
E.J. Ratcliffe
Known For
Acting
Born
1863-03-10 in London, England, UK
Died
1948-09-28
Biography
From Wikipedia (The Free Encyclopedia): Edward J. Ratcliffe (10 March 1863 – 28 September 1948) was an English actor of stage and screen. He had an established stage career behind him when he came to films in 1915. He then spent nearly twenty years before the cameras before making his last film in 1933. He can be seen in many surviving silent and sound films. In the early Warner Brothers sound extravaganza The Show of Shows he plays Henry VI in the excerpted vignette from that play opposite John Barrymore's Richard III. Ratcliffe played Theodore Roosevelt in three films: The Fighting Roosevelts (1919), Sundown (1924), and I Loved a Woman (1933).
Most Known For

Cheating Cheaters
as Mr. Palmer

No Control
as John Douglas

The Winning of Barbara Worth
as James Greenfield

The Four Feathers
as Col. Eustace

The Black Pirate
as The Governor

Smile, Brother, Smile
as Fred Bowers

I Loved a Woman
as Theodore Roosevelt

Sundown
as President Theodore Roosevelt

Help Yourself
as Merlin Vallant

One Hysterical Night
as Wellington

Skinner's Dress Suit
as McLaughlin

The Head Man
as Wareham

Wide Open
as Trundle

Sally
as John Farell

The Imp
as Jane's Father

Experience
as Ambition

Wine of Youth
as Father John Hollister

The Cohens and the Kellys in Scotland
as McPherson

The Marriage Whirl
as John J. Carleton

The Idol of the North
as Lucky Folsom