
Acting · 55 years old
Hampton Beach, New Hampshire, USA
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Dustin Lancy Farnum (May 27, 1874 – July 3, 1929) was an American singer, dancer, and actor on the stage and in silent films. Although he played a wide variety of roles, he tended toward westerns and became one of the biggest stars of the genre. He was born in Hampton Beach, New Hampshire, the older brother of actor William Farnum, whom he closely resembled, and the lesser known silent film director Marshall Farnum (died 1917). He married Mary Cromwell in 1909 and they divorced in 1924. He then married Winifred Kingston. Winifred and he were the parents of radio actress Estelle "Dustine" Runyon (1925–1983). After great success in a number of stage roles, Farnum landed his first film role in 1914 in the movie Soldiers of Fortune, and later in Cecil B. DeMille's The Squaw Man. He died of kidney failure on July 3, 1929, in Manhattan, New York City, aged 55.

The Flaming Frontier
General George Armstrong Custer

The Squaw Man
Capt. James Wynnegate

The Virginian
The Virginian

A Son of Erin
Dennis O'Hara

The Call of the Cumberlands
Samson South

The Iron Strain
'Chuck' Hemingway

Davy Crockett
Davy Crockett

David Garrick
David Garrick

Durand of the Bad Lands
Dick Durand

The Buster
Bill Coryell

The Parson of Panamint
Reverand Philip Pharo

The Light of Western Stars
Gene Stewart

Screen Snapshots (Series 22, No. 10)
Self (archive footage)

Captain Courtesy
Leonardo Davis (Captain Courtesy)

The Man Who Won
Wild Bill

The Spy
Mark Quaintance

A Man's Fight
Roger Carr

Iron to Gold
Tom Curtis

The Devil Within
Captain Briggs

Cameo Kirby
'Cameo' Kirby