Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin were major silent screen stars, but with his horn-rimmed glasses and straw hat, Harold Lloyd (1893-1971) was one of the most daring and beloved comedic stars of ...
Often referred to as the "third genius" of silent screen comedy, Harold Lloyd was frequently No. 1 at the 1920s box office and, extras in this collection make clear, aces in the hearts of his devotees ...
The classic Harold Lloyd comedy “Safety Last” is turning 100 years old this year. But with its heavy dollops of action and a superstar’s real-life derring-do, it doesn’t seem a day over 10, even if it ...
Harold Lloyd remains the least known of the great silent comedians, little more than an ineffaceable image – the man dangling from the sprung clock of a skyscraper – surrounded by cliches about those ...
And now a page from our "Sunday Morning" Almanac, March 8th 1971, 44 years ago today . . . the final fade-out for one of Hollywood's earliest comic stars. For that was the day Harold Lloyd died at the ...
Harold Lloyd flips off his reflection in "Speedy." In my recent article on Nebraska-native movie star Harold Lloyd, there were a lot of details I left out (as the story was already getting a bit on ...