Stand by · pulling the latest frames
Stand by · pulling the latest frames

Born in Evanston, Illinois, his mother was the pioneering African-American film actress Madame Sul-Te-Wan (née Nellie Crawford) and his father was Robert Reed Conley. He had two brothers; Odel and Otto. His father abandoned the family shortly after Conley's birth, leaving his actress mother to raise the three boys. Like his mother, Onest Conley gravitated toward the acting profession and began taking bit parts in films. His first film appearance was a minor role in the 1926 Frank Borzage-directed The Dixie Merchant, a film adaptation of the Barry Benefield novel The Chicken-Wagon Family. The film starred Jack Mulhall and Madge Bellamy. Despite limitations for African-American actors within the film industry during the 1920s and 1930s, Onest Conley appeared in films during the era, often typecast in stereotypical roles as "natives" and "shoeshine boys". Conley appeared alongside his brother Odel as "warriors" in the 1933 box-office hit King Kong, in which their mother also appeared in an uncredited role as a "native handmaiden". Conley also appeared alongside his mother in the 1930 Richard Thorpe-directed film The Thoroughbred as the character Ham Tolliver.
7.6King Kong
1933
5.0Vengeance
1930
6.5Golden Boy
1939
5.4The Thoroughbred
1930
6.0The Foxes of Harrow
1947
8.0Princess O'Hara
1935
7.0The Dixie Merchant
1926
8.0Racing Luck
1935
5.0This Day and Age
1933
2.9Jungle Goddess
1948
6.6She Knew All the Answers
1941
6.2The Thrill of Brazil
1946
10.0Diamond Handcuffs
1928
7.0Grand Old Girl
1935