Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Dwight Deere Wiman

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Nationality
  
American

Movies
  
Puritan Passions

Known for
  
Broadway Producer

Children
  
Nancy Wakeman


Name
  
Dwight Wiman

Role
  
Movie actor

Siblings
  
Charles Deere Wiman

Dwight Deere Wiman image2findagravecomphotos250photos201334570

Born
  
August 8, 1895 (
1895-08-08
)
Moline, Illinois, USA

Resting place
  
Riverside CemeteryMoline, Illinois41°30′28″N 90°29′31″W / 41.50780°N 90.49190°W / 41.50780; -90.49190Coordinates: 41°30′28″N 90°29′31″W / 41.50780°N 90.49190°W / 41.50780; -90.49190

Education
  
Todd Seminary for BoysYale University

Occupation
  
Actor, Playwright, Director, Producer

Died
  
January 20, 1951, Hudson, New York, United States

Spouse
  
Dorothea Stephens (m. ?–1946)

Parents
  
William Wiman, Anna Deere

Dwight Deere Wiman (August 8, 1895 – January 20, 1951) was an American silent movie actor, playwright and theatrical director. He is best known as a Broadway producer.

Contents

Early life & Education

Dwight Wiman was born in Moline, Illinois, one of two boys born to William Wiman (son of Erastus Wiman and Eleanor nee Galbrith/Erastus was the son of Erastus Wyman and Therese Amelia nee Matthews) and Anna Deere, a granddaughter of John Deere. His mother died in 1906 and after his grandfather, Charles Deere, died the following year he, his father and his brother, Charles Deere Wiman, went to live with his grandmother on her estate in Moline, which was named "Overlook". His grandmother died in 1913 and his father died in 1914. He and his brother were cared for by his uncle and aunt, William and Katherine Butterworth who lived across the street. Both his grandfather, uncle and brother served as president of Deere & Company. He was sent to Todd Seminary for Boys in Woodstock, Illinois for school. He served in the military during World War I and studied drama under Monty Woolley at Yale University.

Career

He spent two years working for Deere & Company before he and a couple of his friends organized an independent film production company, Film Guild, in Astoria, Queens from 1920-1924. He acted in three silent movies during this time. The film company suffered from marketing difficulties and it dissolved.

In 1925 he started a partnership with William A. Brady, Jr. They produced plays such as Lucky Sam McCarver (1925), the revivals of Little Eyolf and The Two Orphans in 1926, The Road to Rome (1927), and The Little Show (1929). Their working relationship ended amicably in 1929 as Wiman was the only one interested in musical theater. Between 1930 and 1951 he produced more than 50 shows. The more significant productions include: The Vinegar Tree (1930), Gay Divorce (1932), She Loves Me Not (1933), On Your Toes (1936), Babes in Arms (1937), On Borrowed Time (1938), I Married an Angel (1938), Morning's at Seven (1939), By Jupiter (1942), and The Country Girl (1950).

Wiman also directed works by Paul Osborn, John Van Druten, and Clifford Odets among others. He had a long association with Rodgers and Hart. During World War II he served as the director of entertainment for the Red Cross in Great Britain.

Personal life & Death

Dwight Wiman was married to Dorothea Stephens. The couple divorced in 1946. He died in Hudson, New York in 1951 at the age of 56 and was buried in Riverside Cemetery in Moline.

Dwight Wiman acted in the following silent films:

Stage Productions

Dwight Wiman was the producer, director or writer for the following stage productions:

Filmography

Actor
1924
Peter Stuyvesant (Short) as
Charles II - King of England
1923
Puritan Passions as
Richard Talbot
1923
Youthful Cheaters as
Dexter French
Miscellaneous
1943
Higher and Higher (producer: musical play - as Dwight Deere Wiman)
1943
Old Acquaintance (producer: stage play - as Dwight Deere Wiman)
1942
I Married an Angel (producer: stage play - as Dwight Deere Wiman)

References

Dwight Deere Wiman Wikipedia