Personal Info
Known For
Acting
Known Credits
119
Gender
Male
Birthday
December 16, 1883 ( 42 years old )
Place of Birth
Cavernes, Saint-Loubès, Gironde, France
Also Known As
Gabriel-Maximilien Leuvielle
Gentleman Max
Max Linder
Although all too frequently neglected by fans of silent comedy, Max Linder is in many ways as important a figure as Charles Chaplin, Buster Keaton, or Harold Lloyd, not least because he predated (and influenced) them all by several years, and was largely responsible for the creation of the classic style of silent slapstick comedy. He started out as an actor in the French theatre, but after making his screen debut in 1905 he quickly became an enormously famous and successful film comedian on both sides of the Atlantic, thanks to his character "Max", a top-hatted dandy. By 1912, he was the highest-paid film star in the world, with an unprecedented salary of one million francs. He began to direct films in 1911 and showed equal facility behind the camera, but his career suffered an almost terminal blow when he was called up to fight in World War I. He was gassed, and the illness that resulted would blight his career. Although offered a contract in America, recurring ill-health meant that his US films had little of the sparkle of his early French work, and a brief attempt to revive his career by making films for the recently-formed United Artists (one of whose founders, of course, was Chaplin) in the early 1920s came to little, although these later films are now regarded as classics. He returned to France and killed himself in a suicide pact with his wife in 1925.
Known For
Une ruse de mari
1911-01-16Au music-hall (At the Music Hall)
1907-01-01Jalousie
1912-12-01N'embrassez pas votre bonne
1914-04-14Seven Years Bad Luck
1921-02-06Le serment d'un prince
1910-01-01Champion de boxe
1911-01-10Max Wants a Divorce
1917-03-26Max in a Taxi
1917-04-23L'anglais tel que Max le parle
1914-03-06