Turhan Bey
Turhan Bey (30 March 1922 – 30 September 2012) was an Austrian-born actor of Turkish and Czech-Jewish descent, best known for his roles as suave, exotic leading men in Hollywood adventure films of the 1940s, earning him the affectionate nickname "The Turkish Delight" from fans.[1] Born Turhan Gilbert Selahattin Şahultavi in Vienna to a Turkish diplomat father and a Czech-Jewish mother, Bey fled Nazi-occupied Austria in 1938 with his mother and grandmother, first living in Paris before emigrating to the United States, where the family settled in New Hampshire and later Los Angeles.[1][2] He honed his English and acting skills through drama classes in Hollywood under instructor Ben Bard and made his screen debut in Footsteps in the Dark (1941), quickly securing a contract with Universal Pictures.[2] At the height of his career in the 1940s, Bey appeared in over 20 films, often cast in Technicolor spectacles as characters of Middle Eastern, Asian, or Latin American origin, leveraging his multilingual abilities and charismatic presence.[1] Notable roles included the scheming Kharis's aide in The Mummy's Tomb (1942), the heroic Ahmad in Arabian Nights (1942), the villainous Jamiel in Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves (1944), and the Mongolian prince in Dragon Seed (1944).[1][2] His on-screen romance with Maria Montez in several Universal productions, including Arabian Nights and Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, further boosted his stardom, though typecasting and shifting industry preferences led to fewer opportunities by the early 1950s.[1] Bey retired from acting in 1953, returning to Vienna to establish a successful career as a fashion and publicity photographer, exhibiting his work internationally.[1] He staged a late-career resurgence in 1993, taking on character roles in American television, such as guest spots on Murder, She Wrote (1995) and the Centauri emperor in Babylon 5 (1995, 1998), with his final film appearance in The Skateboard Kid II (1995).[2] Never married, he died in Vienna at age 90 from complications of Parkinson's disease.[3]Early life
Family background and birth
Turhan Bey was born on March 30, 1922, in Vienna, Austria, with the birth name Turhan Gilbert Selahattin Sahultavy.[3] His father served as a Turkish military attaché stationed at the Turkish Embassy in Vienna, where he had been posted after losing his right arm in World War I.[3][4] The senior Bey met and married the actor's mother, a woman of Czech-Jewish descent, during his assignment in Austria in the early 1920s.[3] Bey grew up in a multicultural household that reflected his mixed Turkish and Czech-Jewish heritage, which later contributed to his distinctive "exotic" appearance and persona in Hollywood films, often casting him in roles emphasizing Eastern allure.[3][5] His early childhood unfolded in Vienna amid the interwar period's relative stability, where he was exposed to diverse cultural influences from his parents' backgrounds.[6] This idyll ended with the escalating rise of Nazism in Europe, particularly following the 1938 Anschluss, which annexed Austria to Nazi Germany and heightened dangers for those of Jewish descent in his family.[3][5]Education and immigration to the United States
In 1938, amid the Nazi annexation of Austria, Turhan Bey (born Turhan Gilbert Selahattin Sahultavy) and his mother fled the country with his grandmother to escape persecution stemming from his mother's Czech-Jewish heritage.[1] The family, separated from Bey's Turkish diplomat father due to an earlier divorce, first fled to Paris before emigrating to the United States, where they initially settled in New Hampshire and later moved to Los Angeles, navigating the hardships of refugee life, including financial struggles and the cultural shock of assimilation in a new country.[3] As part of their adjustment, the family simplified their identities for practical reasons in American society; Bey's elaborate birth name was eventually streamlined to "Turhan Bey" as he pursued opportunities in the U.S.[1] At age 17, Bey enrolled in a Los Angeles high school to complete his secondary education and improve his English proficiency, initially focusing on scientific studies before discovering his passion for the performing arts.[1] His early interest in drama led to initial stage appearances in school productions around 1939, providing a creative outlet amid the challenges of immigration and fostering his adaptation to American life.[3]Acting career
Early training and debut
Following his immigration to the United States with his mother and grandmother in 1938 to escape the Nazi annexation of Austria, Turhan Bey briefly attended high school in New Hampshire before relocating to Los Angeles, where he enrolled at Ben Bard's School of Dramatic Art in 1939.[7] The school, founded by former actor and drama coach Ben Bard, provided Bey with structured training to improve his English pronunciation and develop his acting skills, focusing on voice modulation, stage presence, and character interpretation essential for the American theater and film industries.[6] Bard's curriculum emphasized practical experience through student-led performances, which allowed Bey to hone his craft amid a diverse group of aspiring performers drawn to Hollywood's burgeoning opportunities.[1] Bey made his first professional stage appearance in December 1939 as part of Bard's Talent Scout Revue, a showcase production designed to highlight promising students to industry scouts and audiences.[3] In this revue, a series of short sketches and scenes, Bey portrayed multiple characters, earning praise from the Los Angeles Times for the "vivid playing and several fine characterizations" that distinguished the evening's entertainment.[6] The performance marked his debut in a professional setting, transitioning him from amateur high school dramatics in Vienna to the competitive Los Angeles theater scene, where he demonstrated a natural flair for dramatic roles suited to his striking features and multilingual background.[7] During his time at the school, Bey adopted the stage name "Turhan Bey" on the advice of Ben Bard, selecting "Turhan" as a nod to his Turkish paternal heritage and "Bey"—a respectful Turkish title denoting a chieftain or gentleman—to align with Hollywood's demand for ethnically ambiguous, exotic leading men in adventure and romance genres.[5] This rebranding helped position him as an appealing "foreign" talent amid the era's Orientalist casting trends.[1] The revue's success led directly to screen tests in early 1940, followed by minor uncredited roles in films that year, serving as his initial foray into cinema before securing formal studio attention.[3] These early film bits, often as background figures in crowd scenes or brief ethnic parts, allowed Bey to gain on-camera experience while building his resume in the competitive pre-war Hollywood landscape.[6]Warner Bros. period
In 1941, Turhan Bey signed a contract with Warner Bros. after a talent scout spotted his performance in a stage play during his English classes in Los Angeles.[3] This marked his formal entry into Hollywood, where the studio positioned him in supporting roles that capitalized on his exotic appearance and Austrian-Turkish heritage.[8] Bey made his Warner Bros. debut in the mystery film Shadows on the Stairs (1941), directed by D. Ross Lederman, portraying Ram Singh, an Indian lodger suspected in a boarding house murder plot involving smuggling and espionage against the British. His character was a minor antagonist with limited screen time, embodying the type of enigmatic "foreign" figure that would define his early typecasting at the studio.[8] He followed this with a small role as Ahmed in Footsteps in the Dark (1941), a comedy-mystery directed by Lloyd Bacon and starring Errol Flynn as an amateur detective moonlighting as a mystery writer.[9] Bey's part was brief, serving as a supporting element in the film's lighthearted intrigue without significant development, further illustrating the modest opportunities afforded to him during this initial phase.[8] These appearances highlighted the constraints of his contract, confining him to peripheral ethnic roles with scant dialogue and visibility.[2]Universal Pictures and breakthrough
After small roles at Warner Bros., Bey was loaned out to RKO Pictures for the mystery film The Gay Falcon (1941), where he portrayed the menacing jewel thief Manuel Retana, marking one of his early opportunities to showcase a more villainous side. This appearance helped attract attention from Universal Pictures, leading to his signing a contract with the studio in 1941 and a transition to more prominent supporting roles in their adventure and horror output.[1] By 1942, he had secured a fuller commitment with Universal, allowing him to appear in approximately five films per year as part of their burgeoning "exotic" cycle of Technicolor spectacles.[3] Bey achieved his breakthrough at Universal with Arabian Nights (1942), directed by John Rawlins, in which he played the cunning Captain of the Guard who sells the storyteller Scheherazade (Maria Montez) into slavery, opposite leads Jon Hall and Sabu.[1] The film, Universal's first three-strip Technicolor entry in the genre, capitalized on Bey's dark, handsome features and suave European accent, earning him the fan-magazine nickname "the Turkish Delight" for his portrayal of enigmatic Eastern figures.[3] This role established him within the studio's adventure formula, blending romance, intrigue, and spectacle. He followed with the horror entry The Mummy's Tomb (1942), again under Rawlins' direction, as the vengeful Egyptian high priest Mehemet Bey, who revives the mummy Kharis (Lon Chaney Jr.) to exact revenge in America.[1] The next year, Bey solidified his archetype in White Savage (1943), directed by Arthur Lubin, playing the debauched prince and brother to a tropical island ruler (Montez) in a South Seas tale that reunited him with Hall and Sabu. These collaborations with Universal's key "exotic" directors and co-stars like Sabu helped define Bey as the suave, often morally ambiguous "exotic prince," a typecast that propelled his visibility in the studio's escapist wartime fare.[10]Stardom and notable roles
Bey reached the height of his stardom at Universal Pictures in 1944, captivating audiences with his suave, exotic persona in a series of Technicolor fantasies and horror-tinged dramas that capitalized on wartime escapism.[1] His performances during this period solidified his appeal as a leading man, blending romantic charm with mysterious allure, and he became a favorite in fan magazines, earning the nickname "The Turkish Delight."[3] In the 1943 horror film The Mad Ghoul, Bey took on a sympathetic lead role as Eric Iverson, a concert pianist entangled in a macabre love triangle with singer Isabel Lewis (Evelyn Ankers) and her fiancé, who becomes a murderous ghoul under the influence of an ancient gas.[11] This part marked a shift toward more prominent romantic positioning for Bey, highlighting his cultured demeanor amid the film's eerie atmosphere. The following year, he portrayed the romantic lead Franz Munzer in The Climax, a Gothic musical-horror opposite Boris Karloff's obsessive Dr. Friedrich Hohner and Susanna Foster's aspiring opera singer Angela Klatt, where his character helps free the heroine from psychological torment.[1] Bey further elevated his status with the blockbuster Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves (1944), playing the cunning lead villain Jamiel, captain of the guard who betrays the young prince Ali Baba (Jon Hall) and schemes against the thieves to seize power in Baghdad.[12] The film, a lavish Arabian Nights adventure co-starring Maria Montez, proved a major box-office success, earning an estimated $1.5 million domestically and ranking among Universal's top earners that year, driven by its spectacle and star power.[13] His rising fame was affirmed by industry recognition, as exhibitors ranked Bey ninth among male stars in the 1944 Motion Picture Herald Fame Poll, a Quigley Publications survey of theater owners reflecting box-office draw.[14] This accolade underscored his breakthrough from supporting exotic roles in earlier Universal films like Arabian Nights (1942) to bona fide stardom. However, success came with typecasting in turbaned, enigmatic romantic leads and villains, often evoking Middle Eastern or Asian mystique, which limited his range but amplified his allure in escapist cinema.[1]World War II military service
Following Turkey's declaration of war on Germany and Japan on February 23, 1945, which enabled resident aliens from allied nations to volunteer for U.S. military service, Turhan Bey enlisted in the U.S. Army as a resident alien of Turkish origin.[15][16] He was inducted on June 5, 1945, at Fort MacArthur in California.[16] Bey served for 18 months in the Signal Corps, remaining stateside throughout his tenure with training focused on radio operations. By November 1945, he had been assigned duties as a stagehand in an Army entertainment unit. His service interrupted the rising trajectory of his acting career at its peak in 1944, during which he had been a leading man in Universal Pictures' exotic adventures. Bey received an honorable discharge in December 1946. During his absence, he missed multiple film opportunities, contributing to a stall in his Hollywood momentum; upon return, he faced increased competition from established stars resuming their careers and subsequent typecasting in supporting villainous roles, limiting his return to stardom.[1][3]Post-war career and decline
Following his discharge from the U.S. Army in 1946, Turhan Bey resumed his acting career with Eagle-Lion Studios, appearing in the screwball comedy Out of the Blue (1947), where he played a suave European aristocrat entangled in romantic mishaps.[17] He followed this with Adventures of Casanova (1948), a swashbuckling adventure in which he portrayed the titular lover in period costume, marking a brief return to lead roles amid the studio's low-budget productions.[1] These films represented Eagle-Lion's acquisition of Bey's contract from Universal Pictures, which had suspended him earlier due to salary disputes and his refusal of assigned roles.[2] Bey returned to Universal for occasional projects, including Song of India (1949), a jungle adventure where he reunited with Sabu as a cunning antagonist who meets a dramatic end by tiger mauling.[1] His final leading role came in Prisoners of the Casbah (1953), a romantic adventure opposite Gloria Grahame, in which he played a heroic figure rescuing captives from a notorious fortress.[17] However, these appearances were sporadic, as post-war shifts in audience preferences diminished demand for the exotic, escapist fantasies that had defined his stardom, with viewers favoring more realistic narratives and the return of established American leading men like Clark Gable.[3] The culmination of Bey's declining Hollywood opportunities was Stolen Face (1952), a British thriller produced by Hammer Films in which he portrayed a plastic surgeon obsessed with remaking a woman's features; shot in England but released in the U.S., it underscored the scarcity of substantial roles stateside.[2] Ongoing contract issues and the genre's fading appeal further eroded his prospects, leading to fewer offers by the early 1950s.[7]Move to Europe and alternative pursuits
Following the release of his final Hollywood film, Prisoners of the Casbah in 1953, Turhan Bey left the United States and returned to Europe, eventually settling permanently in Vienna by the mid-1950s.[3][17] There, he took occasional minor acting roles in European films and theater productions, including work as a stage director at the Salzburg Marionette Theatre, where he helmed a few plays.[1][6] By the 1960s, Bey shifted focus to professional photography, a passion from his youth that he developed into a full career specializing in fashion shoots, celebrity portraits, and commercial work for advertisements and magazine covers.[18] His images captured the elegance of high-profile subjects, reflecting his eye for composition honed during his acting days.[19] Bey exhibited his photographs in prominent galleries during the 2000s, including a solo show titled Vom Glück verfolgt at Galerie Clairefontaine in Luxembourg in 2007, organized by gallerist Marita Ruiter, who highlighted his artistic transition from screen to lens.[20][3] This period marked his embrace of alternative creative pursuits, sustaining him artistically and financially in Vienna for decades.[17]Return to Hollywood in the 1990s
After a 40-year absence from acting spent primarily in Europe pursuing photography and other interests, Turhan Bey returned to Hollywood in 1993 at the age of 71 with a guest role in the science fiction series SeaQuest DSV.[3] In the episode "Treasure of the Mind," which aired on September 26, 1993, he portrayed Dimitri Rossovich, a character involved in the discovery of an ancient library annex.[21] This appearance marked his re-entry into American entertainment, signaling a modest revival in his career through supporting roles in television and low-budget films.[22] Bey continued his television comeback with guest spots on popular shows, including Murder, She Wrote in 1995, where he played Sherif Faris in the episode "Death 'N' Denial," a story centered on the theft of an Egyptian relic.[23] That same year, he appeared in Babylon 5 as the Centauri Emperor in the episode "The Coming of Shadows," a pivotal installment in the series' narrative arc.[1] He later appeared in the series in 1998, portraying Turval in "Learning Curve," further showcasing his regal screen presence in science fiction contexts.[22] These roles, while not leading parts, allowed Bey to leverage his exotic allure from earlier decades.[24] In addition to television, Bey took on minor film roles in 1995, including Zeno, an angelic figure who aids a young skateboarder, in the family adventure The Skateboard Kid II.[1] He also appeared as Dr. Cameron, a scientist manipulating virtual reality, in the direct-to-video action film Virtual Combat.[25] These projects highlighted his versatility in genre fare without demanding starring status.[26] Critics and observers noted Bey's return as a nostalgic highlight, praising his enduring charm and poise despite his advanced age, though his appearances remained limited to character parts that evoked his classic Hollywood persona.[22] This late-career phase positioned him as a beloved throwback figure in 1990s media, receiving positive mentions for bringing elegance to ensemble casts.[24]Personal life
Romantic relationships
Turhan Bey's most notable romantic involvement was his high-profile affair with actress Lana Turner, which began in 1944 amid his rising stardom at Universal Pictures.[1] The relationship quickly captured media attention, with gossip columns portraying the pair as Hollywood's "ideal couple" and generating widespread frenzy over their glamorous public appearances together.[27] Their romance intensified through 1945 and into 1946, culminating in a brief engagement announced that summer, with wedding plans set for August.[28] The engagement ended abruptly just two weeks before the planned ceremony, leaving Hollywood stunned and prompting speculation about the causes.[27] Bey's mother strongly disapproved of the match, reportedly forbidding the union due to cultural and personal differences, while Bey's impending induction into the U.S. Army for World War II service further strained the relationship and contributed to its dissolution.[27][1] The couple parted ways in late 1946, after which Bey entered military service. Bey never married and had no children, remaining single for the rest of his life.[1][3] In later years, he reportedly described Turner as the love of his life during a chance encounter with her ex-husband Stephen Crane decades after their breakup.[4] Beyond this prominent affair, Bey was linked to several brief Hollywood romances in the 1940s, including a short-lived involvement with actress Rose Hobart and rumored connections with other co-stars, though none progressed to serious commitment.[7]Life in Vienna and photography
After leaving Hollywood in the early 1950s, Turhan Bey permanently returned to Vienna, his birthplace, where he resided until his death in 2012 while holding dual Turkish and American citizenship.[4][3] He settled into a low-profile life in the Austrian capital, focusing on personal stability and creative endeavors away from the film industry.[6] Bey maintained this European base even during occasional professional trips back to the United States, prioritizing a quieter existence over renewed acting pursuits.[18] In Vienna, Bey revived his childhood passion for photography, transforming it into a professional vocation as a fashion photographer.[3][29] His work included artistic nude studies, such as gelatin silver prints created circa 1960, which later appeared at auctions and highlighted his shift toward fine art photography.[30] Bey's photographs gained recognition in Europe, with exhibitions of his pieces organized by gallery owner Marita Ruiter at her venue in Luxembourg, underscoring his establishment as a respected figure in the continent's art scene.[6][3] This phase allowed him to channel his visual sensibilities into a sustained creative outlet, distinct from his earlier cinematic career.[1]Death
In his later years, Turhan Bey endured a long struggle with Parkinson's disease.[6] He died from the condition on September 30, 2012, in Vienna, Austria, at the age of 90.[3] Bey was cremated on October 8, 2012.[31] His ashes were interred in the urn burial ground at Friedhof Feuerhalle-Simmering in Vienna.[32] Following his death, obituaries in major publications such as The New York Times and The Guardian highlighted Bey's career as a charismatic Hollywood actor in exotic adventure films and swashbucklers of the 1940s.[3][1]Legacy and recognition
Nicknames and public image
Turhan Bey earned the affectionate nickname "The Turkish Delight" from fans and media in the mid-1940s, particularly around the release of his 1944 film Dragon Seed, highlighting his suave demeanor and exotic allure that captivated audiences during World War II.[33][2] In Hollywood, Bey cultivated a public image as a romantic heartthrob in vibrant Technicolor adventure films, such as the Arabian Nights series, where his dark, handsome features and polished charm embodied escapist fantasies of mystery and romance.[1][2] This on-screen persona, often portraying enigmatic ethnic characters, contrasted sharply with his real-life multicultural heritage as the Austrian-born son of a Turkish diplomat father and a Czech-Jewish mother, which added layers of authenticity to his roles while underscoring Hollywood's tendency to exoticize diverse backgrounds.[3][34] 1940s gossip columns frequently portrayed Bey as an embodiment of elegance and intrigue, amplifying his mystique through coverage of his high-profile romances, including a notable affair with Lana Turner that fueled speculation in outlets like Photoplay.[2][35] In later retrospectives, Bey has been recognized as a "forgotten star" of the Golden Age, with obituaries and film histories lamenting his post-war decline while noting how his multifaceted pursuits, such as a successful career in fashion photography in Vienna, enriched his legacy beyond acting and revealed a more introspective side often underexplored in popular accounts.[1][3][6]In popular culture
Following Turhan Bey's death in 2012, major obituaries in prominent publications reignited public and critical interest in his contributions to Universal Pictures' 1940s output, particularly the Technicolor escapism of films like Arabian Nights (1942) and The Mummy's Tomb (1942), which featured him alongside Maria Montez and Jon Hall.[1] The Guardian's obituary emphasized his roles as romantic leads in Arabian Nights fantasies, portraying him as a suave symbol of wartime Hollywood allure that captivated audiences seeking diversion from World War II realities.[1] Similarly, the Los Angeles Times highlighted his nickname "Turkish Delight" and collaborations with stars like Errol Flynn, underscoring how these Universal productions exemplified exotic adventure genres that defined the era's cinema.[6] The New York Times tribute further amplified this by recalling period reviews, such as Bosley Crowther's 1945 praise for Bey's Valentino-esque charm in Sudan, encouraging renewed viewings of his over 30 films as artifacts of Continental sophistication in American cinema.[3] In scholarly works on 1940s Hollywood, Bey is frequently cited as an emblem of wartime escapism, where his "exotic" persona in Universal's lavish fantasies provided audiences with illusory relief amid global conflict. For instance, in Hollywood Abroad: Audiences and Cultural Exchange (2007), editor Ruth Vasey and contributors discuss how Bey's stardom in the 1940s, amplified by Turkish film magazines, transformed him into a cultural bridge, blending Hollywood fantasy with national identity to offer escapist narratives during the war.[36] The 2007 documentary film Hollywood Chinese directed by Arthur Dong, in which Bey is interviewed, positions his frequent casting in "exotic" roles—often opposite Montez—as a key example of how 1940s studios used non-Western archetypes to craft immersive, color-saturated worlds that distracted from wartime hardships.[37] The chapter “The Making of Our America: Hollywood in a Turkish Context” by Nezih Erdoğan in Hollywood Abroad: Audiences and Cultural Exchange (2007) further analyzes Bey's image in 20 Turkish publications from the era, framing him as a "Turkish star" whose films symbolized aspirational glamour and cultural hybridity in an age of uncertainty.[38] Bey made rare guest appearances in 1990s television, which later analyses credit with enhancing his legacy by reintroducing his refined presence to new generations and bridging his classic era to modern media. Notable roles included Dimitri Rossovich in seaQuest DSV (1993), earning praise for his authoritative demeanor in sci-fi settings, and the Centauri emperor Turval in Babylon 5 (1995, 1998), which garnered him an Emmy nomination and highlighted his enduring versatility beyond 1940s tropes.[6] These cameos, as noted in post-2012 film retrospectives, revitalized appreciation for his Universal work by contrasting his historical escapism with contemporary narratives, influencing discussions on immigrant actors' adaptability in Hollywood.[3] In 2024, discussions of Bey's legacy emphasized his role as one of the first actors of Turkish descent to gain international recognition, paving the way for greater Middle Eastern representation in Hollywood.[34]Filmography
Feature films
Turhan Bey's feature film career spanned from 1941 to 1995, encompassing around 25 theatrical releases, with the bulk—over 15 titles—produced by Universal Pictures during the 1940s, where he often portrayed exotic or villainous characters in adventure and fantasy genres. His early roles were typically small but built toward leading parts in Universal's "exotic" cycle, including uncredited or supporting appearances that highlighted his suave, international appeal.Early Career (1941–1943)
Bey began with minor roles in Warner Bros. and RKO productions before gaining traction at Universal.| Year | Title | Role | Studio |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1941 | Footsteps in the Dark | Ahmed | Warner Bros. |
| 1941 | Raiders of the Desert | Hassen Mohammed | Universal Pictures |
| 1941 | Burma Convoy | Chinese national | Universal Pictures |
| 1941 | The Gay Falcon | Mexican jewel thief | RKO Pictures |
| 1941 | Shadows on the Stairs | Ram Singh | Warner Bros. |
| 1942 | The Falcon Takes Over | Phony psychic | RKO Pictures |
| 1942 | Drums of the Congo | Henchman | Universal Pictures |
| 1942 | Unseen Enemy | Axis thug | Universal Pictures |
| 1942 | The Mummy's Tomb | Mehemet Bey (High Priest of Karnak) | Universal Pictures |
| 1942 | Arabian Nights | Captain of the Guard | Universal Pictures |
| 1943 | White Savage | Brother of the princess | Universal Pictures |
| 1943 | Background to Danger | Turkish sidekick | Warner Bros. |
| 1943 | The Mad Ghoul | Eric Iverson | Universal Pictures |
Peak Universal Period (1944–1949)
This era marked Bey's stardom at Universal, featuring him in lavish Technicolor adventures and romantic leads, often as charismatic antagonists or heroes in Orientalist settings.| Year | Title | Role | Studio |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1944 | The Climax | Comte de Melito (leading role) | Universal Pictures |
| 1944 | Dragon Seed | Lao Er Tan (Middle Son) | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
| 1944 | Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves | Jamiel (Princess Amara's servant) | Universal Pictures |
| 1945 | Sudan | Herua (slave leader) | Universal Pictures |
| 1945 | Frisco Sal | Dude Forante | Universal Pictures |
| 1946 | Night in Paradise | Aesop (leading role) | Universal Pictures |
| 1947 | Out of the Blue | Dr. David Gresham | Eagle-Lion Films |
| 1948 | The Amazing Mr. X | Alexis (bogus spiritualist) | Eagle-Lion Films |
| 1948 | Parole, Inc. | Matthew Christo (crime boss) | Eagle-Lion Films |
| 1949 | Song of India | Ram Singh (antagonist) | Columbia Pictures |
Later Films (1953–1995)
After a hiatus, Bey returned for sporadic roles in the 1950s and a brief comeback in low-budget 1990s action films.| Year | Title | Role | Studio |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1953 | Prisoners of the Casbah | Abdar | Columbia Pictures |
| 1995 | The Skateboard Kid II | Zeno (angel) | PM Entertainment Group |
| 1995 | Virtual Combat | Dr. Cameron | Cinepix Film Properties |