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William Warren (actor)

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Occupation
  
Stage actor

Name
  
William Warren


Role
  
Actor

Siblings
  
Pauline Krech


Born
  
1812
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Died
  
September 24, 1948, Hollywood, California, United States

Spouse
  
Helen Barbara Nelson (m. 1923–1948)

Parents
  
Frances Krech, Freeman E. Krech

Movies
  
Cleopatra, Gold Diggers of 1933, Employees' Entrance, The Wolf Man, Satan Met a Lady

Similar People
  
Mervyn LeRoy, Roy Del Ruth, George Waggner, Ann Dvorak, James Whale

William Warren (1812–1888) was an American actor, for many years connected with the old Boston Museum.

William Warren (actor) Warren William Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Biography

Warren was born in Philadelphia and educated at the Franklin Institute in that city. After his father's death in 1832, he made his début a week later at the Arch Street Theatre in Philadelphia in the part of Young Norval, the character in which his father, also an actor and also named William Warren, had begun his career upon the stage. He first appeared in New York City in 1841, in London in 1845, and in Boston in 1846. He played in various characters, from broad and eccentric comedy to juvenile tragedy, with general acceptance.

The next year, in 1847, he became a member of the Boston Museum, where he remained, with a brief exception, until he retired in 1883. His semicentennial in 1882 brought out many deserved tributes to an admirable comedian and representative of the best traditions of the stage. Toward the last Warren was particularly successful in rendering the roles of fine old English gentlemen. He was a cousin of Joseph Jefferson. He was at his best in such roles as Dr. Pangloss in The Heir at Law, Sir Peter Teazle in The School for Scandal, Dr. Primrose and Touchstone in As You Like It.

In December 1853, Warren was accused of shooting Singleton Mercer, a man who had been the subject of a sensational murder trial fictionalized in George Lippard's The Quaker City, or The Monks of Monk Hall (Daily Gazette, Utica, NY, December 30, 1853). Warren was never charged in the case, and Mercer ultimately recovered.

He died in Boston.

References

William Warren (actor) Wikipedia