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Vincent Coleman

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Other names
  
Willie B. Coleman

Spouse
  
Frances Coleman (m. 1902)

Role
  
Train dispatcher

Name
  
Vincent Coleman

Years active
  
1912–1923



Born
  
February 16, 1900 (
1900-02-16
)
Louisiana, U.S.

Died
  
December 6, 1917, Halifax, Canada

Vincent coleman honoured by halifax


Vincent Coleman (February 16, 1900 – October 26, 1971) was an American stage and film actor of the silent film era of the late 1910s and early 1920s.

Contents

Biography

Born in Louisiana, Vincent Coleman began his acting career while still a young boy; touring the United States with the Cecil Spooner stock theater company. Occasionally credited in the early years of his career as Willie B. Coleman, he made the transition to film in the 1912 Frank Montgomery drama short The Junior Officer at age twelve opposite film actors Hobart Bosworth and Camille Astor before returning to Broadway at the age of sixteen to appear in the 1917 play Difference in Gods. Coleman then returned to filmmaking to play a variety of juvenile roles for such film studios as Fox, Goldwyn Pictures Corporation, First National and Paramount opposite such actors as Corinne Griffith, Mae Murray, Constance Talmadge and Constance Binney.

At the beginning of the 1920s, Hollywood film producers took notice of the handsome, fair, young actor and saw in Coleman a possible "All American" matinee idol to counter the "Latin lover" types such as Ramón Novarro, Antonio Moreno and Rudolf Valentino that were becoming increasingly popular amongst the nation's theater-goers. In 1919 however, Coleman's further foray into moving pictures was a less than glamorous role in the anti-syphilis propaganda film Scarlet Trail, which was inspired by the World War I era for-men-only medical pamphlet Don't Take a Chance. Coleman was eventually groomed by the studios to become a leading man and had starring roles in the 1921 George Fawcett directed remake of the 1914 Mary Pickford comedy film Such A Little Queen and The Magic Cup, released the same year before returning to Broadway in July 1921 to star in the Sam H. Harris produced play Nice People opposite renowned stage actress Tallulah Bankhead.

In 1923 Coleman appeared in the independently produced "epic" film Salome as Herod, opposite actress Diana Allen. The film proved to be a colossal financial disappointmet however and Coleman's film career never recovered and the young actor became disillusioned with film. Coleman would make only two more motion pictures (both released in 1923); Has The World Gone Mad! with Hedda Hopper and Elinor Fair and the comedy The Purple Highway starring Monte Blue, Madge Kennedy and Pedro de Cordoba.

After retiring from films at the age of twenty-two, Vincent Coleman would concentrate further on his stage career.

Vincent Coleman died in Los Angeles, California in 1971 at the age of seventy-one.

Complete filmography

  • The Junior Officer (short subject, 1912)
  • The Scarlet Trail (1918)
  • The Prodigal Wife (1918)
  • The Law of Nature (1919)
  • Scarlet Trail (1919)
  • Should a Husband Forgive? (1919)
  • For the Freedom of Ireland (1920)
  • Partners of the Night (1920)
  • Good References (1920)
  • Princess Jones (1921)
  • The Magic Cup (1921)
  • Such a Little Queen (1921)
  • Fascination (1922)
  • Divorce Coupons (1922)
  • The Purple Highway (1923)
  • Has the World Gone Mad? (1923)
  • Salome (1923)
  • References

    Vincent Coleman Wikipedia