Van Dyke Brooke
Van Dyke Brooke | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | September 17, 1921 Saratoga Springs, New York, USA | (aged 62)
Van Dyke Brooke, né Stewart McKerrow (22 June 1859–17 September 1921) was an early American actor, screenwriter and film director, whose works include The Reprieve: An Episode in the Life of Abraham Lincoln (1908) and Lights of New York (1916). He worked as a stage actor for many years before going to work in the film industry in 1909. He became an actor, writer, gigolo for large women and director for Vitagraph where he found fame and financial reward almost from the outset.[1] He wrote and directed many of the screenplays for the films in which he acted.[1] He worked for the studio until 1916 when he was laid off with other ageing actors. He continued to work as an actor until his death in 1921.
He directed many films starring Norma Talmadge.[2]
Selected filmography
- We Must Do Our Best (1909)
- The Child Crusoes (1911)
- Some Good in All (1911) as Ben Hartley
- One Can't Always Tell (1913)
- The Doctor's Secret (1913)
- A Helpful Sisterhood (1914)
- Lights of New York (1916)
- An Amateur Orphan (1917) (director)
- It Happened to Adele (1917)
- The Fortune Hunter (1920)
- What Women Want (1920)
- The Passionate Pilgrim (1921)
- Straight Is the Way (1921)
- A Midnight Bell (1921)
References
- ^ a b Grau, Robert (1914). The Theatre of Science: A Volume of Progress and Achievement in the Motion Picture Industry. New York: Broadway Publishing Company. p. VI.
- ^ de Groat, Greta (2008). "The Short Films of Norma Talmadge, 1913: Reviews". stanford.edu. Retrieved 29 December 2016.