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Rex Ingram
   
Life
1893-1950 [pseud. of Reginald Ingram Montgomery Hitchcock], son of Donnellan
lecturer (TCD), and rector of Kinnity, Co. Offaly; ed. St. Columbas;
emig. USA at 18; Yale School of Fine Arts; his Four Horsemen of the
Apoocalypse (Metro, 1920) introduced Rudolph Valentino and Alice Terry,
whom he married; other films incl. The Prisoner of Zenda (1922)
and Scaramouche (1923). Two novels, Legion Advances (1934),
and Mars in the House of Death (1939), on bullfighting in Sapin
and Mexico; d. Hollywood. DIB DIW
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Criticism
Liam OLeary, Rex Ingram: Master of the Silent Cinema (Le
Giornate de Cinema Muto/British Film Institute 1993), ill.
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Notes
Mare Nostrum, dir Rex Ingram (USA 1925), 100 mins; based
on Vincente Blasco Ibanezs novel of love and espionage in World
War I, dir. Dublin-born emigré; shows him as a silent pictorialist
with a taste for mystical and exotic [Programme
of Walter Reade Theatre, 1994.]
James Joyces Finnegans
Wake (1939) contains an allusion to Rex Ingram: his scaffold
is there set up, as to edify, by Rex Ingram, pageant-master (FW568.35),
combine the office of pageant master - and therewith perhaps holder of
the Theatrical Patent in Dublin - with and movie director and also something
more ominous.
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Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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