[2] As a youth, he attended a military academy, graduated Maitre d'Arms and served with the Royal Danish Hussars, earning a reputation as a world-class swordsman.
[7] In 1914, Anders Randolf began appearing in 1- or 2-reelers with the Vitagraph Studios stock company, and earned critical praise in his first feature film The Wheels of Justice (1915) in the role of Tug' Riley, a convict.
A reviewer in the New York Dramatic Mirror wrote: "Anders Randolf as Tug Riley is undoubtedly the most real in the excellent cast.
[10] A versatile actor, Randolf could expertly play comedic roles, for example, as a incompetent banker in In Hollywood with Potash and Perlmutter (1923); and Mary Pickford's father in Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall (1924).
[13] His final film appearances were in comedy shorts: Laurel and Hardy's The Night Owls (1930) and Joe E. Brown's Maybe It's Love (1930).