Frank Currier (September 4, 1857 – April 22, 1928) was an American film and stage actor and director of the silent era.
[1] Similar to Theodore Roberts, Kate Lester, Ida Waterman, and William H. Crane, Currier had a long and successful stage career in the Victorian and Edwardian eras.
By the time he started appearing in silent films he was in his 50s and middle-aged.
Currier, like Roberts, had a distinctive grandfatherly look as he aged and was respected and beloved by film audiences.
On Broadway, Currier performed in The Poor Little Rich Girl (1913), An Old New Yorker (1911), The Aviator (1910), Beethoven (1910), The Gay Life (1909), This Woman and This Man (1909), Way Down East (1905), The Winter's Tale (1904), Twelfth Night (1904), and Quo Vadis (1900).