词条 | Julian Royce |
释义 |
Life and careerRoyce was christened in Chorlton-upon-Medlock. In 1889 he married an actress, Elizabeth Mary Day ("Nora Day"). The two toured together in 1891, by which time he had adopted the stage name Julian Royce. They appeared together in 1897 in The New Magdalen, and in 1898 they appeared in Sporting Life, by Seymour Hicks and Cecil Raleigh, at the Shaftesbury Theatre in London, with Royce as the evil Malet de Carteret. In 1898 Nora died, of cancer, aged 40.[1] The next year, Royce married Ivy Herzog, who had been in the cast of Sporting Life. The two then sometimes performed and toured together. In 1900, they travelled to America with Lillie Langtry, and played Sir William and Lady Saumarez in The Degenerates on Broadway. After they returned to Britain, they toured in The Messenger Boy, with Julian as the villainous Pyke. For Charles Frohman, he played the title character in William Gillette's play Sherlock Holmes several times over the next years. He and Herzog also toured with Mrs Patrick Campbell.[1] He returned to Broadway in Detective Sparks (1909), Caste (1910), Passers-by (1911), Declassee (1919–1920) and Death Takes a Holiday, as Duke Lambert (1931). He began a film career in the silent film era and continued making films through the 1930s. Royce died at Hailsham in 1946, aged 80. His wife died later the same year.[1] Selected filmography
References1. ^1 2 3 Gänzl, Kurt. [https://kurtofgerolstein.blogspot.com/2018/06/ivy-girl-who-married-sherlock-holmes.html "Ivy: the girl who married Sherlock Holmes"], Kurt of Gerolstein, 19 June 2018 External links
6 : 1870 births|1946 deaths|English male film actors|English male silent film actors|People from Bristol|20th-century English male actors |
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