Matty Roubert


Matthew "Matty" Roubert was an American actor, who started out as a child actor working in silent films. As an adult, he mainly worked in B movie western films. Roubert made his film debut at the age of two in Uncle Tom's Cabin
At the age of seven, The Universal Company hired Roubert to star in a series of short films as "The Universal Boy", who visited many prominent people and celebrities. When he was twelve, Reelcraft Picture Company cast him in the Romances of Youth series, which were marketed to a wider audience. Roubert was inducted into the Young Hollywood Hall of Fame in 1913.

Biography

Matty Roubert was born on January 22, 1907, in Manhattan, New York to William and Rachel Roubert. His father was an actor and director, and his mother was a member of the Powers Motion Picture Company. Roubert made his film debut at the age of two in Uncle Tom's Cabin His father also established a production company, named after his son, Matty Roubert Productions, which produced Heritage.

Career

Roubert first appeared in films for Vitagraph and Biograph before starring in comedies for Pat Powers. He was frequently featured alongside Baby Early. They were known as the "Powers Kids". In 1914, the Universal company hired him to star in a series of short films, and he was known as the Universal Boy. In 1920, Reelcraft Picture Company cast him in several short films known as the Romance of Youth series. As an adult, he starred primarily in western films, sometimes working as a stunt double. Roubert has over 140 credits as an actor.
In 1917, while directing Roubert in Parentage, Hobart Henley remarked that Roubert was "probably the greatest boy actor in the industry" at that time. Henley said he didn't bother with costumes or make-up for the actor, because he "wanted him just as he found him, just as he looked when he went to school each day". Film historian Anthony Slide suggested that during the 1910s, there were more children on the screen than at any other period in film history, with Roubert being one of the most prominent. When he turned 18, Roubert recalled working with Norma Talmadge and Mary Pickford before they became well known, and D. W. Griffith directed him in the first two-reeler he made. Roubert also starred in the first three-reeler made in the United States.

Personal life

In 1924, he was dating Thelma Salter, who he had starred with in several productions when they were child actors. That same year, Roubert also told the Los Angeles Times, that when he was a boy, he once had lunch with Theodore Roosevelt, after he climbed on the running board of Roosevelt's car. In 1934, he married Helen Gutierrez, while living in Hollywood. She appeared in several Community Playhouse productions. In 1936, Roubert and his wife traveled to Tahiti, where they lived for six months. By 1973, Roubert was living in Honolulu, Hawaii, where he died in May 1973.

Filmography

YearFilmRef.
1910Uncle Tom's Cabin
1911The Freshet
1912Baby Sherlock
1912The Coming Generation
1912The Golden Rule
1912Ransom
1912Tangled
1913A Man's Awakening
1913Mrs. Brown's Burglar
1913When Dolly Died
1914How Villains Are Made
1914John Barleycorn
1914Little Billy's City Cousin
1914One Day Of Matty's Life
1914The Race
1914Vasco the Vampire
1915A Bachelor's Christmas
1916The Big Sister
1916Blind Man's Bluff
1916The Scarlet Mark
1917The Waif
1918Parentage
1920Heritage
1923For You My Boy
1923The Stolen Child
1925After a Reputation
1929Close Harmony
1931The Wife Wins
1931Up Pops the Devil
1932Tom Brown of Culver
1933The Prizefighter and the Lady
1934Broadway Bill
1934Evelyn Prentice
1934Jealousy
1934The Merry Widow
1934The Mighty Barnum
1935Mad Love
1935The Four Star Boarder
1936Divot Diggers
1937Crusade Against Rackets
1938Gold Mine in the Sky
1938Shine On, Harvest Moon
1939Saga of Death Valley
1940Adventures of Red Ryder
1940Frontier Vengeance
1940Lone Star Raiders
1940Knute Rockne, All American
1940One Man's Law
1940The Trail Blazers
1940Under Texas Skies
1941Arizona Bound
1941Gauchos of Eldorado
1941The Phantom Cowboy
1943The Blocked Trail
1943West of Texas
1945Gangster's Den
1945Song of the Prairie
1946Daughter of Don Q
1946The Fighting Frontiersman
1946Galloping Thunder
1946Gunning for Vengeance
1946Heading West
1946Lone Star Moonlight
1946Prairie Outlaws
1946Romance of the West
1946Santa Fe Uprising
1946Stars Over Texas
1946Terror Trail
1946That Texas Jamboree
1946Thunder Town
1946Tumbleweed Trail
1946Two-Fisted Stranger
1947Border Feud
1947Buffalo Bill Rides Again
1947The Fighting Vigilantes
1947Law of the Lash
1947The Lone Hand Texan
1947Valley of Fear
1948G-Men Never Forget
1948Phantom Valley
1949Challenge of the Range
1950Gunfire
1950Hoedown
1950I Shot Billy the Kid
1951Cyclone Fury
1952The Rough, Tough West

Short films series

Roubert was seven years old when he became the Universal Boy. During his stint in the series, Roubert would meet a well known celebrity in each short, among them: American actors King Baggot, William Shay, Frank Crane, DeWolf Hopper, American aviator Lincoln Beachey, New York Giants manager John McGraw, Australian swimmer Annette Kellerman, American lyricist Oscar Hammerstein, New York Giants pitcher Christy Mathewson, Secretary of War Lindley Garrison, the Columbia University College rowing in [the United States|rowing crew], Theodore Roosevelt, American race car driver Barney Oldfield, American businessman Nathan Straus, and German-American editorial cartoonist Hy Mayer.
Roubert was twelve when he was cast in the Romance of Youth series. According to R.C. Cropper, president of Reelcraft Pictures, "this will be the biggest series of its kind ever attempted in the independent field. These will be feature productions in every sense of the word, from the preparation of the story right on through cast and production. The stories will concern adventures of boys and girls, in other words, the days of youth, but they will appeal to audiences of all ages."