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William Ingersoll (actor)

William Ingersoll (October 9, 1860 – May 5, 1936) was an American actor on stage, in musical theatre and in film. During a career spanning over five decades, he played more than 800 roles on stage. After performing in his first silent motion picture in 1920, he appeared in a handful of "talkies" in the 1930s, playing mainly character roles such as doctors, judges and a police commissioner.

Early life

William Ingersoll was born in Lafayette, Indiana to a physician father, in a family that had never produced any actors; most of his relatives were shocked when, as a boy, he considered acting as a career, on the suggestion of his elder brother.[1] He studied mining engineering at the Colorado School of Mines in Denver[1][2] after graduating from Purdue University, where he made such an impression in The Pirates of Penzance that friends urged him to become an actor.[3]

Career

Ingersoll joined the Boston Museum Company in 1882,[2] where he remained for five years.[3] In the beginning, he divided his time between acting and supporting the company as a backstage hand and general utility man, eventually making his first professional appearance as a fully fledged actor in 1885.[1] He performed with Marie Wainwright in Twelfth Night at Palmer's Theatre in New York and went on tour with her for three seasons; she rated Ingersoll as "the best leading man on the American stage."[1]

In 1894, Ingersoll joined the summer stock theatre company that James F. Neill and R.L. Giffen had organized at the Manhattan Beach, Denver. In September of the same year, he joined the first winter stock company that Neill and Giffen also organized at the Lyceum Theatre, Denver.[4] When T. Daniel Frawley—who had placed another company in Salt Lake City in December 1894—later purchased the Neill-Giffen interests and moved the organization to San Francisco, Ingersoll remained on the roster of the combined Denver and Salt Lake City company.[4]

Ingersoll then married and left the stage, but resumed his acting career after his wife's death.[1] He first joined the Nat Goodwin Company,[1] with whom he performed in In Mizzoura when it opened at the Baldwin Theatre in San Francisco in June 1896;[5] immediately after the play closed, the whole company sailed to Australia on June 25.[6] Ingersoll remained with the Goodwin company for a period that included four seasons in Australia.[3] In addition to performing with the Nat Goodwin company, Ingersoll played in the supporting companies of Mary Shaw, William H. Crane, Marie Cahill and Charles Richman.[7]

He played leading parts at the Grand Opera House in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and at the Chestnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He acted in many roles as a visiting star in Columbus, Cincinnati,[3] at the Elitch Theatre in Denver, Colorado,[8] and in Washington, D.C., Providence, Rhode Island, Richmond, Virginia, Salt Lake City,[2] and on Broadway, among many others. He performed with stars of the period, such as Margaret Maher, Ethel Barrymore, Mrs. Fiske,[2] and William DeWolf Hopper.[9] In 1928–1929, he played in Brothers at the 48th Street Theatre in New York, learning his part perfectly in two days, one of the instances of his exceptional memory; this was the 821st he had learned.[8]

After appearing on stage for 55 years[8] and trying his hand in a silent film in 1920, he progressed into sound films in the 1930s, and one of his final talkies was Little Lord Fauntleroy (1936), in which he played the role of the Doctor.[8][10]

Personal life

At the time of his death in 1936, Ingersoll was married to Mabel Tate,[3] and they had a daughter,[8] Mrs Ira Minnick.[11]

Memberships

Ingersoll was elected to The Lambs Theatre Club in 1893,[12] and was also a member of The Players Club and of the council of the Actors' Equity Association.[8]

Selected works

Stage

In the table below, all theatres are located in New York, NY, except where indicated.

Film

Explanatory footnotes

  1. ^ J.P. Wearing indicates that the role of Scaramba was shared between Ingersoll and Melville Stewart (Wearing 2013, p. 421), although the available sources do not provide precise dates for when Ingersoll left the West End production of El Capitan to join the cast of Peter Stuyvesant at the Wallack's Theatre on October 2, 1899.
  2. ^ The available sources are confusing about the opening date of Adventure at the Theatre Republic in 1928, which they document as having taken place on "September 25". At the Playbill website, the digitized copy of page 15 of the play's original playbill states clearly: "Week beginning Monday evening, October 1, 1928" (Adventure Playbill #9965). Unless the closing date of Trapped on "September 30" at the National Theatre is in error, it seems improbable that Ingersoll could also have performed in Adventure if the latter had really opened on "September 25", as currently documented at both the IBDB and Playbill websites. Both these sources are also silent about the closing date of Adventure (Adventure IBDB #10723; Adventure Playbill #9965).

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f Washington Times; July 17, 1898; p.14, col.4.
  2. ^ a b c d A Divine Moment Playbill #11131; p.12.
  3. ^ a b c d e Gettysburg Times; May 8, 1936; p.1.
  4. ^ a b New York Times; September 10, 1911; p.12, cols.6-7.
  5. ^ a b Goodwin 2016, p. 88.
  6. ^ Goodwin 2016, p. 91.
  7. ^ The Web Playbill #2503.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Gettysburg Times; May 8, 1936; p.2.
  9. ^ Janesville Daily Gazette; May 11, 1936; p.5.
  10. ^ AFI Catalog #5579.
  11. ^ Bakersfield Californian; May 9, 1936; p.6.
  12. ^ The Lambs Member Roster.
  13. ^ An American Citizen IBDB #405757.
  14. ^ Washington Times; July 17, 1898; p.14, col.3.
  15. ^ Nathan Hale IBDB #404622.
  16. ^ Wearing 2013, p. 421.
  17. ^ Peter Stuyvesant IBDB #5217.
  18. ^ A Rich Man's Son IBDB #5232.
  19. ^ Home Folks IBDB #4935.
  20. ^ Home Folks Playbill #11764.
  21. ^ Moonshine IBDB #4883.
  22. ^ Gallops IBDB #6171.
  23. ^ Gallops Playbill #12126.
  24. ^ The Builders IBDB #6346.
  25. ^ The Builders Playbill #1335.
  26. ^ Philadelphia Inquirer; March 31, 1912; p.54, col.2.
  27. ^ Tante IBDB #7722.
  28. ^ Tante Playbill #4076.
  29. ^ So Much for So Much IBDB #8102.
  30. ^ So Much for So Much Playbill #7066.
  31. ^ Experience IBDB #8656.
  32. ^ Experience Playbill #7954.
  33. ^ Over Here IBDB #8741.
  34. ^ Over Here Playbill #4624.
  35. ^ Bordman 1984, p. 667.
  36. ^ Three Wise Fools Playbill #11797.
  37. ^ The Ouija Board IBDB #6790.
  38. ^ The Ouija Board Playbill #1487.
  39. ^ The Half Moon IBDB #8341.
  40. ^ Dietz 2019, pp. 39–40.
  41. ^ Alias Jimmy Valentine IBDB #12720.
  42. ^ Alias Jimmy Valentine Playbill #4879.
  43. ^ The Charlatan IBDB #12795.
  44. ^ The Charlatan Playbill #10997.
  45. ^ Lights Out IBDB #9090.
  46. ^ It Is the Law IBDB #9160.
  47. ^ It Is the Law Playbill #10161.
  48. ^ Thumbs Down IBDB #8351.
  49. ^ Thumbs Down Playbill #469.
  50. ^ Queen Victoria IBDB #9319.
  51. ^ Queen Victoria Playbill #332.
  52. ^ Fata Morgana IBDB #9483.
  53. ^ Fata Morgana Playbill #12034.
  54. ^ The Devil Within IBDB #9757.
  55. ^ The Devil Within Playbill #5922.
  56. ^ The Goat Song IBDB #9669.
  57. ^ The Goat Song Playbill #5416.
  58. ^ The Half-Caste IBDB #10035.
  59. ^ The Half-Caste Playbill #2890.
  60. ^ Trapped IBDB #10674.
  61. ^ Trapped Playbill #2884.
  62. ^ Adventure IBDB #10723.
  63. ^ Adventure Playbill #9965.
  64. ^ Hotbed IBDB #10771.
  65. ^ Brothers IBDB #10810.
  66. ^ Brothers Playbill #305.
  67. ^ Fata Morgana IBDB #11465.
  68. ^ Fata Morgana Playbill #10336.
  69. ^ Angeline Moves In IBDB #11532.
  70. ^ Angeline Moves In Playbill #4815.
  71. ^ The Web IBDB #11608.
  72. ^ We, The People IBDB #13291.
  73. ^ We, The People Playbill #3983.
  74. ^ Nine Pine Street IBDB #9693.
  75. ^ A Church Mouse IBDB #7908.
  76. ^ A Church Mouse Playbill #8138.
  77. ^ A Divine Moment IBDB #11817.
  78. ^ A Divine Moment Playbill #11131.
  79. ^ The First Legion IBDB #9817.

Sources

Books

Newspapers

Theatre programs/playbills

Websites

External links