
Wyndham Standing
Biography
Wyndham Standing (23 August 1880 – 1 February 1963) was an English film actor. Standing appeared in 131 films between 1915 and 1948. A popular and much beloved leading man in the silent film era, he starred and co-starred along many famous names of the day, both men and women. He and Ronald Colman were the stars of the now lost classic The Dark Angel (1925). Standing delivered a memorable performance in Hell's Angels (1930) as the commanding officer who gets fed up with the cowardly antics of Ben Lyon and James Hall just before sending them off on a deadly bombing mission. He was born Charles Wyndham Standing in London, England and died in Los Angeles, California. He was the son of veteran actor Herbert Standing (1846–1923) and the brother of actors Jack Standing, Sir Guy Standing, Herbert Standing Jr. and Percy Standing. He was also the uncle of Joan Standing and Kay Hammond. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

The Hushed Hour
as Lord George Daw
1919

Imitation of Life
as Beatrice's Butler Jarvis
1934

The Wolf Woman
as Franklin Walden
1916

Design for Living
as Max's Butler
1933

Week-End at the Waldorf
as Literary Type (uncredited)
1945

Flames of Desire
as Daniel Strathmore
1924

The Night of Nights
as Naval Commander (uncredited)
1939

Redeeming Love
as Hugh Wiley
1916

The Canadian
as Ed Marsh
1926

Billy the Kid
as John W. Tunston
1930

Limehouse Blues
as Assistant Commissioner Kenyon
1934

The Unchastened Woman
as Hubert Knollys
1925

The Marriage Price
as Frederick Lawton
1919

Eyes of the Soul
as Larry Gibson
1919

Law of the Land
as Richard Harding
1917

Exile
as Vincento Perez
1917

The Private Affairs of Bel Ami
1947
White Heat
as Gilbert Gillman
1927

The Hillcrest Mystery
as Hugo Smith
1918

Out of the Shadow
as Richard Steel
1919