Cesar Romero
César Julio Romero Jr. (February 15, 1907 – January 1, 1994) was an American actor, singer, dancer, and comedian whose multifaceted career in entertainment spanned nearly six decades.
Romero appeared in over 100 films, frequently cast as charismatic Latin lovers, historical figures, or affable rogues in genres ranging from musicals and comedies to Westerns and costume dramas.[1] His television work included guest spots on numerous series, but he achieved enduring fame as the cackling archvillain the Joker in the campy Batman series (1966–1969), where he declined to shave his signature mustache, creating a unique visual under the greasepaint.[1]
Enlisting in the United States Coast Guard in 1942 at the peak of his early film success, Romero served aboard the patrol cutter USS Cavalier during World War II, participating in convoys across the Atlantic and Pacific while entertaining troops with performances.[2] His postwar career sustained versatility, with roles in projects like the swashbuckling Captain from Castile (1947), often praised as one of his strongest dramatic turns as the conquistador Hernán Cortés.[1] Romero's longevity and adaptability in Hollywood, from Broadway beginnings to late-life soap opera appearances on Falcon Crest, underscored his professional resilience amid shifting industry demands.
Early Life and Background
Family Heritage and Childhood
César Julio Romero Jr. was born on February 15, 1907, in New York City to César Julio Romero Sr., a Spanish-born merchant specializing in sugar imports and refining machinery, and María Mantilla, a Cuban concert singer of immigrant parentage.[3][4][5] Romero's family heritage reflected a blend of Spanish and Cuban influences, with his mother widely reported as the biological daughter of José Martí, the Cuban poet and independence leader killed in 1895 during the fight against Spanish colonial rule; Romero himself proudly claimed this lineage, underscoring a household emphasis on cultural identity and anti-colonial pride amid Cuban exile communities in the United States.[6][7] His early childhood unfolded in a privileged New York environment, where exposure to the performing arts began through his mother's career as a vocalist, fostering an initial familiarity with stage performance and music within a prosperous merchant family supported by his father's trade connections in sugar and shipping.[8][9]Education and Early Influences
Romero attended the Collegiate School and Riverdale Country School in New York City during his formative years, institutions known for providing a rigorous preparatory education to students from affluent backgrounds.[10][11] These schools emphasized classical studies and discipline, laying a foundation that contrasted with his later pivot to the arts, though he showed no early formal training in performance.[6] Following his education, Romero took an entry-level position as a bank messenger on Wall Street, secured through his father's connections in finance, which instilled habits of punctuality and professional demeanor amid the economic fluctuations of the 1920s.[11][2] Concurrently, lacking any structured dance instruction, he began performing as a ballroom dancer at New York social events, supper clubs, and speakeasies during the Roaring Twenties, honing improvisational skills and charisma through paid partnerships that exposed him to live audiences.[12][2] This hands-on experience, amid the pulsating energy of Broadway's theater district, sparked his affinity for stage performance, transitioning from amateur foxtrots and tangos to informal theatrical aspirations without reliance on familial artistic ties for initial entry.[13]Entry into Entertainment
Broadway and Stage Debut
César Romero began his professional performing career as a dancer in New York City's theater scene during the late 1920s. His stage debut occurred in the 1927 Broadway revue Lady Do at the Liberty Theatre, where he performed alongside dance partner Ada Louise Higgins, executing tango, waltz, and foxtrot routines that contributed to the show's 56-performance run.[14][15] This early exposure highlighted Romero's agility and charm as a dancer, skills honed from his teenage years performing at family gatherings and social events in Manhattan.[16] Following Lady Do, Romero continued in ensemble and chorus roles in various New York productions, refining his abilities in dance, singing, and rudimentary acting amid the vibrant revue and musical theater environment. Notable appearances included the 1929 musical The Street Singer, which marked one of his initial credited performances on Broadway.[17] These roles, often in supporting capacities, allowed him to build stage presence and versatility, performing in fast-paced revues that demanded quick adaptability to live audiences and orchestral accompaniment. Through consistent work in these late-1920s productions, Romero attracted attention within New York's theater community for his energetic footwork and charismatic demeanor, establishing a foundation that positioned him for broader opportunities beyond the stage.[18] His early theater experiences emphasized physical performance over dramatic leads, fostering the multifaceted talents that would later define his career.[19]Initial Film Roles
Romero entered Hollywood after gaining notice on Broadway, securing a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1932 during his run in the play Dinner at Eight.[18] His first credited film appearance was as Tony Rico in the crime drama The Shadow Laughs (1933).[1] In 1934, Romero played the supporting role of gigolo Chris Jorgenson in the mystery-comedy The Thin Man, directed by W.S. Van Dyke and starring William Powell and Myrna Loy.[1] MGM subsequently loaned him to Warner Bros. for British Agent, where he portrayed Tito Del Val opposite Leslie Howard and Kay Francis. He also featured in Universal's Cheating Cheaters that year, marking an early foray into ensemble casts involving theft and deception plots.[1] Following the end of his brief MGM tenure, Romero signed a three-year contract with Universal Studios in 1934, which positioned him as a reliable supporting player often typecast in roles emphasizing his ethnic heritage as suave, romantic Latin figures.[20] During this period, he appeared as a gigolo in The Good Fairy (1935), a comedy directed by William Wyler, and as a Spanish officer in love interest to Marlene Dietrich in Josef von Sternberg's The Devil Is a Woman (1935).[21] These assignments reinforced his image as a charismatic foil in romantic and adventurous narratives, though confined to secondary billing. By the late 1930s, after transitioning to 20th Century-Fox, Romero continued in similar vein with supporting parts such as in The Cisco Kid and the Lady (1939), portraying the titular bandit opposite Warner Baxter.[1] This phase solidified his status as a contract actor adept at ethnic characterizations, paving the way for expanded opportunities without yet achieving lead prominence.[20]Film Career
Breakthrough Roles and Latin Lover Typecasting
Romero's breakthrough came in the mid-1930s with roles that capitalized on his tall stature, dark features, and Cuban-Italian heritage, positioning him as a suave Latin lover in Hollywood productions. In 1935, he secured a leading role as Antonio Galvan opposite Marlene Dietrich in The Devil Is a Woman, directed by Josef von Sternberg, which was intended to establish him as a major romantic heartthrob but was undermined by the film's commercial failure due to its high cost and limited audience appeal.[22][23] That same year, Romero portrayed Jerry Richardson, a romantic rival in the biographical drama Diamond Jim, supporting Edward Arnold as financier James Buchanan Brady and engaging in courtship dynamics with Jean Arthur's character.[24] The following year, Romero appeared as Bill Wadsworth in the screwball comedy Love Before Breakfast, where he played the fiancé of Carole Lombard's socialite Kay Colby, only to be sidelined by Preston Foster's scheming industrialist rival, highlighting his charm in light romantic entanglements.[25] These roles, along with an early villainous supporting part as Chris Jorgenson in The Thin Man (1934), showcased Romero's appeal as a charismatic antagonist or suitor in mystery and comedy genres.[23] By 1939, he took on the flamboyant escape artist Rhadini in Charlie Chan at Treasure Island, blending showmanship with intrigue to aid Sidney Toler's detective, further cementing his popularity in series films.[26] This pattern of typecasting as a Latin lover provided Romero with consistent employment across Universal and other studios, where his ethnic persona drove box-office draw in romantic leads and supporting parts, often loaned out for ethnic-flavored characters that boosted production output in B-movies and programmers.[21] However, the reliance on stereotypes—emphasizing exotic allure and limited dramatic depth—restricted his range, confining him predominantly to superficial romantic or antagonistic figures rather than allowing exploration of more varied or substantive roles, a common Hollywood practice for actors of Latin descent during the era.[16] Despite these constraints, Romero's versatility within the genre, including dance-infused performances and comedic timing, sustained his mid-tier stardom and fan appeal through the early 1940s.[27]Diverse Character Roles and Collaborations
Romero expanded his repertoire beyond romantic leads by portraying Ram Dass, the devoted Indian servant aiding the protagonist, in the family drama The Little Princess (1939), directed by Walter Lang and co-starring Shirley Temple as Sara Crewe.[28] This supporting role, which involved dramatic and compassionate elements rather than seduction, marked an early departure from ethnic stereotypes, allowing him to demonstrate emotional depth in a non-Latin character.[29] In the same year, Romero assumed the persona of the tubercular gambler and gunman Doc Halliday in the Western Frontier Marshal (1939), a loose dramatization of Tombstone events with Randolph Scott as Wyatt Earp.[30] As Halliday, he delivered a portrayal blending tragic romanticism and volatility, engaging in shootouts and saloon conflicts that highlighted his adaptability to action-oriented adventure narratives.[31] These pre-war assignments in Westerns and period pieces underscored his broadening appeal, transitioning from musicals to genres requiring grit and historical nuance. Romero further embraced adventure through the Cisco Kid series, initiating with The Cisco Kid and the Lady (1939) and continuing in Viva Cisco Kid (1940), where he played the charismatic bandit evading lawmen while righting wrongs in Southwestern settings.[32] Though rooted in his established swashbuckler image, these B-movies involved horseback chases, disguises, and moral dilemmas, collaborating with sidekicks like Chris-Pin Martin as Gordito and emphasizing quick-witted heroism over mere romance.[33] Such roles, often secondary to white protagonists in ensemble casts, reflected Hollywood's era-specific casting practices that favored Anglo leads for central authority figures while assigning ethnic actors to flavorful supporting parts.[34]Post-War and Later Films
Following his discharge from the U.S. Coast Guard in late 1945, Romero returned to Hollywood and took on supporting roles in adventure epics, including Hernán Cortés in Captain from Castile (1947), a 20th Century Fox production directed by Henry King that co-starred Tyrone Power and Jean Peters.[35] This marked his resumption of film work after wartime service, emphasizing historical figures in lavish period pieces amid the studio system's post-war emphasis on spectacle. In the 1950s, Romero's roles diversified into international ensembles and Westerns, such as the Marquis Henri de Labordere in Vera Cruz (1954), a gritty adventure directed by Robert Aldrich featuring Gary Cooper and Burt Lancaster, where he portrayed a scheming nobleman allied with bandits. He also appeared as a henchman to Achmed Abdullah in the epic Around the World in 80 Days (1956), produced by Michael Todd and starring David Niven, contributing to the film's all-star cameo-driven narrative based on Jules Verne's novel.[36] These parts reflected a pivot from romantic leads to character work, capitalizing on his debonair presence in multinational casts as Hollywood adapted to declining attendance and rising competition from television. By the 1960s and 1970s, Romero solidified as a reliable supporting player in comedies and villainous turns, often in family-oriented or B-movies, such as the corrupt but bumbling businessman A.J. Arno in Disney's The Strongest Man in the World (1975), the final entry in the Dexter Riley series starring Kurt Russell, where his character schemes to exploit a strength-enhancing formula.[37] He reprised comic antagonism in the big-screen adaptation Batman (1966), playing the Joker alongside Adam West, extending his theatrical flair to campy features. This phase sustained his screen presence into the 1980s, with appearances like the ship's captain in Mortuary Academy (1988), though leads became rare as audience tastes shifted toward method acting and youth-driven narratives, relegating seasoned contract players like Romero to flavorful bit parts. His adaptability ensured steady employment across genres, underscoring the era's demand for versatile utility actors over marquee stars.[10]Television and Broadcasting Career
Iconic Role as the Joker
Cesar Romero portrayed the Joker in the ABC television series Batman, which aired from January 12, 1966, to March 14, 1968, appearing in 22 episodes, and reprised the role in the 1966 theatrical film Batman.[38] When cast at age 59, Romero refused to shave his trademark mustache—a signature feature from his earlier Latin lover roles—for the part, prompting the production team to layer white greasepaint over it, resulting in a visible outline that became an inadvertent hallmark of his interpretation.[39][40] Romero's Joker emphasized flamboyant villainy through cackling laughter, elaborate non-lethal schemes involving trick gadgets and wordplay, and a theatrical flair that aligned with the series' campy, pop-art aesthetic rather than the character's comic book roots as a chaotic psychopath. This approach depicted the Joker as a mischievous prankster whose threats were defused by humor and Batman's gadgets, diverging from the source material's darker menace to suit 1960s broadcast standards prohibiting graphic violence.[41] The performance influenced early pop culture views of the character as a colorful, comedic antagonist, paving the way for lighter adaptations before subsequent portrayals shifted toward psychological horror.[42] The role markedly boosted Romero's fame late in his career, transforming him into a cultural icon as the first live-action Joker and generating renewed interest that extended his visibility beyond film into television syndication and merchandising.[43] While lauded for its energetic commitment and synergy with the show's satirical tone—evident in Romero's ability to convey gleeful insanity—critics and comic enthusiasts have faulted the exaggeration of camp elements for softening the Joker's anarchic terror, rendering him more buffoon than existential threat compared to the 1940s-1950s comics.Other Television and Radio Appearances
Romero made several guest appearances on radio programs during the 1930s and 1940s, including a notable role in the Lux Radio Theatre adaptation of Cardinal Richelieu broadcast on January 23, 1939, opposite George Arliss.[44] These audio performances showcased his vocal range and dramatic timing in condensed versions of popular films, adapting his film persona to the medium's reliance on dialogue and sound effects.[45] Transitioning to television, Romero demonstrated versatility through episodic roles across genres, accumulating dozens of guest spots from the 1950s onward.[1] In the Disney series Zorro (1957–1959), he portrayed Esteban de la Cruz, the roguish uncle of Don Diego de la Vega, across four episodes in season 2 during 1959.[46] This swashbuckling character highlighted his flair for charismatic, scheming supporting parts in adventure serials. He also featured in variety formats, such as multiple appearances on The Martha Raye Show in the mid-1950s, where his song-and-dance background contributed to musical and comedic sketches.[47] By the 1980s, Romero sustained his career with a prominent recurring role as the wealthy shipping magnate Peter Stavros on the prime-time soap Falcon Crest, appearing in 51 episodes from 1985 to 1988.[1] Introduced in October 1985 as an ally to matriarch Angela Channing (played by Jane Wyman), Stavros added intrigue through business rivalries and romantic entanglements in the Tuscany Valley wine empire storyline.[48] Additional guest roles in series like Murder, She Wrote (1984), Fantasy Island (1977), Bewitched, and Wagon Train underscored his adaptability to anthology, mystery, and Western formats, often playing suave or authoritative figures that leveraged his debonair screen presence.[1] This breadth of work, spanning over three decades, affirmed his enduring appeal in shifting media landscapes beyond theatrical features.[47]Military Service and Patriotism
Coast Guard Enlistment
In October 1942, at the age of 35 and at the peak of his Hollywood career, Cesar Romero voluntarily enlisted in the United States Coast Guard as an apprentice seaman.[49][2] Despite his fame as a leading actor in films, Romero opted for military service rather than seeking deferments commonly available to entertainers for wartime morale efforts on the home front.[6] This decision reflected his strong sense of patriotism and commitment to national defense amid World War II.[50] Upon enlistment, Romero explicitly requested no special privileges or treatment due to his celebrity status, insisting on being treated as an ordinary sailor.[6][49] His enlistment garnered national media attention, underscoring the contrast between his public persona and his determination to serve anonymously within the ranks.[6] Assigned initially to standard Coast Guard duties, Romero's choice of branch aligned with his desire for active involvement in the war effort, bypassing opportunities for less demanding roles.[50][2]Wartime Contributions
During World War II, Cesar Romero served aboard the Coast Guard-manned assault transport USS Cavalier (APA-37), participating in key Pacific operations including the invasions of Saipan and Tinian in 1944, where the vessel supported troop landings and logistics under fire.[51][50] As a deck crew member operating winches for cargo and landing craft, Romero contributed to the ship's operational efficiency without engaging in direct infantry combat, embodying the resolve of enlisted personnel from diverse backgrounds.[6] Beyond shipboard duties, Romero bolstered troop morale through organized variety shows and recreational performances for fellow sailors when operational pauses allowed, leveraging his pre-war entertainment experience to foster camaraderie amid grueling deployments.[6] Later in the conflict, he engaged in public outreach by speaking at war production plants and participating in war bond rallies, efforts aimed at encouraging industrial output and financial support for the war machine without publicity-seeking fanfare.[6][2] These activities aligned with broader celebrity-driven initiatives to sustain home front enthusiasm, though official records emphasize Romero's integration as "just another guy" in uniform rather than exploiting his fame.[6] Romero's wartime service, culminating in his advancement to Chief Boatswain's Mate by 1945, exemplified practical patriotism through logistical support and motivational endeavors, raising funds via bonds and promoting enlistment indirectly through visible commitment.[49][50] While some contemporaries critiqued celebrity enlistments as potentially performative, contemporary U.S. Coast Guard accounts highlight Romero's work ethic and humility, free of noted controversies.[6]Political Involvement
Republican Party Support
Romero, a registered Republican, actively campaigned for the Republican presidential ticket of Richard Nixon and Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. during the 1960 election, including participating in motorcade events where he and actress Ginger Rogers distributed Nixon-Lodge bumper stickers to supporters in Los Angeles.[52][53] In October 1960, he appeared at promotional rallies to boost visibility for the ticket, leveraging his Hollywood celebrity to engage voters. During the 1964 presidential election, Romero endorsed and supported Barry Goldwater's Republican candidacy, attending high-profile events such as a New York dinner hosted by Goldwater where he mingled with other conservative figures and donors.[54] His involvement extended to grassroots efforts amid Goldwater's campaign against Lyndon B. Johnson, reflecting Romero's alignment with the party's nominee despite the eventual landslide loss.[55] In 1970, Romero backed California U.S. Senator George Murphy's re-election bid as a Republican incumbent, appearing at the opening of Murphy's San Francisco campaign headquarters alongside other entertainers like Gale Storm to draw crowds and media attention.[56] He was photographed rallying supporters, including young participants wearing campaign sashes, to energize the base in Murphy's unsuccessful defense against Democratic challenger John V. Tunney.[57] These efforts underscored Romero's consistent role in mobilizing Hollywood's conservative-leaning performers for GOP Senate races.[23]Anti-Communist Positions and Campaigns
Romero's opposition to communism stemmed from his Cuban heritage and alignment with Republican foreign policy hawks during the Cold War. In 1960, he actively supported the presidential bid of Richard Nixon and running mate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., explicitly praising Lodge's robust anti-communist measures as U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam, where Lodge oversaw efforts to counter North Vietnamese expansionism backed by Soviet and Chinese support.[55] This endorsement reflected Romero's preference for containment strategies against global communist threats, distinguishing his views from more isolationist Republican factions. His Cuban background intensified this stance, as Castro's 1959 revolution imposed a Soviet-aligned regime on the island, prompting mass exile. Romero, whose mother was Cuban-born and who claimed descent from independence hero José Martí—a figure whose advocacy for individual freedoms and aversion to centralized tyranny Cuban exiles invoked against collectivist dictatorships—starred in the 1963 film We Shall Return. The production depicted a family's flight from Castro's Cuba and their clandestine plans to return and topple the government, aligning Romero with anti-Castro narratives that highlighted the regime's suppression of dissent and economic nationalization.[7][58] After the 1970s, Romero's public anti-communist advocacy waned amid his focus on acting and philanthropy, though contemporaries noted his steadfast private rejection of Marxist ideologies, particularly amid Hollywood's occasional tolerance for leftist figures despite documented Soviet infiltration attempts via cultural fronts in the 1930s–1950s.[59] He avoided the overt crusades of figures like Hedda Hopper but consistently framed communism as antithetical to American liberty and his family's anti-authoritarian legacy.Personal Life
Relationships and Private Life
Cesar Romero never married and had no children, maintaining the status of a lifelong bachelor throughout his 87 years.[60][61] He frequently appeared at Hollywood events escorting prominent actresses, including Joan Crawford, Linda Darnell, and Barbara Stanwyck, which aligned with the era's expectations for public male figures in the industry.[55] One notable association was with actress Phyllis Brooks, with whom he was photographed and romantically linked around 1940. Despite this public persona, Romero's private relationships remain largely undocumented, with no verifiable accounts of long-term romantic partnerships of any kind emerging from contemporary records or his own statements.[62] Speculation about his sexuality has persisted posthumously, particularly in recent biographies asserting he was gay and discreet due to mid-20th-century Hollywood's repressive environment toward homosexuality.[63] These claims often cite rumored close friendships, such as with actor Tyrone Power, but lack direct evidence like admissions from Romero or corroborated eyewitness testimonies.[64] Romero himself never publicly confirmed or denied such orientations, emphasizing privacy in interviews where he attributed his unmarried state to a preference for deep emotional commitment before marriage.[61] The absence of scandals or leaked personal correspondences contrasts with the more exposed private lives of other Hollywood figures during the same period, suggesting either exceptional discretion or a genuinely asexual or privately heterosexual lifestyle unmarred by controversy.[65] Sources advancing the homosexual narrative, including LGBTQ-focused media and biographies, rely on circumstantial inferences from his bachelorhood and industry patterns rather than empirical documentation, highlighting potential interpretive biases in retrospective analyses of pre-Stonewall era celebrities.[63][62]Lifestyle and Philanthropy
Romero maintained an active and disciplined lifestyle, centered on ballroom dancing, which he pursued professionally from his vaudeville beginnings in the late 1920s without formal training, performing in New York nightclubs and theaters alongside partner Janette Hackett. This passion extended to social settings, films, and parties, where he was frequently photographed dancing, contributing to his enduring physical vitality and suiting him for dynamic roles across a 60-year career. He also enjoyed cigars as a personal indulgence, rarely appearing without one off-screen, while avoiding the financial excesses that plagued some contemporaries, instead leveraging early career earnings to support his family during the late 1920s economic downturn.[66][2][67] In philanthropy, Romero exhibited generosity rooted in his World War II Coast Guard service, demonstrating years of concern, dedication, and support for the organization and its veterans, including practical contributions like blood donations during wartime operations at Saipan to aid wounded Marines. His giving remained largely private, with no documented major financial scandals or publicized large-scale campaigns, aligning with a profile of discreet beneficence rather than high-visibility advocacy. While his Cuban-American heritage prompted informal aid to exile networks—such as hosting gatherings at family-associated properties for anti-revolutionary figures—such efforts were limited and not central to his charitable record.[68][6][7]Death and Legacy
Final Years and Health
In the 1980s, Romero maintained an active presence in television, portraying the recurring character Peter Stavros on the soap opera Falcon Crest from 1985 to 1987.[1] He also engaged in dinner theater performances as his film roles diminished.[18] Romero's health deteriorated in late 1993, resulting in hospitalization for severe bronchitis and pneumonia at Saint John's Health Center in Santa Monica, California.[15] [69] He died on January 1, 1994, at the age of 86, from complications of a blood clot developed during his treatment.[20] [15] His body was cremated, with ashes interred at Inglewood Park Cemetery in Inglewood, California.[70]Cultural Impact and Recognition
Cesar Romero's depiction of the Joker in the 1966–1968 Batman television series established a benchmark for campy supervillain portrayals, emphasizing theatrical exaggeration and comedic flair over grim realism, which revived public interest in comic book antagonists during the era's pop art movement.[71] His insistence on retaining his trademark mustache beneath the character's white makeup created a visually distinctive element that has been emulated and referenced in later adaptations, underscoring a legacy of performative resilience against production demands.[72] This role has prompted retrospective analyses framing Romero's Joker as an early queer cultural touchstone, attributed by some to its flamboyant mannerisms and subversion of traditional masculinity, though such readings derive from stylistic choices in a heterosexual actor's performance rather than biographical evidence of personal orientation.[73] Claims of a concealed queer life, as explored in recent works, remain speculative amid documentation of Romero's long-term relationships with women and absence of public acknowledgment.[74] Romero's broader cultural footprint reflects a prolific yet underrecognized career, marked by typecasting in Latin lover and character roles that constrained access to leading dramatic parts despite spanning nearly 60 years and over 100 films.[75] He earned two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame—one for motion pictures at 6615 Hollywood Boulevard in 1960 and one for television at 1719 Vine Street—yet received no major acting awards like Oscars, highlighting industry biases against ethnic actors in prestige categories.[76] Posthumous reappraisals, including Samuel Garza Bernstein's 2025 biography Cesar Romero: The Joker is Wild, reassess his versatility across musicals, comedies, and Westerns, portraying him as an exemplar of adaptability in a Hollywood system prone to pigeonholing non-Anglo performers.[77] In 2022, Romero was posthumously inducted into the Walk of Western Stars, affirming his contributions to genre films amid ongoing discussions of overlooked talents.[78]
Career Bibliography
Filmography
Cesar Romero's film career began with uncredited and supporting roles in the early 1930s, transitioning to leading parts in musicals and Westerns during the 1940s, before settling into character actor positions in comedies and action films later in life.[1] He appeared in more than 100 feature films over five decades. Key films from his filmography, listed chronologically, include:| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1933 | The Shadow Laughs | Tony Rico | Feature film debut.[10] |
| 1934 | The Thin Man | Chris Jorgenson | Supporting villainous role opposite William Powell and Myrna Loy; mystery comedy genre. |
| 1935 | The Devil Is a Woman | Antonio Galvan | Romantic drama directed by Josef von Sternberg.[79] |
| 1936 | Cheating Cheaters | Steve Barnes | Comedy; one of Romero's early leading roles.[1] |
| 1937 | Wee Willie Winkie | Coppinger | Adventure film co-starring Shirley Temple.[80] |
| 1939 | The Little Princess | Ram Dass | Family drama with Shirley Temple.[80] |
| 1939 | The Cisco Kid and the Lady | The Cisco Kid | First in a series of six Westerns starring as the Cisco Kid (1939–1941).[9] |
| 1941 | Week-End in Havana | Manuelito | Musical comedy co-starring Carmen Miranda.[1] |
| 1954 | Vera Cruz | Marquis de Labordere | Western co-starring Gary Cooper and Burt Lancaster.[79] |
| 1960 | Ocean's 11 | Duke Santos | Heist comedy with the Rat Pack including Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin.[79] |
| 1963 | Donovan's Reef | Don Andrea | Adventure comedy directed by John Ford, co-starring John Wayne.[79] |
| 1966 | Batman | The Joker | Superhero film adaptation; reprise of his television role.[1] |
| 1969 | The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes | Richter | Comedy starring Kurt Russell; Disney production.[79] |
| 1984 | Cannonball Run II | Arnold | Ensemble comedy sequel.[81] |
Theatre and Radio Credits
Romero's early stage career featured dance performances in vaudeville and nightclub acts, partnering with Janette Hackett in the late 1920s, where he showcased foxtrot, waltz, and tango routines.[66][16] He transitioned to Broadway, debuting in musical and comedic roles that highlighted his charm and Latin flair. Key Broadway credits include:- The Street Singer (1929–1930), as John.[82]
- Strictly Dishonorable (1930), playing a romantic lead.[1]
- Dinner at Eight (October 22, 1932 – May 1933), in a supporting role amid the original production's 232 performances.[83][84]