• Home

    Movies

  • Discover
  • Popular
  • Now Playing
  • Upcoming
  • Top Rated

    TV Shows

  • Discover
  • Popular
  • Airing Today
  • On The Air
  • Top Rated

    People

  • Popular

    Trending

  • Movies
  • TV Shows
    Tom Forman
    An image from The Cost of Hatred, one of the productions that also features Tom Forman.
    Tom Forman

    Tom Forman

    February 22, 1893 — Mitchell County, Texas, USA

    Tom Forman (February 22, 1893 – November 7, 1926) was an American motion picture actor, director, writer, and producer of the early 1920s.

    Texas-born Forman made his first film for Jesse L. Lasky's production company in 1914. With the exception of service at the front during World War I, he had a successful career as both an actor and director. Forman directed Lon Chaney's Shadows (1922), but his biggest achievement was realised directing the second screen version of Owen Wister's The Virginian (1923). After his career faltered, he was reduced to working on cheap Poverty Row melodramas. Forman is also known for his work with Edith Taliaferro in Young Romance.

    Forman was set to direct the Columbia film The Wreck, which was to start shooting on November 8, 1926. However, on the evening of November 7 Forman died by suicide, by shooting himself through the heart at his parents' home in Venice, California. Adela Rogers St. Johns based the character of Maximillan Carey in her original story for What Price Hollywood? (1932) on Forman.

    He was a cousin of silent screen star Madge Bellamy.

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    For Better, for Worse

    For Better, for Worse

    1919

    The Round-Up

    The Round-Up

    1920

    Young Romance

    Young Romance

    1915

    Out of the Darkness

    Out of the Darkness

    1915

    The Unknown

    The Unknown

    1915

    The Cost of Hatred

    The Cost of Hatred

    1917

    The Tree of Knowledge

    The Tree of Knowledge

    1920