After gaining years of stage experience in his travels, Talbot in 1929 established his own theatre company, "The Talbot Players", in
Memphis, Tennessee, where he hired his father and stepmother, Anna Henderson, to be among the company's roster of performers. At the end of 1931, however, Talbot decided to move to California to find more lucrative acting opportunities in motion pictures. He already had some experience, though very limited, in performing on screen, namely in small roles in a few
shorts, which included a bit part as a gangster in
The Nightingale (1931) and playing a police captain in
The Clyde Mystery (1931). Both of those low-budget,
two-reel shorts were filmed in New York City and produced by Warner Bros. in affiliation with
Vitaphone in
Brooklyn.
Move to Hollywood, 1932 Talbot's arrival in California at the beginning of 1932 proved to be ideal timing, for
Hollywood was still in the formative years of the
sound era, when studios remained busy searching for potential leading actors who were not only engaging performers, but also had acceptable voices and articulate speech patterns for the early audio technologies being used and refined on film sets. Talbot possessed those qualities, for his screen test at Warner Bros. went well despite the fact that the scene Talbot performed was from a play that satirized the studio's production chief
Darryl F. Zanuck. Talbot quickly accepted Zanuck's offer to join the company's growing ranks of contract players, who included the rising stars
Bette Davis and
Humphrey Bogart. Just prior to his work in
Love Is a Racket, Talbot appeared as a major supporting character, Dr. Jerome Preston, in
Unholy Love, a drama produced by Warner Bros. in cooperation with
Albert Ray Productions. Lyle's portrayal of "Jerry" did not go unnoticed by film industry
trade publications. In its July 9, 1932 review of
Unholy Love, the popular journal
Motion Picture Herald encourages theater owners and prospective audiences to direct special attention on three performers in the film: "Don't overlook
Beryl Mercer and
Ivan Lebedeff, as well as Lyle Talbot, "whom Warner Brothers are grooming for stellar roles." from
trailer for
Havana Widows (1933). Some other notable films in which Talbot was cast in his first years at Warner Bros. are
Three on a Match (1932),
20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932) with
Spencer Tracy,
College Coach (1933) with
Pat O'Brien and
Dick Powell,
Mary Stevens, M.D. (1933) and
Mandalay (1934) with Kay Francis, and
Ladies They Talk About (1933) with Barbara Stanwyck.
"The 42nd Street Special" and "cheap socks" Early in his career at Warner Bros., Talbot took part in one of Hollywood's most extravagant and ambitious publicity events, a five-week rail trip in 1933 across the United States with Bette Davis, Preston Foster, Leo Carrillo, Glenda Farrell, cowboy star
Tom Mix, Olympic swimmer Eleanor Holm, comedian
Joe E. Brown, and a chorus line of Busby Berkeley dancers. The established studio celebrities and rising stars and personnel traveled aboard "The
42nd Street Special," a passenger train that was elaborately decorated in silver and
gold leaf and trimmed with electric lights. Stopping at dozens of cities along their journey, the Hollywood travelers widely promoted Warners' new
Busby Berkeley musical
42nd Street. They also took the opportunity when the train paused in Washington, D.C., on March 4, 1933, to attend the first inauguration of
Franklin Delano Roosevelt as a show of the studio's support for the nation's new president. Days later, after arriving in New York City on March 9, the train returned to California. In the extensive news coverage of The 42nd Street Special's itinerary, Talbotalready divorced from a brief marriage in 1930was described in reports as the train's "Railway Romeo" and as being "'handsome as hell'" and "'likable as a collie.'" The monthly movie-fan magazine
Photoplay profiled Talbot in its March 1933 issue, distributing it to its subscribers and
newsstands at the same time the 42nd Street Special was still touring the nation. Written by Sara Hamilton and titled "Born to be a Villain But Lyle Talbot wishes they would let him go straight", the article provided readers with some insight into the popular actor's general lifestyle at the time, along with some details about his early life and personal preferences, right down to his "cheap socks":
SAG and later films Back in Hollywood after the 1933 publicity tour and working long hours six days a week, Talbot in July 1933 decided to become a member of the first
board of directors of the
Screen Actors Guild. His activism in SAG union affairs reportedly hurt his career. In 1936, Warner Bros. dropped his contract, which immediately affected Talbot's acting opportunities. He seldom received starring roles again, although he continued to find steady work as a capable character actor, often playing the "other man", affable neighbors, or crafty villains with equal finesse. Such universal acceptance of acting offers led to his performing in, as Talbot himself described them in the same
Times interview, "'some real stinkers'". He also had a role on
The Vigilante movie serial too for the original Vigilante
Greg Saunders, again for
DC Comics In 1960, after an absence of more than 20 years, Talbot returned to the
Warner Bros. big screen, appearing in the Franklin D. Roosevelt bio-pic,
Sunrise at Campobello written by
Dore Schary and starring
Ralph Bellamy. It was Talbot's penultimate film appearance. ==Television, 1950s1980s==