Wesley Barry(1907-1994)
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
- Actor
- Producer
A Hollywood native (born there in 1907), seven-year-old Wesley Barry
was spotted by a director at Kalem who was taken with the boy's face
full of freckles, and he went on to become one of the most popular
child actors in the business. Barry had been making picture for several
years when director Marshall Neilan
scrubbed off the layers of greasepaint that covered his freckles (the
standard "solution" at the time in Hollywood to cover up facial
blemishes) and let the boy's naturally wild hair grow out instead of
being slicked down. Audiences were charmed by the young actor's
naturalness and "all-American" looks and flocked to his films. His
biggest success was Dinty (1920), but he
also scored with Penrod (1922),
School Days (1920) and
Rags to Riches (1922). Barry was
not one of those former child stars whose life fell apart after growing
into adulthood; he got involved in the production end of the business
and enjoyed a long career as an assistant director, producer and
director in both films and television. He died in Fresno, CA, in 1994.