People
Ramon Novarro
Biography:
Mexico native Ramon Novarro (born Jose Ramon Gil Samaniego, February 6, 1899 – October 30, 1968) was a Hollywood film and television actor. He was a major star and matinee idol of 1920s Silent through early 1930s "talkies" cinema.
Movies:
| Title | Release date |
|---|---|
| This Is Francis X. Bushman as Judah Ben-Hur (Archive Footage) | 2021-09-06 |
| Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood as Self (archive footage) | 2018-07-27 |
| The Bronze Screen: 100 Years of the Latino Image in American Cinema | 2002-06-06 |
| The Bible According to Hollywood as Self | 1994-01-01 |
| Murderers, Mobsters, & Madmen: Volume 6: Hollywood Police Files | 1992-01-01 |
| Hollywood Scandals and Tragedies | 1988-09-19 |
| Hollywood: The Dream Factory as Self (archive footage) | 1972-01-10 |
| Heller in Pink Tights as De Leon | 1960-03-01 |
| Hedda Hopper's Hollywood as Self | 1960-01-10 |
| Crisis as Colonel Adragon | 1950-07-07 |
| The Outriders as Don Antonio Chaves | 1950-03-01 |
| The Big Steal as Inspector General Ortega | 1949-07-01 |
| We Were Strangers as Chief | 1949-04-27 |
| Twenty Years After as (archive footage) | 1944-01-01 |
| The Virgin who Forged a Fatherland as Juan Diego | 1942-12-11 |
| Comedy of Happiness as Félix | 1940-12-23 |
| A Small Town Idol as Dancer | 1939-02-11 |
| A Desperate Adventure as André Friezan | 1938-08-05 |
| The Sheik Steps Out as Ahmed Ben Nesib | 1937-09-05 |
| The Night Is Young as Archduke Paul 'Gustl' Gustave | 1935-01-11 |
| Laughing Boy as Laughing Boy | 1934-04-13 |
| The Cat and the Fiddle as Victor Florescu | 1934-02-16 |
| The Barbarian as Jamil El Shehab | 1933-05-12 |
| The Son-Daughter as Tom Lee | 1932-12-23 |
| Huddle as Tony | 1932-05-14 |
| Mata Hari as Lt. Alexis Rosanoff | 1931-12-26 |
| The Christmas Party as Himself | 1931-12-17 |
| Son of India as Karim | 1931-08-01 |
| We’re Switching to Hollywood as Self | 1931-06-09 |
| Daybreak as Willi Kasder | 1931-05-02 |
| Sevilla de mis Amores as Juan de Dios Carbajal | 1930-12-05 |
| Call of the Flesh as Juan de Dios | 1930-08-16 |
| In Gay Madrid as Ricardo | 1930-05-17 |
| Devil-May-Care as Armand de Treville | 1929-12-27 |
| The Pagan as Henry Shoesmith Jr. | 1929-04-26 |
| The Flying Fleet as Tommy Winslow | 1929-01-19 |
| Forbidden Hours as His Majesty, Michael IV | 1928-06-16 |
| A Certain Young Man as Lord Gerald Brinsley | 1928-05-19 |
| Across to Singapore as Joel Shore | 1928-04-07 |
| The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg as Prince Karl Heinrich | 1928-01-30 |
| The Road to Romance as José Armando | 1927-10-08 |
| Lovers as José | 1927-05-01 |
| Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ as Judah Ben-Hur | 1925-12-25 |
| The Midshipman as Dick Randall | 1925-10-04 |
| A Lover's Oath as Ben Ali | 1925-09-29 |
| 1925 Studio Tour as Self | 1925-04-09 |
| The Red Lily as Jean Leonnec | 1924-09-08 |
| The Arab as Jamil Abdullah Azam | 1924-07-13 |
| Thy Name Is Woman as Juan Ricardo | 1924-02-04 |
| Scaramouche as André-Louis Moreau, alias 'Scaramouche' | 1923-09-15 |
| Where the Pavement Ends as Motauri | 1923-01-02 |
| Trifling Women as Henri / Ivan de Maupin | 1922-11-06 |
| The Prisoner of Zenda as Rupert of Hentzau | 1922-09-11 |
| Mr. Barnes of New York as Antonio | 1922-05-22 |
| Man-Woman-Marriage as Dancer | 1921-03-27 |
| The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse as Guest at Ball (uncredited) | 1921-03-06 |
| A Small Town Idol as Dancer (uncredited) | 1921-02-13 |
| The Goat | 1918-09-22 |
| The Woman God Forgot as Aztec Man (uncredited) | 1917-10-27 |
| The Hostage | 1917-09-10 |
| The Little American as Wounded Soldier (uncredited) | 1917-07-12 |
| The Jaguar's Claws as Bandit (uncredited) | 1917-06-11 |
| Joan the Woman as Starving Peasant | 1916-12-25 |


