Henry King — Motography’s Gallery of Picture Players (1914) 🇺🇸

Henry King, leading man at the Balboa studios in Long Beach, Cal., is known as “the man from Virginia,” because he is a native of that state.
His mother still resides near Roanoke, on a large estate which has been owned by the King family more than 100 years. King was once a New York stage favorite.
He entered the cinema field two years ago, becoming leading man at the western Lubin studios, where he remained a year and then resigned the position to be leading man at the Balboa Amusement Producing Company’s plant.
He has been with the Balboa studios a year and has done strikingly artistic work in the leading roles of “The Will O’ the Wisp,” “Sacrificial Fires,” “The Path of Sorrow,” “The Unexpected,” “The Rat,” “Nerve,” “The Cruise of the Hell Ship,” “The Moth and the Flame,” “Power of Print,” “Abide With Me” and “Through Night.”

Collection: Motography Magazine, October 1914
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