The date of Orlamond's emigration to the United States is unclear, but by 1912 he was in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania working in one-reelers for
Siegmund Lubin and appearing in
Pathé and
Edison Studios production shorts. While under contract to
Louis B. Meyer's
Metro Pictures, Orlamond proved to be an able actor in supporting roles, both dramatic and comedic. He gave solid performances as
Rudolph Valentino's father with
Alla Nazimova in
Camille (1921) and as Mosely, a textile baron in
Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak Model (1924) starring
Claire Windsor. Orlamond provided a measure of levity to the over-wrought romance
Flesh and the Devil (1926) as the inept but well-meaning Uncle Kutowski. In the film, which starred
Greta Garbo and
John Gilbert, Orlamond's brief appearance "receives one of the few laughs in the entire nine reels of nostril-flaring passion," according to film historian Hans J. Wollstein. The picture was exceptionally profitable to the newly amalgamated
MGM. Orlamond's "tour-de-force" performance as Sourdough in
Victor Sjostrom's
The Wind was the high water mark of his career. The "uncouth" Sourdough is among several characters who vie for the favor of
Lillian Gish in her ingénue role as Letty. Wollstein reports that Orlamond "stole every scene he was in". ==Later life==