Thomas Meighan

Thomas Meighan (April 9, 1879 – July 8, 1936) was an American actor of silent films and early talkies. He played several leading-man roles opposite popular actresses of the day, including Mary Pickford and Gloria Swanson.[1] At one point he commanded $10,000 a week.[2]

Thomas Meighan
President of The Lambs
In office
1924–1926
Preceded byAlbert Oldfield Brown
Succeeded byThomas Alfred Wise
Personal details
Born(1879-04-09)April 9, 1879
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
DiedJuly 8, 1936(1936-07-08) (aged 57)
Great Neck, New York
Spouse(s)Frances Ring (1909–1936)
OccupationActor

Early life

Meighan was born to John and Mary Meighan in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His father was the president of Pittsburgh Facing Mills, and his family was well-off.[2]

Meighan's parents encouraged him to go to college but he refused. At the age of 15 his father sent him to work shoveling coal, which quickly changed his mind. He attended St. Mary's College to study pharmacology. After three years of study, Meighan decided he wished to pursue acting.[2]

Early theatre career

After dropping out of college in 1896, Meighan became a juvenile player in the Pittsburgh Stock Company headed by Henrietta Crosman. He was paid $35 a week.[2]

Meighan soon found success. He first appeared on Broadway in 1900, and four years later appeared in The Two Orphans.[2] His breakthrough role came in 1908 when he appeared with William Collier Sr. in The Dictator; this was followed by a leading role in The College Widow, which had a successful run on Broadway in the 1907–1908 season. During that run he met his wife Frances Ring.[3]

Despite his film career, Meighan remained devoted to the theatre during his life.[2]

Film career

In 1914, he entered motion pictures, at that time still in their infancy. His first film, shot in London, was titled Dandy Donovan, the Gentleman Cracksman. This led to a contract with Famous Players-Lasky.[1] His first US film, in 1915, was The Fighting Hope. During the next two years, Meighan's career took off.[2] In 1918 he made a propaganda film for World War I, titled Norma Talmadge and Thomas Meighan in a Liberty Loan Appeal. He then played opposite Mary Pickford in M'Liss.[1]

Stardom

Meighan with co-star Pauline Starke in 1922, as they appeared in publicity for the film If You Believe It, It's So

Meighan hit stardom in 1919. One of his best-known films of the period was that year's The Miracle Man which featured Lon Chaney Sr.;[2] it is now believed to be lost except for brief clips. This was followed with Cecil B. DeMille's Male and Female which starred him opposite Gloria Swanson and Lila Lee. Most of that film's cast returned for the 1920 film Why Change Your Wife? which also co-starred Bebe Daniels.[2] In April 1925, Meighan and Swanson produced a short film directed by Allan Dwan for the annual "Spring Gambol" for The Lambs. This film (sometimes known as Gloria Swanson Dialogue), made in Lee DeForest's sound-on-film Phonofilm process, was made as a joke for the live event, showing Swanson trying to crash the all-male club.

His popularity continued through the Roaring Twenties, during which he starred in several pictures. In 1924 he played in The Alaskan opposite Estelle Taylor and Anna May Wong. In 1927, Meighan starred in The City Gone Wild opposite Louise Brooks.

His final silents, both produced by Howard Hughes in 1928, were The Mating Call, which was critical of the Ku Klux Klan, and The Racket, which was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture. Both were thought lost until rediscovered in private collections in 2006; they were restored by University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and shown on Turner Classic Movies.

Talkies and career's end

Meighan's first talkie feature film was The Argyle Case (1928). At this time he was nearing 50; fearing his popularity might wane, he decided to go into real estate. It wouldn't be until 1931 that he would return to the screen with Young Sinners. He would go on to make only four additional talkies until illness sidelined him from acting.[2] His last film was Peck's Bad Boy in 1934.

Personal life

Meighan commanded a salary of $5,000 a week for much of his career. At one point it reached $10,000 a week.[1][2]

Marriage

Meighan at home with his wife, Frances Ring

Meighan met Frances Ring (July 4, 1882 – January 15, 1951)[4] when she was an attractive stage actress on Broadway and he was also appearing there. She was a sister of popular singer Blanche Ring. Actor and director A. Edward Sutherland was a nephew of both Blanche Ring and Meighan. Sutherland's mother, Julie, was a sister of Blanche and Frances Ring.[5]

Meighan and Ring became inseparable and soon married. They remained married until his death in 1936. Their marriage was considered happy and strong; one writer remarked, "Thomas Meighan and Rin Tin Tin were the only Hollywood stars who had never seen a divorce court". The couple had no children.[2]

Hollywood scandals

Meighan was involved in some of the more scandalous moments of silent film history, albeit as a helping hand. He was the sole witness to Jack Pickford and Olive Thomas's secretive wedding in New Jersey on October 25, 1916.[6]

In March 1923, Douglas Gerrad, in need of help bailing his friend Rudolph Valentino out of jail for bigamy, called up a fellow Irishman named Dan O'Brien who happened to be with Meighan at the time. Meighan barely knew Valentino but put up a large chunk of the bail money, and with the help of June Mathis and George Melford, Valentino was eventually freed.[7]

Florida

In the mid-1920s, Meighan became obsessed with Florida after talks with his realtor brother James E. Meighan. He bought property in Ocala, Florida, in 1925. In 1927, he built a home in New Port Richey, Florida, where he was to spend his winters. He intended to shoot his film We're All Gamblers there; however, filming was moved to Miami.

The Meighans hoped to draw other celebrities to the area.[8] On July 1, 1926, The Meighan Theatre opened with a screening of Meighan's movie The New Klondike. Meighan himself was not present but sent a congratulatory telegram.[8]

In 1930, sound was added to the theatre. Meighan himself appeared this time, pushing the button to start the sound. The theatre closed in 1934, a victim of the Depression. It reopened in 1938 under the name 'The New Port Richey Theatre'.[8] The theatre is still open as a community playhouse, under the name Richey Suncoast Theatre.[9]

Death

In 1934, Meighan was diagnosed with cancer. The following year he underwent surgery at Doctors Hospital in Manhattan. He finally succumbed to cancer at 9:10pm on July 8, 1936, passing away at his home in Great Neck, New York. Many of his family were present.

Meighan was originally buried at Calvary Cemetery in Queens.[10] After resting there for almost a year, his remains were moved to a family plot at Saint Mary Cemetery in Meighan's hometown of Pittsburgh.[11]

Legacy

Meighan was a large donor to various Catholic charities and the Federation for the Support of Jewish Philanthropic Societies. Many of his later films survive and have been released on DVD.

Selected filmography

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References

  1. © Thomas Meighan, Silent Movie Star – goldensilents.com
  2. "Thomas Meighan, Movie Actor, Dies". The New York Times. July 9, 1936. Retrieved July 23, 2017.
  3. Meighan Genealogy Thomas Meighan
  4. Who Was Who in the Theatre 1912–1976 original material by John Parker, reprinted here by Gale Research (1976)
  5. Barry Paris, Louise Brooks (Anchor Books, 1990) p. 147
  6. Long, Bruce (September 1995). "TAYLOROLOGY; The Life and Death of Olive Thomas". public.asu.edu. Retrieved July 23, 2017.
  7. Leider, Emily W., Dark Lover: The life and death of Rudolph Valentino, p. 211
  8. "History of the Meighan/Richey Suncoast Theatre". fivay.org. September 5, 2015. Retrieved July 23, 2017.
  9. Silent Era : Theaters : USA : Florida : New Port Richey : Thomas Meighan Theatre
  10. "Meighan Death Takes Star of Silent Screen". Motion Picture Herald. 124 (3): 66. July 18, 1936.
  11. "Body of Meighan Brought to City". Pittsburgh Press. June 13, 1937. p. 8.
  12. deMille, William C. (2007). "24: The Excitements of Celluloid: The Camel's Nose". In Peter Wild (ed.). The Grumbling Gods: a Palm Springs Reader. Salt Lake City, UT: University of Utah Press. ISBN 978-0-87480-899-5. OCLC 122974473, 608203796, 608020250 (print and on-line), quoting deMille in Hollywood Saga. New York, NY: E. P. Dutton. 1939. pp. 319. OCLC 1353346. (Rouben Mamoulian Collection (Library of Congress) First edition OCLC 655475937) (Also catalogued at OCLC 494267566, 475574309; and OCLC 591194207 (eBook)); and see The Heir to the Hoorah at the American Film Institute Catalog
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