- Was once one of the 10 richest entertainers in the world.
- His home, "Greenacres" has 44 rooms, 26 bathrooms, 12 fountains, 12 gardens and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
- A 1919 accident with a prop bomb, which turned out to be a live bomb, cost him the thumb and forefinger of his right hand. In subsequent films, he wore a glove and prosthetic device to hide it. Remarkably, he was able to do many of his gags (he employed a stunt man for serious stunts) convincingly afterward.
- One of the 36 founders of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS).
- He was the visual inspiration for the original illustrations of the superhero Superman/Clark Kent (created in 1938). Lloyd was 45 years old at the time, and he was modeled for Clark Kent's identity (Superman's identity was modeled after Douglas Fairbanks). Lloyd's "Glasses character" was the inspiration because like that character, Lloyd found that he could hide his identity simply by taking off the glasses.
- Lloyd was extremely superstitious. His daily routines were dictated by his superstitions: he maintained that certain streets were unlucky and his chauffeurs were instructed to avoid them. He would habitually enter and exit rooms from the same doors and dress and undress in precise reverse order.
- His hobbies included 3-D photography. He took hundreds of stereo images of Hollywood stars such as Marilyn Monroe, John Wayne, Sterling Holloway, Richard Burton and Roy Rogers. Many of these photos are reproduced in the book "3-D Hollywood: Photography by Harold Lloyd", which was edited by his granddaughter, Suzanne Lloyd Hayes, and comes with a 3-D viewer.
- After Lloyd's career as an actor deserted him in 1938, he immersed - some would say drowned - himself into one hobby after another. While he bred Great Danes and collected cars earlier in life, he would later indulge himself in marathon movie nights several times each week, and become rabidly interested in photography (which allowed himself intimate contact with innumerable models) and later, in hi-fidelity sound systems. He placed standing orders for the entire catalogs of several record companies, amassing an enormous record collection.
- Parts of Westworld (1973) were shot at his estate, Greenacres. He had expressed a desire to see his home preserved in some capacity related to his career, but his will strangely neglected any funding for the enormous estate. His heirs briefly opened it as a tourist attraction (and filming location) but this failed to generate adequate income and it was later sold.
- A famous story about Lloyd concerns he and composer Gaylord Carter regarding the scoring of Lloyd's film Safety Last! (1923)) for a re-release. Lloyd was present during the recording session; during the sequence from the film in which he is scaling the side of a building, he loses his grip and catches hold of the hands of an enormous clock. During this moment, Carter at the organ swung into the song "Time on My Hands", which prompted Lloyd to give Carter a mock stern glance and declare, "Gaylord, I'LL do the jokes!".
- While never credited as a writer through his entire career, Lloyd was in fact the driving force behind all of his movies, from Grandma's Boy (1922) throughout the silent era. He came up with most of the stories and gags and structured them together with his team.
- Following his death the Harold Lloyd Estate (also known as Greenacres) in Los Angeles became a popular filming location for Hollywood, appearing in features such as The Godfather (1972), Westworld (1973), Beverly Hills Cop (1984) and Commando (1985). One of Lloyd's many superstitions was that it was extremely unlucky to travel around the ornamental fountain at the front of the house (and he only ever did so once, in his hearse on the way to his funeral). In all four films characters travel around the same fountain only to suffer a violent death afterwards.
- His home was used as the exterior of Jack Woltz's (John Marley) home in The Godfather (1972).
- His actual autographs prior to 1936 are quite rare. His father, J. Darcie 'Foxy' Lloyd, was given the job as the official fan mail correspondent within the Harold Lloyd Corporation. Foxy's signature is easy to recognize - it's right out of the 19th century and quite florid. HL's signature is much plainer and common. His father retired to Palm Springs in 1936. HL found it impossible to dodge autograph seekers when he began whirlwind movie/bowling nights around Los Angeles as his acting career wound down about the same time. Real pre-1936 autographs exist mainly on contracts and extremely personal correspondence to Bebe Daniels.
- Merian Cooper rented several of Lloyd's purebred Great Danes for the hunt sequence of "The Most Dangerous Game" when he realized the leopards called for in the script weren't practical (even for him). He dyed the dogs' hair black to make them look more ferocious.
- Unlike many other stars of the silent era Lloyd was known for his financial acumen. Despite his many expensive hobbies and the essential death of his film career after the advent of 'talkies' in the late 1920s he would still leave an estate of $12 million dollars upon his death in 1971.
- Great-uncle of Bentley Mitchum (Robert Mitchum's grandson).
- He is the great-great uncle of Casper Van Dien and Grace Van Dien.
- Before moving into his famous home Greenacres in 1928, Lloyd and his wife lived at 502 South Irving Boulevard in Los Angeles, just south of Hollywood. The house still exists. Before that, up until shortly after his marriage in 1923, Lloyd lived in a large two-story house on Hoover Street.
- Harold Lloyd was in danger of becoming a name from the past, in the years following his death. Then, beginning with a new biography about him, his legacy began to blossom until he has now become almost as recognized as Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton.
- After his attempts at succeeding in talkie movies failed, Lloyd reacted to this in a somewhat philosophical manner. He felt he had achieved everything he could in comedy and had no regrets that it was all over.
- He adopted daughter Peggy Lloyd in 1929, when she was five years old.
- According to the book, "The History Of Pulitzer Prize Winning Plays", Lloyd was originally slated to play the lead role of Elwood P. Dowd in Mary Chase's Broadway stage play "Harvey". Lloyd turned the part down, and it then went to Frank Fay.
- Was immortalized in Futurama (1999) episode S03E08: That's Lobstertainment. In this episode we find out that Dr. Zoidberg has an uncle who was a silent actor, Harold Zoid.
- Father of Harold Lloyd Jr. and Gloria Lloyd Roberts.
- Aside from two talking films, The Milky Way (1936) & The Sin of Harold Diddlebock (1947) (AKA "The Sin of Harold Diddlebock"), all films from 1922 through Grandma's Boy (1922), were owned by Lloyd. Many of the pre-1920 shorts were lost in a nitrate explosion in his film vault in 1943 and are now considered lost. A limited number of films rights were sold to Time-Life in 1998, and released on VHS format. The estate rejected offers to release them to DVD up until 2005, when they accepted an offer from New Line (some have also been restored and shown periodically on TCM). His films are set to be released on DVD somewhere in the next two years (2006-2007) (The two talking films are in the public domain, and all films before 1922 are owned by KINO having passed from Pathe and Roach)
- Interred at Forest Lawn, Glendale, California, USA, in the Great Mausoleum, Begonia Corridor.
- Head of jury at the Berlin International Film Festival in 1960.
- He has appeared in three films that have been selected for the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant: Safety Last! (1923), The Freshman (1925) and Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925).
- His granddaughter donated 85 scrapbooks and 3,000 still negatives documenting his career over 34 years to the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences for Motion Picture Study in Beverly Hills.
- Pictured on one of ten 29¢ US commemorative postage stamps celebrating stars of the silent screen, issued 27 April 1994. Designed by caricaturist Al Hirschfeld, this set of stamps also honored Rudolph Valentino, Clara Bow, Charles Chaplin, Lon Chaney, John Gilbert, Zasu Pitts, Theda Bara, Buster Keaton, and Keystone Kops.
- Before developing as a film comedian, Harold Lloyd did act in many dramatic roles during the early part of his career. Unfortunately, little footage exists in the archive.
- On the rare occasions he allowed his work to be shown publicly, Harold Lloyd enjoyed the company and opinions of younger people as they discussed his films in his presence.
- As with a lot of comedians, Harold Lloyd regarded creating comedy as an immensely frustrating experience. There were several occasions where he and his gag writers would spend many hours at a time - without much success - in trying to come up with some inspiration.
- As someone who held complete copyright over his movies, Harold Lloyd forbade any of his work from being shown on television. As a result, his name would remain unknown for many years among future film fans.
- Brother of Gaylord Lloyd.
- Grandfather of Suzanne Lloyd Hayes.
- Lloyd and future film producer Hal Roach began making a living as actors in 2 reel movies at "Universal" studios during the early teens.
- Photography enthusiast Roddy McDowall was invited by Harold Lloyd to his home, so that McDowall could take some photographs of the grounds.
- He and his wife Mildred Davis are mentioned twice in the Drake Bell song "End it Good" off of his 2006 album "It's Only Time".
- Son of J. Darcie 'Foxy' Lloyd and Elisabeth Fraser Lloyd.
- Sam Taylor was the most important director for him.
- During the 1920s, Harold Lloyd was one of the highest earners in Hollywood. Under his contract with "Paramount Studios," he was making approximately $1.2 million a year.
- On August 7, 2018, he was honored with a day of his film work during the TCM Summer Under The Stars.
- He received an Honoray Oscar in 1952.
- At home, Harold Lloyd exercised a Victorian kind of strictness with all of his children. He could be expected to grow angry if any infraction was committed.
- It has never been fully explained as to why Harold Lloyd didn't make the transition to talkie films. The most likely reason was due to the actor not having the right kind of voice for sound.
- He was Bebe Daniels's first date.
- At the beginning of his career, Lloyd tried to succeed with a character called Lonesome Luke. Similar to Chaplin's tramp character, Lloyd experienced little success and the character was soon dropped.
- For the last few years of his life, Harold Lloyd became a recluse.
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