David Miles (actor)

David Miles (c. 1871 – October 28, 1915) was an American actor and director. Born in Milford, Connecticut, he became a Hollywood actor and was head of dramatic production at the Kinemacolor Company of America until October 1913. Later, he owned David Miles, Inc., a film making company in Los Angeles, California. He died of a sudden hemorrhage while walking with his secretary in New York City, aged 44.

As actor

 * All 1909 shorts, unless otherwise noted.


 * The Helping Hand
 * The Maniac Cook
 * The Honor of Thieves
 * Love Finds a Way
 * A Rural Elopement
 * The Criminal Hypnotist
 * The Welcome Burglar
 * The Cord of Life
 * The Girls and Daddy
 * The Brahma Diamond
 * Edgar Allen Poe
 * A Wreath in Time
 * Tragic Love
 * The Joneses Have Amateur Theatricals
 * His Wife's Mother
 * The Politician's Love Story
 * At the Altar
 * The Prussian Spy
 * The Wooden Leg
 * The Roue's Heart
 * The Voice of the Violin
 * The Deception
 * And a Little Child Shall Lead Them
 * A Burglar's Mistake
 * A Drunkard's Reformation
 * Trying to Get Arrested
 * The Road to the Heart
 * Lucky Jim
 * Lady Helen's Escapade
 * Two Memories
 * The Cricket on the Hearth
 * The Violin Maker of Cremona
 * The Lonely Villa
 * An Outcast Among Outcasts (1912 short)

As director

 * The Closed Bible (1912 short)
 * How To Live 100 Years (1913 Kinemacolor short)
 * The Scarlet Letter (1913 Kinemacolor short)