on the stage, but appeared in his first movie Monday Morning in a Coney Island Police Court already in 1908. Henderson was a frequent associate of film pioneer D.W. Griffith since 1909 and appeared in numerous of his early shorts in Hollywood. He also acted on a less prolific basis in the movies of producer Mack Sennett and his Keystone Studios. In addition to acting, Henderson also directed nearly 200 silent films between 1911 and 1928. Most of those films are forgotten or lost, but he also directed movies with silent stars like Harry Carey and Roscoe Arbuckle. Henderson also worked as a writer on numerous screenplays. After retiring from directing in 1927, Henderson turned to acting full-time and played important supporting roles in King Vidor's The Crowd (1928) and as General Marmaduke Pepper in Show People (1928). The advent of sound film damaged his acting career, and he often had to play smaller roles. In the 1930s, the comedic character actor appeared on several occasions as a comic foil for such comedians as The Three Stooges, W. C. Fields and Laurel and Hardy. He often played somewhat pompous figures like judges, businessmen, detectives or mayors. Modern audiences will remember Henderson as annoyed hospital president Dr. Graves in The Three Stooges film Men in Black and the put-upon chaperone in the Little Rascals film Choo-Choo!. He also appeared as a Night Court Judge in Laurel and Hardy's Our Relations (1936) and as a friendly Car salesman in Leo McCarey's drama Make Way for Tomorrow (1937). Henderson ended his film career after numerous small roles in 1950. Henderson died of a heart attack in Hollywood at the age of 79. He was married with actress Florence Lee until his death, they made several silent films together.
Directed

Who Loved Him Best?
Director · 1918

The Girl from Porcupine
Director · 1921

The Dead Line
Director · 1920

Sure-Fire Flint
Director · 1922
Red Hicks Defies the World
Director · 1913
Father's Chicken Dinner
Director · 1913
The Suffragette Minstrels
Director · 1913

Courage for Two
Director · 1919

The Broken Silence
Director · 1922
The Power of the Camera
Director · 1913

Gambling Wives
Director · 1924

Outcast
Director · 1917

Dynamite Allen
Director · 1921

Battling Brewster
Director · 1924

The Shark
Director · 1920

By Hook or Crook
Director · 1918

The Bad Lands
Director · 1925

Hit or Miss
Director · 1919
Acting

The Awful Truth
Vance's Butler (uncredited) · 1937

Intolerance: Love's Struggle Throughout the Ages
Extra (uncredited) · 1916

Make Way for Tomorrow
Ed Weldon - Auto Salesman (uncredited) · 1937

The Crowd
Dick · 1928

The Major and the Minor
Doorman (uncredited) · 1942

Love Affair
Cafe Manager (uncredited) · 1939

Ruggles of Red Gap
Sam · 1935

Stranger on the Third Floor
Detective (uncredited) · 1940

Annie Get Your Gun
Hotel Guest in Hammock (uncredited) · 1950

The Champ
The Doctor (uncredited) · 1931

It's a Gift
Mr. Abernathy · 1934

Show People
Colonel Pepper · 1928

The Laurel-Hardy Murder Case
Housekeeper (uncredited) · 1930

Men in Black
Dr. Graves (uncredited) · 1934

Wrong Again
Painting owner · 1929

Once Upon a Honeymoon
American Attaché (uncredited) · 1942

The Lonedale Operator
A Tramp · 1911

Steamboat Round the Bend
Salesman · 1935

Abe Lincoln in Illinois
Minor Role (uncredited) · 1940

Fifth Avenue Girl
Headwaiter (uncredited) · 1939

The Unchanging Sea
The Rescuer · 1910

Undercurrent
Party Guest (uncredited) · 1946

The Daring Young Man
Mayor · 1935
The Power of the Camera
Second Convict · 1913




