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Willard Mack

 

Mack, Willard [né Charles Willard McLaughlin] (1878–1934), playwright and actor. The Canadian performed in vaudeville for many years before joining a stock company in San Francisco. He came to New York in 1913 with a vaudeville sketch, which the following year he expanded into his first hit play, Kick In. Among his subsequent successes were such melodramas as Tiger Rose (1917), High Stakes (1924), The Dove (1925), The Noose (1926), and A Free Soul (1928). Mack's many acting assignments included originating Captain Bartlett in Eugene O'Neill's Gold (1921). He also frequently served as a director and producer.

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Writer: Willard Mack
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  • Born: Sep 18, 1878 in Morrisburg Ontario, Canada
  • Died: Nov 18, 1934 in Hollywood, California
  • Occupation: Writer, Actor, Director
  • Active: '20s-'30s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Crime
  • Career Highlights: Sporting Blood, A Free Soul, Night of Terror
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Lost Bridegroom (1916)

Biography

Canadian-born Willard Mack was a theatrical quadruple-threat man: actor, director, playwright, manager. Mack grew wealthy from royalties accrued by such plays as The Dove, Tiger Rose, A Free Soul and Kick In, most of which were eventually filmed, sometimes more than once. He began his own movie career in 1916, once more wearing several creative hats. He made his talkie debut as star, director and co-writer of 1929's Voice of the City, a blatant imitation of Universal's blockbuster Broadway (1929). His subsequent directorial efforts included one of the better yarns of the 1930s, What Price Innocence? (1933). Willard Mack was married twice, to actresses Pauline Frederick and Marjorie Rambeau. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Willard Mack
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Willard Mack
Born September 18, 1873(1873-09-18)
Morrisburg, Ontario, Canada
Died November 18, 1934 (aged 61)
Brentwood, California, United States
Spouse(s) Marjorie Rambeau
(1913-1917) (divorced)
Pauline Frederick
(1917-1919) (divorced)

Willard Mack (September 18, 1873November 18, 1934) was a Canadian-born actor, director, and playwright.

Born Charles McLaughlin, in Morrisburg, Ontario, at an early age his family moved to Brooklyn, New York. After two years, they relocated to Cedar Rapids, Iowa where McLaughlin finished high school. His parents returned to Canada but he went on to study at Georgetown University in Washington, D. C. where he became involved in student plays. Adopting the stage name, Willard Mack, after graduation he took minor acting jobs for a few years and did Shakespearian repertoire. However, writing scripts was what he was most interested in and his second effort about the Northwest Mounted Police titled "In Wyoming" proved to be a commercial success. It would later be used as a basis for the screenplay for his film "Nanette of the Wilds." Throughout his life Willard Mack frequently returned to Canada. Some of his other plays, including "Tiger Rose" and "The Scarlet Fox," were set in northern Alberta.

A prolific writer, in 1914 he made his acting debut on Broadway in a play he had written. Over the next fourteen years he would write a further twenty-two Broadway productions, acting in ten of them, and producing four. For a time, Willard Mack operated a stock company with actress Maude Leone. In the mid 1920s, he met an aspiring stage actress named Ruby Stevens hired as a chorus girl for his new play. Mack coached Stevens's acting and rewrote parts of the play to expand her role then convinced her to change her name to Barbara Stanwyck.

During his time on Broadway, Willard Mack began writing for motion pictures and although he performed in fifteen films and directed four, he was primarily a writer. At first he remained on the East Coast but later moved to Los Angeles. A number of his plays were made into motion pictures and between 1916 and 1953 he was involved with the writing of more than seventy film scripts.

Starting out in silent film, he made his talkie debut as actor, director and co-writer of the 1929 film "Voice of the City." In 1933 he directed the acclaimed drama film, "What Price Innocence?" then wrote and directed "Broadway To Hollywood," a backstage musical spanning nearly five decades that recounts the struggles of a vaudeville family.

In 1913, Willard Mack married actress Marjorie Rambeau. divorced in 1917, he immediately married actress/dancer Pauline Frederick whom he had met a year earlier while appearing in a film together. Their marriage was short lived and they divorced in 1919.

Willard Mack's writing success made him a wealthy man. He died in Brentwood Heights, California in 1934.

Plays

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Copyrights:

American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Writer. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Willard Mack" Read more

 

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