- Born
- Died
- Birth nameWilliam Phillips
- Height5′ 10½″ (1.79 m)
- Tully Marshall intended to pursue a legal career, until he tried a dramatic course at Santa Clara University. He started stage work in San Francisco in 1883 and moved to New York in 1887, where he played in various roles on Broadway and on the road. After a few small parts in films he was given the role of the High Priest of Babylon in the D.W. Griffith classic, Intolerance (1916). One of his finest roles in silents was that of an old frontiersman in another classic, The Covered Wagon (1923).
When sound arrived Marshall was very much in demand and worked for nearly every major studio. His last film was Behind Prison Walls (1943). He died on March 10, 1943, after a 60-year career in entertainment.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Dale Berryessa
- SpouseMarion Fairfax(June 7, 1899 - March 10, 1943) (his death)
- In the 1920s, he and Marion Fairfax lived in a Moroccan home in Hollywood designed by S.O. Clements of the Frank Meline Company of Hollywood.
- Was in three Oscar Best Picture nominees: Grand Hotel (1932), A Tale of Two Cities (1935) and Sergeant York (1941). Only the first of these won.
- He was born on the same day the Battle of Half Mountain began in Kentucky during the Civil War. He was a year and a day old when Abraham Lincoln was shot at Ford's Theater.
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