Louis Macloon

Louis Owen Macloon (20 May 1893 – 13 August 1979, age 86) was a prominent theatrical producer of the 1920s and 1930s.

Family

Macloon was the son of Chicago Tribune reporter Charles Macloon and his wife, Josephine, née Owen.

Louis Macloon married three times:

  • Lois Florence Hoover in 1916, divorced by 1922
  • Lillian Albertson, in 1922, divorced in 1933
  • Lucille Ryman, 1936 (also ended in divorce)

He had one child, a daughter, Ruth, by his first wife.

Theatrical producer career

Macloon is credited with having given Clark Gable his first professional acting role, carrying a spear as a soldier. Later, Gable served as understudy to the role of Sergeant Quirk in What Price Glory by Laurence Stallings and Maxwell Anderson, another Macloon production. Macloon told Gable, "You'll do, my boy." [1]

Macloon's career with producing partner and wife Lillian Albertson was prolific, marking over a decade of successful plays and musicals from New York to Chicago and Los Angeles, including It Pays to Sin, which they translated from Hungarian.

Entrepreneur

Macloon was also an entrepreneur, and was a major investor in Almac Yacht Corporation, of Mystic, Connecticut, which built fifty foot Seven Seas Cruisers with interiors designed by Joseph Urban, the noted architect of the Ziegfeld Theatre.

Death

Macloon died 13 August 1979 at age 86 in Baker City, Oregon.

gollark: There's a JIT compiler, which is stupidly designed too.
gollark: Mine is C but compiled with optimizations turned off and busy loops inserted.
gollark: I also made a C-based esolang as a joke because someone insisted compiled languages were faster.
gollark: I can write a hello world in it.
gollark: If you like C, try Rust, it has nice memory management.

References

Louis Macloon at the Internet Broadway Database



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.