
From Wikipedia
Charles Eldridge was an American stage and screen actor of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In the film industry he appeared in over 100 films, although the majority of those were film shorts. He began on the stage during the 1870s, and appeared in at least one Broadway play, Charles Frohman's 1899 production of Because She Loved Him So. His first appearance in film was in a 1910 short, The Legacy, in which he starred. His first appearance in a feature film was in The Strange Story of Sylvia Gray. In addition to the over 100 shorts he was in, Eldridge appeared in 27 feature films between 1914 and 1922. In his roles in full-length films, he would usually appear in a supporting role, although occasionally be given a lead, as in 1917's Polly of the Circus, 1920's Broken Hearts, and 1922's Ashamed of Parents. Polly of the Circus was notable for being the first film released by Goldwyn Pictures, which was shot in Fort Lee, New Jersey, mostly at rented space at the studios owned by Universal Studios.
His final screen appearance would be in a supporting role in the 1922 film, No Trespassing, which starred Irene Castle of the famous dancing team, Vernon and Irene Castle. No Trespassing was released on June 11, 1922, and Eldridge would die soon after, on October 29, 1922 in New York City.

A Reformed Santa Claus
1911

Redhead
1919 · as Mr. Mellows

Ignorance
1916 · as The Father

Two Stepchildren
1914 · as Hazel's Stepfather

The Spider's Web
1912 · as Graham Lawlor - Trevor's Father

The Duchess of Doubt
1917 · as Walter Gray Sr.

Sunshine Nan
1918 · as Mr. Snawdor

The Man Under the Bed
1912 · as The Father

Captain Jenks' Dilemma
1912 · as Sir Brian Squills

Her Forgotten Dancing Shoes
1912

The Red Barrier
1912 · as Professor Bain

His Father's Son
1917 · as Adam Barron

Up in a Balloon
1913

The Life Boat
1911

The Little Minister
1913 · as Sanders Webster

The Wheel of the Law
1916 · as Frank Willis

As You Like It
1912 · as Corin, a Shepherd

The Younger Brother
1911 · as Father Werner