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A photo of Charles Farrell

Charles Farrell 1900 - 1990

Charles David Farrell of Palm Springs, California United States was born on August 9, 1900 in Walpole, Norfolk County, Massachusetts USA, and died at age 89 years old on May 6, 1990 in Palm Springs, California United States. Charles Farrell was buried on May 9, 1990 at Welwood Murray Cemetery in Palm Springs.
Charles David Farrell
Palm Springs, California United States
August 9, 1900
Walpole, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, USA
May 6, 1990
Palm Springs, California, United States
Male
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Charles David Farrell's History: 1900 - 1990

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  • Introduction

    Charles David Farrell was born to David Henry Farrell (1870 - 1965) and Estelle Warren "Stella" Carew (1871 - 1930). He had one sister, Ruth Mayville Farrell (1899 - 1966). Charles Farrell married Virginia McSweeney, also known as Virginia Valli (1898 - 1968) on February 14, 1931. Charles Farrell was the handsome, charming and high-class father in the show, MY LITTLE MARGIE, in which he co-starred with Gayle Storm. From a portion of his Find A Grave Memorial "An actor and a businessman, Charles was a popular Hollywood leading man, in first silent films and then early talkie movies. By the end of the '30s, Farrell's star diminished but in 1938, he with several partners founded the fabled Hollywood Racquet Club which became the watering hole of the stars in Palm Springs that took a dusty, hot little town where no one ever ventured to a place of prosperity, plush development and the winter home of movie stars and famous people of every description including Presidents." A veteran of World War II, Charles served in the United States Navy. See Charles Farrell: Obituary.
  • 08/9
    1900

    Birthday

    August 9, 1900
    Birthdate
    Walpole, Norfolk County, Massachusetts USA
    Birthplace
  • Ethnicity & Family History

    Charles was Caucasian.
  • Nationality & Locations

    Born and raised in Massachusetts, Charles spent most of his life in California: in Hollywood, where he was an actor, and Palm Springs, where he was a business owner and the fifth mayor of Palm Springs. He died in Palm Springs.
  • Early Life & Education

    He attended Boyden Elementary School, Walpole High School, and Boston University. His grade school and high school were in Walpole, Massachusetts.
  • Military Service

    He served in the Navy during WW II.
  • Professional Career

    Popular Hollywood leading man of late silent movies and early talkies. He is best remembered for his teaming with Janet Gaynor in 12 screen romances between 1927 and 1934. He retired from films in the early 1940s, but TV audiences of the 1950s would see him as Gale Storm's widower dad in the popular television series My Little Margie (1952). He was also a businessman, owning a well-known club in Palm Springs which was frequented by movie stars, and is known as one of the founders of Palm Springs. He was the fifth mayor of Palm Springs. Movie credits: Charles Farrell and June Lang in The Deadly Game (1941) Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor in Merely Mary Ann (1931) Paul Cavanagh, Madge Evans, and Charles Farrell in Heartbreak (1931) Mary Duncan and Charles Farrell in The River (1928) Charles Farrell and Greta Nissen in Fazil (1928) Marguerite Churchill, Charles Farrell, and Walter Woolf King in Girl Without a Room (1933) El Brendel, Charles Farrell, Janet Gaynor, and Crauford Kent in Delicious (1931) Charles Farrell and Dorothy Revier in The Red Dance (1928) Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor in Lucky Star (1929) Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor in Lucky Star (1929) Charles Farrell, Janet Gaynor, and Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams in Lucky Star (1929) Charles Farrell and Paul Fix in Lucky Star (1929) Known for: 7th Heaven (1927) William Collier Sr., Charles Farrell, Minna Gombell, and Marian Nixon in After Tomorrow (1932) Peter Piper (1932) Charles Farrell in Liliom (1930) [The remake as a musical became Carousel] Janet Gaynor in Street Angel (1928) Credits: Actor The Charles Farrell Show Charlie Farrell 1956 Charles Farrell and Gale Storm in My Little Margie (1952) Vernon Albright TV Series 1952–1955 Charles Farrell, Frederick Giermann, June Lang, and John Miljan in The Deadly Game (1941) Barry Scott Constance Bennett, Joan Davis, Charles Farrell, Alice Faye, and Nancy Kelly in Tail Spin (1939) Bud Shirley Temple, Joan Davis, Amanda Duff, Charles Farrell, Bert Lahr, and Bill Robinson in Just Around the Corner (1938) Jeff Hale Julie Bishop and Charles Farrell in Flight to Fame (1938) Captain Robert Lawrence Bombs Over London (1937) Briant Gaunt Charles Farrell, Barbara Greene, and Ignacy Jan Paderewski in Moonlight Sonata (1937) Eric Molander The Flying Doctor (1936) Sandy Nelson Charles Farrell and June Martel in Fighting Youth (1935) Larry Davis Charles Farrell and Charlotte Henry in Forbidden Heaven (1935) Mr. Archer Nibs Charles Farrell and Mary Lawson in Trouble Ahead (1934) Howard Elliott Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor in Change of Heart (1934) Chris Thring Bette Davis, Ricardo Cortez, Charles Farrell, Glenda Farrell, and Allen Jenkins in The Big Shakedown (1934) Jimmy Morrell Marguerite Churchill in Girl Without a Room (1933) Tom Duncan Soundtrack Betty Grable in Fred Astaire Salutes the Fox Musicals (1974) Charles Farrell and Gale Storm in My Little Margie (1952) Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor in High Society Blues (1930) Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor in Sunny Side Up (1929) Happy Days (1929) Videos: (16) The Big Shakedown Trailer 2:01 The Big Shakedown My Little Margie: Margie's Manproof Lipstick Trailer 1:47 My Little Margie: Margie's Manproof Lipstick My Little Margie: Shipboard Story Trailer 1:46 My Little Margie: Shipboard Story My Little Margie: Vern's Winter Vacation Trailer 2:15 My Little Margie: Vern's Winter Vacation My Little Margie: En Garde Trailer 1:55 My Little Margie: En Garde My Little Margie: Margie's Mink Trailer 1:48 My Little Margie: Margie's Mink My Little Margie: Vern's Butterflies Trailer 2:01 My Little Margie: Vern's Butterflies My Little Margie: Honeyboy Honeywell Trailer 1:28 My Little Margie: Honeyboy Honeywell My Little Margie: The Contract Trailer 1:19 My Little Margie: The Contract My Little Margie: My Little Clementine Trailer 1:32 My Little Margie: My Little Clementine My Little Margie: Matinee Idol Trailer 3:10 My Little Margie: Matinee Idol My Little Margie: Collection 1 (1952) Trailer 1:37 My Little Margie: Collection 1 (1952) He acted in Pat Wallace and Guy Bolton's play, "The Sun Never Sets", at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane, London, England with Leslie Banks, Edna Best, Todd Duncan, Adelaide Hall, Stewart Granger, Henry Oscar, Mackenzie Ward, Frank Cochrane, Shelagh Furley and Wally Patch in the cast. Basil Dean was the director. Quotes "Janet Gaynor and I were always receiving wedding-anniversary presents in the mail, care of the studio. The fans didn't even know what date our anniversary fell on, which is logical, since we were never married".
  • Personal Life & Family

    Charles was married to Virginia Valli until she died in 1968.
  • 05/6
    1990

    Death

    May 6, 1990
    Death date
    Unknown
    Cause of death
    Palm Springs, California United States
    Death location
  • 05/9
    1990

    Gravesite & Burial

    May 9, 1990
    Funeral date
    Welwood Murray Cemetery in Palm Springs, California USA
    Burial location
  • Obituary

    Charles Farrell, Actor, Dies at 88; Made Debut in 'Seventh Heaven' By Eric Pace May 12, 1990 Charles Farrell, the gentle-mannered actor whose career spanned four decades, ranging from silent films to talkies to the 1950's television series ''My Little Margie,'' died on Sunday at his home in Palm Springs, Calif. He was 88 years old. Mr. Farrell was so durable as a performer that Bob Hope is said to have referred to him once as a ''19th-century Fox star.'' An athletic six-foot-two, he gained fame as the romantic lead in ''Seventh Heaven'' (1927). The Times critic Mordaunt Hall said that he was ''splendid'' in that role, playing opposite Janet Gaynor. ''Sometimes he may seem to be a little too swaggering, but what of it?'' Mr. Hall observed. ''The actions suit the young man's agreeable bombast. You find that you like him.'' A Walk-Up Heaven: The Seventh Heaven in the silent film was the walk-up Parisian garret where Mr. Farrell, playing an impecunious laborer, made his home. Mr. Farrell and Miss Gaynor then co-starred in a series of other film romances. For seven years they were movieland's leading on-screen romantic couple. Then his movie career waned. His film work included serious as well as romantic roles in such films as ''Wings of Youth'' (1925), ''Sandy'' (1926), ''The Rough Riders'' (1927), ''Aggie Appleby'' (1933), ''Fighting Youth'' (1935) and ''The Deadly Game'' (1942). He retired from films in 1943. In television he turned to comedy, starring as a widowed father in more than 100 installments of ''My Little Margie,'' which was widely popular. Began as an Extra: Charles Farrell was born Aug. 9, 1901, in Onset Bay, Mass., and attended Boston University. He played some stage roles and broke into films as an extra in ''The Cheat'' (1923). He then had various supporting parts before ''Seventh Heaven,'' which opened in New York at the old Sam H. Harris Theater and remained his best-known movie. Recalling his movie work in a 1954 interview Mr. Farrell, still handsome and wavy-haired, said: ''They wouldn't accept my voice. They said I didn't have diction. When the talkies came in, a lot of stage people came to Hollywood from New York and I knew that I didn't talk like them, but my voice was me and that's all there was to it.'' ''One fellow kept needling me about improving my diction until I finally sat on him - but good,'' he added. ''My life was made miserable. There were other complicating factors, and I decided to move on.'' Resort Hotel Manager: He served in the Navy in World War II and prospered in a new career as a manager and host of the Racquet Club, a private resort hotel in Palm Springs, where he lived with his wife, the former silent film star Virginia Valli, whom he married in 1932; she died in 1968. Mr. Farrell served as mayor of Palm Springs for several years in the 1940s and 50s. He sold the Racquet Club in 1959. His television career, mainly in the 1950s, included the starring role in ''The Charlie Farrell Show'' in addition to ''My Little Margie,'' in which he played the father of a prankish unmarried daughter, portrayed by Gale Storm. ''I took the part because I'm a ham,'' Mr. Farrell said in the 1954 interview. ''The work is not exactly the same as making pictures, but it's pretty close.''
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8 Memories, Stories & Photos about Charles

Find A Grave Memorial
The following memorial was written by Donald Greyfield:

Actor, Businessman. He was a popular Hollywood leading man, first silent and then early talkie movies. By the end of the 30's, Farrell's star diminished but in 1938, he with several partners founded the fabled Hollywood Racquet Club which became the watering hole of the stars in Palm Springs that took a dusty, hot little town where no one ever ventured to a place of prosperity, plush development and the winter home of movie stars and famous people of every description including Presidents. His success with the club also resurrected his career with the popular TV sitcom "My Little Margie" where he costarred with Gale Storm. The series was aired shortly after his election as the fifth mayor of Palm Springs to a six year term. The successful show made Charles Farrell the best-known mayor in the entire country.

Soon, he would also headline an alternate TV series, the long running "Charlie Farrell Show" a sitcom which was virtually a national commercial for Palm Springs and his Racquet Club. He was born in South Walpole, Massachusetts, the only son of David and Estelle Farrell. The family moved to South Walpole where he became a student at Boyden Elementary school. His father operated a lunch counter-newsstand in South Walpole with a large room above where they showed silent films in the evening, probably the source of Charlie's aspiration to become an actor. His time after school was spent working in the families enterprises. He swept the floors, set up the seats and prepared the tickets for each night's show in the upstairs Theatre then worked as a waiter and dishwasher in the restaurant. After graduating from Walpole High School he enrolled at Boston University pursuing business administration an endeavor which lasted only a few years after being forced to drop out due to poor grades.

Once on his own, the lure of a movie career attracted him to Hollywood, now in full production making silent movies. He found work appearing in bit parts and as an extra in Mac Sennett films. Fox Studios signed him to a contract and paired him with Janet Gaynor, the couple became known as "America's Favorite Love birds." The duo made many romantic dramas... silent films "Seventh Heaven", "Sunrise" and "Street Angel." They survived the demise of silent films and reemerged in the talkies with success in several musicals..."Sunny Side Up", "Delicious" and "Tess of the Storm Country." They would make twelve movies together. Farrell would simply fade away, his movie appeal gone but would find new life during the 50's as an actor in the fledgling new medium of television. He served in the Navy during World War II.

Farrell sold his interest in the club, whoever his wife Virginia would die in 1968 and he withdrew becoming a virtual recluse for the rest of his life. Upon his death no notice appeared announcing the event. He was buried directly at Wellwood Murray cemetery with no fanfare beside his wife, former film actress Virginia Valli. His death and burial was unknown until some weeks later.

Legacy...When Farrell died in May 1990 at age 88 he was deemed a founder of Palm Springs. He had already witnessed the demise of his Racquet Club and seen the proliferation of the city. The population flow in the Coachella Valley was toward communities other than Palm Springs, to Palm Desert, Indian Wells and Quinta. Celebrities now had private tennis courts and swimming pools at their homes and had no need for a club. In the heyday of the club, stars flocked to play tennis on the club courts, eat at the famous Bamboo Lounge and stay in the hideaway bungalows. Among the regulars...Clark Gable, Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, Cary Grant, Spencer Tracy, Humphrey Bogart (Farrell's vocal coach prior to fame) Ginger Rogers and Marilyn Monroe. Today, Farrell's Racquet Club along with its famous Bamboo Lounge where the Bloody Mary was conceived and sported four inscribed bar stools reserved for Clark Gable, William Powell, Spencer Tracy and of course Charles Farrell has been resurrected and reopened. Some other landmarks have also been refurbished and preserved. The famous Clark Gable Bridge still remains which still leads to the group of cottages each with the name of their former famous occupants.

He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contributions to television and is also honored with a star on the Palm Springs Walk of Fame and one can see it on the west side of Palm Canyon Drive between Tahquitz and Arenas. Palm Springs has a history of naming city streets after popular actors. The tradition started with Charles Farrell. Farrell Drive runs through the residential area of the city. Its roadbed is historic as the street was constructed over the tracks of a narrow gauge railway which existed to serve an early agricultural development called Palm Valley.
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Charles Farrell and Gale Storm in MY LITTLE MARGIE.
Charles Farrell and Gale Storm in MY LITTLE MARGIE.
This hit TV Series was filmed in the 1950s for 3 years. I loved it and I thought he was the most handsome "father" on Television.
I live in hick town now and they have MY LITTLE MARGIE on TV every day!
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Charles Farrell
Charles Farrell
Movie and TV Star.
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Charles Farrell
Charles Farrell
Handsome movie star turned TV Star.
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Charles Farrell.
Charles Farrell.
Handsome and Sexy.
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Charles Farrell.
Charles Farrell.
Had one wife only.
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Charles Farrell's Family Tree & Friends

Charles Farrell's Family Tree

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