From Wikipedia
Holbrook Blinn (January 23, 1872 – June 24, 1928) was an American stage and film actor.
Blinn was born in San Francisco. His father was Charles H. Blinn, a Civil War veteran and his mother Nellie Hollbrook was an actress. He appeared on the legitimate stage as a child, and played throughout the United States and in London. He appeared in silent films, and was the director of popular one-act plays at New York's Princess Theatre. In 1900, he appeared in London in Ib and Little Christina. His Broadway stage successes include The Duchess of Dantzic (1903, as Napoleon), Salvation Nell (1908) in a breakout performance as the brutish husband of Mrs. Fiske, Within the Law (1912), Molière (1919), A Woman of No Importance (1916), The Lady of the Camellias (1917), and Getting Together (1918). Some of his finest silent screen accomplishments are in McTeague (1916), The Bad Man (1923), Rosita (1923), Yolanda (1924), and Janice Meredith (1924), the latter two films both starring Marion Davies.
Blinn died from complications of a fall off his horse in 1928.
1927
as Jim Blake
1927
as Baron Tolento
1925
as William Morrow
1925
as Juan Fernández
1924
as Lord Clowes
1924
as King Louis XI of France
1923
as The King
1919
1917
as Eugene D'Arcy
1917
as Eric
1917
1916
as Stuart Doane
1916
as Richard Baker
1916
as David Spencer
1916
as Walter Norman
1916
as Zachary Trewehella
1916
as McTeague
1915
as Richard Duvall
1915
as Michael R. Regan