
Directing
Born January 15, 1892 in Dublin, Ireland
Rex Ingram started his film career as a set designer and painter. His directorial debut was The Great Problem (1916). A true master of the medium, Ingram despised the business haggling required in the Hollywood system. He was also unhappy with the level of writing he found in American writers. This led him to work with such foreign writers as Vicente Blasco Ibáñez, which resulted in the first major role for the young Rudolph Valentino. Ingram was a great friend of Erich von Stroheim, who, like Ingram, was a great filmmaker, but often went way over budget. In 1924, Ingram moved to Nice, France, where, in his own studios, he directed films of his own choosing, often with his then-wife Alice Terry. In his later career he acted as a mentor to the young director Michael Powell.

Baroud

L'évadée

The Three Passions

The Garden of Allah

The Magician

Mare Nostrum

Camille: The Fate of a Coquette
Charles Stewart Parnell

The Arab

Scaramouche

Mary of the Movies
(uncredited)

Where the Pavement Ends

Trifling Women

The Prisoner of Zenda

Turn to the Right

The Conquering Power

The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

Under Crimson Skies

The Day She Paid

Humdrum Brown

His Robe of Honor

The Little Terror

The Flower of Doom

The Pulse of Life

The Reward of the Faithless

Black Orchids

The Chalice of Sorrow

Broken Fetters

The Great Problem

The Galley Slave

The Wonderful Adventure

Should a Mother Tell

Snatched from a Burning Death
Chandler, the lover

The Evil Men Do
Margaret's Companion

The Moonshine Maid and the Man

Beau Brummel