Skip to main content
Jack Luden
Jack Luden
Jack Luden

Jack Luden

1902 Reading, Pennsylvania – 1951 San Quentin, California
BiographyJack Luden, born Jacob Benson Luden, was an American film actor. His uncle was William H. Luden, a confectioner who developed the menthol cough drop. Jack Luden joined the Paramount Pictures School in 1925 to study acting. After school, he played roles in a series of silent films by Paramount Pictures, including the 1927 Western Shootin’ Irons. However, his career began to decline quickly. A speech impediment limited his appeal for sound films and a heroin addition further limited his career. In the 1930s he was arrested for petty theft related to his addiction. In the late 1930s, he appeared in a series of low-budget Westerns produced by Columbia Pictures that were unsuccessful and his film career ended. In 1950 he was imprisoned in San Quentin State Prison, California for convictions for writing bad checks and possession of heroin. He died there the following year at the age of 49.
Person TypeIndividual
1888 Appleton, Wisconsin - 1960 St. John's, Arizona
William Hogarth
1697 London, England - 1764 London, England
Bing Crosby
1903 Tacoma, Washington - 1977 Madrid, Spain
Carl Laemmle
1867 Laupheim, Germany – 1939 Los Angeles, California
Charles Buddy Rogers
1904 Olathe, Kansas – 1999 Rancho Mirage, California
John Gilbert
1897 Logan, Utah – 1936 Los Angeles, California
Harold Lloyd
1893 Burchard, Nebraska - 1971 Beverly Hills, California
George O'Hara
1899 New York, New York – 1966 Los Angeles, California
William Russell
1884 New York, New York – 1929 Los Angeles, California
Fred Niblo
1874 York, Nebraska – 1948 New Orleans, Louisiana