Wilson Coleman
Wilson Coleman (1873–1940) was a British actor. Years active: 1891 to 1940.

He started his stage career in 1891, playing juvenile and heavy parts. He worked with Barry Jackson for five years. He toured both North and South America as well as South Africa. His hobbies were anything mechanical, electrical and optical, giving him the knowledge to invent his own camera for taking moving pictures. This led to him being in the photographic section of the RFC in World War I.
Partial filmography
- Doss House (1933)
- Kentucky Minstrels (1934)
- Borrow a Million (1934)
- Music Hall (1934)
- Flood Tide (1934)
- Say It With Flowers (1934)
- Lest We Forget (1934)
- Blue Smoke (1935)
- A Real Bloke (1935)
- Sexton Blake and the Mademoiselle (1935)
- Mother, Don't Rush Me (1936)
- Blind Man's Bluff (1936)
- Doctor Syn (1937)
- Alf's Button Afloat (1938)
- Stepping Toes (1938)
- Where's That Fire? (1940)
Sources
- Film Star Who's Who on the Screen 1938
gollark: They probably need to be consistent with the last page at most.
gollark: http://www.demarcken.org/carl/papers//ITA-software-travel-complexity/text0.html
gollark: Because airlines have a really complicated price structure, and the language used to describe fares allows you to encode various hard problems.
gollark: Ticketing-wise.
gollark: I read that it's actually an uncomputable problem to determine how to fly between two airports or something like that.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.