Calhern, Louis [né Carl Henry Vogt] (1895–1956), actor. The lanky, suave leading man of screen and stage made his theatrical debut while still a boy with Cecil Spooner's stock company in his native New York. He played stock in St. Louis for two seasons beginning in 1914, then toured with Margaret Anglin before serving in World War I. The first role Calhern created on Broadway was the minor one of Eugene Poppin in Roger Bloomer (1923), which was followed by his portraying Joseph Murdoch in George M. Cohan's The Song and Dance Man (1923). His first major assignment was as the untemptable Jack Race opposite Judith Anderson in The Cobra (1924). Thereafter he suffered a string of failed plays—a string broken only when he assumed the supporting role of Cass Worthing, the hero's rival, in Brief Moment (1931). Long runs eluded him until he accepted the role of Father in a touring company of Life with Father (1941), and later played the same part in New York. Probably his most‐remembered role was the bigoted Colonel Tadeusz in Jacobowsky and the Colonel (1944), and he won further laurels as Oliver Wendell Holmes in The Magnificent Yankee (1946). Calhern's last important roles were in two disparate revivals: as Sandor Turai in The Play's the Thing (1948) and as King Lear (1950). A final New York appearance came as the senile Pop in The Wooden Dish (1955).




