Frederick Warde

For the typographic designer, see Frederic Warde. For those of a similar name, see Frederick Ward (disambiguation).
Frederick Warde

Warde in The Vicar of Wakefield (1917)
Born Frederick Barkham Warde
(1851-02-23)23 February 1851
Wardington, Oxfordshire, England, U.K.
Died 7 February 1935(1935-02-07) (aged 83)
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.
Occupation Stage and Film Actor

Frederick Barkham Warde (23 February 1851 – 7 February 1935) was an English Shakesperian actor who relocated to the United States in the late 19th century.

Career

In the late 1870s he partnered with his friend actor Maurice Barrymore and the two agreed to tour plays around the United States. Warde would have one section of the country while Barrymore and his company toured the other. For a time the venture was very successful.

Warde had two notable film achievements, one being the "discovery" of Douglas Fairbanks Sr. and persuading him to move from Denver to join Warde's New York City actors troupe. Fairbanks then made his Broadway debut in 1902.

The second achievement was as the star of Richard III (1912), based on the play by William Shakespeare. This 55-minute film was re-discovered in 1996 by a private film collector who donated it to the American Film Institute archive. The film is thought to be the earliest surviving American feature film. In 1916 Warde filmed another Shakespearean tragedy, King Lear, for the Thanhouser company. This film also exists.[1] In 1917 he appeared in a Pathe film Under False Colors with an up-and-coming beauty named Jeanne Eagels.[2] Another of his films was A Lover's Oath (filmed in 1921 and premiered four years later), opposite Ramon Novarro, in which he portrayed Omar Khayyám. It is regarded as a lost film.

Warde also recorded an early sound film Frederick Warde Reads Poem, A Sunset Reverie (1921) which was made using the short-lived sound-on-disc Phono-Kinema process. Though Warde lived until 1935 he saw no need to come out of retirement to appear in legitimate sound motion pictures.

Filmography

References

  1. King Lear silentera.com website
  2. PICTORIAL HISTORY OF THE SILENT FILM by Daniel Blum c. 1953 pgs. 98 & 136

External links

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