Robert House Peters, Sr. (12 March 1880 – 7 December 1967) was a British-born American silent film actor, known to filmgoers of the era as "The Star of a Thousand Emotions." Born in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England, Peters began his career on a high note, playing the handsome leading man in In the Bishop's Carriage (1913), co-starring Mary Pickford. While The Bishop's Carriage was filmed in an East Coast studio, Peters was in Los Angeles by 1914, becoming one of the first screen stars to permanently settle there. Although he stated publicly that he preferred playing villains, Peters, curly haired and pleasantly dimpled, was from the outset typecast as the romantic hero. After enjoying his greatest success as the good-bad hero of The Girl of the Golden West (1915), Peters found his career peak of the early 1920s. He signed with Universal Studios for six films in 1924, hoping for a comeback. The results, however, were mostly mediocre and he was soon demoted to supporting roles. Re...
Salomy Jane
1914
Held to Answer
1923
Raffles: The Amateur Cracksman
1925
The Warrens of Virginia
1915
The Great Divide
1915
Rose-Marie
1928
O. Henry's Full House
1952
Leah Kleschna
1913
The Girl of the Golden West
1915
Treasure of the Golden Condor
1953
The Unafraid
1915
The Old West
1952
Counsel for the Defense
1925
Human Hearts
1922
Isobel or the Trail's End
1920
The Captive
1915
The Great Redeemer
1920
The Storm Breaker
1925
The Storm
1922
The Heir of the Ages
1917
The Tornado
1925
The Leopard Woman
1920
The Forfeit
1919
Stolen Goods
1915
Silk Husbands and Calico Wives
1920
Prisoners of the Storm
1926
A Trip Through the World's Greatest Motion Picture Studios
1920
The Highway of Hope
1917
Between Men
1916
A Lady of Quality
1913
Lying Lips
1921