Malcolm Williams (actor)

Malcolm Williams (July 16, 1870 Spring Valley, Minnesota June 10, 1937 New York, New York)[1] was an American actor and composer.

Malcolm Williams
Williams and Ketty Galanta in
Empty Pockets, 1918
Born(1870-07-16)July 16, 1870
DiedJune 10, 1937(1937-06-10) (aged 66)
New York, New York
Occupationactor, composer
Years active1896-1931
Spouse(s)Florence Reed (1908–1937; his death)

By February 1896 he had moved to New York City and played Phillip Norwood in Charles Dazey's melodrama The War of Wealth on Broadway at the Star Theatre. The play was inspired by the Panic of 1893. In the 1900 census he was listed as a resident of the Ashland House Hotel on Park Avenue South (4th Ave. then) and 24th St. in New York City.

Family

Malcolm Edgar Williams was the son of John H. and Sarah Williams. Malcolm married actress Florence Reed in February 1908. They often appeared in Broadway shows together and sometimes collaborated writing music. They had no children.

Broadway

  • The War of Wealth (1896) as Philip Norwood
  • Polly of the Circus (1907) as Rev. John Douglass
  • Madame X (1910) as Laroque
  • Master of the House as Frederick Hoffman
  • The Typhoon
  • The Painted Woman (1913)
  • The Phantom Rival (1914)
  • Idol of the Stage (1916)
  • Roads of Destiny (1918) as Alec Harvey
  • The Mirage (1920) as Chester Martin
  • The Wisdom Tooth (1926) as Mr. Porter
  • Beyond the Horizon (1926) as James Mayo
  • The Breaks (1928) as Manson
  • Little Accident (1928) as J.J. Overbeck

Selected filmography

Musical compositions

  • "I Love My Dolly Best" (1898)
  • "Kiss Me Good-Night, Dear" feature song in 1903 comedy play Merely Mary Ann collaborated with Israel Zangwill
gollark: Did you know that there are actually three independent XTMF writer programs, and three reader ones (two for ingame use, one for playing back tapes on the desktop for some bizarre reason)?
gollark: You are *really* repetitive, qez.
gollark: If I were to redesign it, it would probably use CBOR in place of JSON, possibly apply some sort of minimal compression library, and include a "track type" field of some kind.
gollark: XTMF is admittedly not the best-designed standard, in retrospect.
gollark: See, thanks to it loading standardized XTMF tapes, instead of... having me hardcode the tracks on the computer or something... I can just put in tapes and it'll handle them fine.

References

  1. Malcolm E. Wiliams; findagrave.com Retrieved June 24, 2017
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.