T. Roy Barnes
Barnes appeared in over 50 films between 1920 and 1935, primarily in comedies.
Barnes started his show career in vaudeville later turning to stage and film acting. During the 1920s, he often played "brash young go-getters" in supporting and leading roles. He’s best known for his roles as Buster Keaton's business partner Billy Meekin in Seven Chances (1925) and in W. C. Fields' comedy It's a Gift (1934), portraying an inquisitive Insurance Salesman. He retired from movies in 1935 and died two years later.
Movies
Doubting Thomas
LaMaze
Village Tale
Goggy Smith
The Four Star Boarder
Felix
Life Begins at Forty
Simonds, the Salesman
Carnival
Salesman
It's a Gift
Insurance Salesman
Kansas City Princess
Alderman James 'Jim' Cameron
Women of All Nations
Captain of the Marines
Aloha
Johnny Marvin
Screen Snapshots Series 10, No. 5
T. Roy Barnes
How's My Baby?
Wide Open
Bob Wyeth
Sally
Otis Hooper
Dangerous Curves
Pa Spinelli
A Blonde for a Night
George
Chicago
Reporter
Body and Soul
The Postman
A Regular Scout
Steve Baxter
The Unknown Cavalier
Clout Pettingill
Ladies of Leisure
Eric Van Norden
The Crowded Hour
Matt Wilde
Seven Chances
Billy Meekin
The Re-Creation of Brian Kent
Harry Green
Reckless Romance
Jerry Warner
Butterfly
Cy Dwyer
Young Ideas
Pritchett Spence
The Great White Way
Jack Murray
Hollywood
T. Roy Barnes
The Go-Getter
Bill Peck
Adam and Eva
The Salesman-Hero
The Old Homestead
Happy Jack
Is Matrimony a Failure?
Arthur Haviland
Don't Get Personal
John Wainwright
Too Much Wife
Jack Morgan
Exit the Vamp
John Shipley
Her Face Value
Jimmy Parsons
A Kiss in Time
Brian Moore
See My Lawyer
Robert Gardner
So Long Letty
Harry Miller