Roy Brooks(1900-1976)
- Actor
- Additional Crew
Roy Brooks was born on 1 January 1900 in Tacoma, Washington, USA. He was an actor, known for Number, Please? (1920), Never Weaken (1921) and The Big Show (1923). He died on 30 January 1976 in Santa Monica, California, USA.
Actor
Additional Crew
- Born
- Died
- January 30, 1976
- Santa Monica, California, USA(undisclosed)
- TriviaRoy Brooks was well-educated, witty, bald and an imposing six-foot four and never made much of an effort to hide the fact he was gay. In 1919 he followed his childhood friend, Mildred Davis from Tacoma to Hollywood who was chosen by Harold Lloyd as a replacement for his previous co-star (and ex-lover), Bebe Daniels. Brooks appreciated working for Lloyd, who displayed a rare tolerance toward homosexuals. Roy and Harold became good friends and this led to him becoming Lloyd's social secretary, along with appearances in several of his early films. From 1921-1930 Harold Lloyd arguably ranked as the most popular comedy star in the world and as his secretary, Brooks wrote nearly all of his correspondence, occasionally tasked with dealing with his fan mail (although a function largely assigned to Lloyd's father J. Darcie 'Foxy' Lloyd). When Harold married Mildred and enforced her retirement from films, Roy moved in with them and often kept Mildred company while Harold was on location. He lived in an apartment over the garage on Lloyd's lavish estate, Greenacres for nearly 30 years. With the Lloyd children grown, Harold often in Europe and Mildred consumed by alcoholism (she died in 1969), Brooks moved to Santa Monica in 1967 and spent the remainder of his days living on a small family inheritance.
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