Milton Sills
Milton Sills | |
---|---|
Los Angeles, California, U.S. | |
Burial place | Rosehill Cemetery, Chicago |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1906–1914 (stage) 1914–1930 (film) |
Spouses | |
Children | 2 |
Milton George Gustavus Sills (January 12, 1882 – September 15, 1930) was an American stage and film actor of the early twentieth century.
Biography
Sills was born in
In 1905, stage actor Donald Robertson visited the school to lecture on author and playwright Henrik Ibsen and suggested to Sills that he try his hand at acting. On a whim, Sills agreed and left his teaching career to embark on a stint in acting. Sills joined Robertson's stock theater company and began touring the country.[citation needed]
In 1908, while Sills was performing in New York City, he attracted the notice of Broadway producers such as David Belasco and Charles Frohman. That same year he made his Broadway debut in This Woman and This Man.[2] From 1908 to 1914, Sills appeared in about a dozen Broadway shows.
In 1912, Sills joined the summer stock cast at the Elitch Theatre. Owner and producer of the theatre, Mary Elitch Long, reported: "Milton Sills, one of the most charming young men I ever knew, came as my leading man, and Louise Woods as leading lady, for a limited engagement."[3]
In 1910, Sills married English stage actress Gladys Edith Wynne, a niece of actress Edith Wynne Matthison. The union produced one child, Dorothy Sills; Gladys filed for divorce in 1925.[4] In 1926, Sills married silent film actress Doris Kenyon with whom he had a son, Kenyon Clarence Sills, born in 1927.[citation needed]
Motion pictures
In 1914, Sills made his film debut in the big-budget drama The Pit for the World Film Company and was signed to a contract with film producer William A. Brady. Sills made three more films for the company, including The Deep Purple opposite Clara Kimball Young.[2]
By the early 1920s, Sills had achieved
Sills had begun to make the transition to sound pictures as early as 1928 with the part-talking The Barker. His final appearance was in the title role of The Sea Wolf (1930), a performance called "incisive" by The New York Times.[9]
Death and legacy
Sills died of a
He was a founding member in 1913 of
Sills also wrote a book, published posthumously in 1932: Values: A Philosophy of Human Needs – Six Dialogues on Subjects from Reality to Immortality, co-edited by Ernest Holmes.[13]
In his time, his fame as an attractive movie star was such that his name was used in a 1928 Danish vaudeville revue song, with the idea that "modern girls find fault with almost everybody; unless a man is a Milton Sills, he doesn't stand a chance".[14]
For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Milton Sills received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6263 Hollywood Boulevard.[15] Sills was the favorite actor of poet Weldon Kees as a child, and Sills' Men of Steel influenced Kees' poem "1926".[16]
Filmography
- The Pit (1914) as Corthell
- The Deep Purple (1915) as William Lake
- The Arrival of Perpetua (1915) as Thaddeus Curzon
- Under Southern Skies (1915) as Burleigh Mavor
- The Rack (1915) as Tom Gordon
- Patria(1917) as Capt. Donald Parr
- The Honor System (1917) as Joseph Stanton
- Souls Adrift (1917) as Micah Steele
- Married in Name Only (1917) as Robert Worthing
- The Fringe of Society (1917) as Martin Drake
- Diamonds and Pearls (1917) as RobertVan Ellstrom
- The Other Woman (1918) as Mr. Harrington
- The Struggle Everlasting (1918) as Mind, aka Bruce
- The Reason Why (1918) as Lord Tancred
- The Mysterious Client (1918) as Harry Nelson
- The Yellow Ticket(1918) as Julian Rolfe
- The Claw (1918) as Major Anthony Kinsella
- The Savage Woman (1918) as Jean Lerier
- The Hell Cat (1918) as Sheriff Jack Webb
- Shadows (1919) as Judson Barnes
- Satan Junior (1919) as Paul Worden
- The Stronger Vow (1919) as Juan Estudillo
- The Hushed Hour (1919) as Luke Appleton
- The Woman Thou Gavest Me (1919) as Conrad
- The Fear Woman (1919) as Robert Craig
- Eyes of Youth (1919) as Louis Anthony
- What Every Woman Learns (1919) as Walter Melrose
- The Street Called Straight (1920) as Peter Devenant
- The Inferior Sex (1920) as Knox Randall
- Dangerous to Men (1920) as Sandy Verrall
- The Week-End (1920) asArthur Tavenor
- Behold My Wife! (1920) as Frank Armour
- Sweet Lavender (1920) as Horace Weather Burn
- The Furnace (1920) as Keene Mordaunt
- The Faith Healer (1921) as Michaelis
- The Little Fool (1921) as Dick
- Salvage (1921) as Fred Martin
- The Great Moment (1921) as Bayard Delaval
- At the End of the World (1921)
- Miss Lulu Bett (1921) as Neil Cornish
- A Trip to Paramountown (1922, Short)
- One Clear Call (1922) as Dr. Alan Hamilton
- The Woman Who Walked Alone (1922) as Clement Gaunt
- Borderland (1922) as James Wayne
- Burning Sands (1922) as Daniel Lane
- Skin Deep (1922) as Bud Doyle
- The Forgotten Law (1922) as Richard Jarnette
- Environment (1922) as Steve MacLaren
- The Marriage Chance (1922) as William Bradley
- The Last Hour (1923) as Steve Cline
- What a Wife Learned (1923) as Rudolph Martin
- The Isle of Lost Ships (1923) as Frank Howard
- Legally Dead (1923) as Will Campbell / George Brown
- The Spoilers (1923) as Roy Glennister
- Adam's Rib (1923) as Michael Ramsay
- Why Women Remarry (1923) as Dan Hannon
- Flaming Youth (1923) as Cary Scott
- Souls for Sale (1923) as Himself (uncredited)
- A Lady of Quality (1924) as Gerald Mertoun, Duke of Osmonde
- The Heart Bandit (1924) as John Rand
- Flowing Gold (1924) as Calvin Gray
- The Sea Hawk (1924) as Sir Oliver Tressilian
- Single Wives (1924) as Perry Jordan
- Madonna of the Streets (1924) as Reverend John Morton
- As Man Desires (1925) as Major John Craig
- I Want My Man (1925) as Gulian Eyre
- The Making of O'Malley (1925) as O'Malley
- The Knockout (1925) as Sandy Donlin
- A Lover's Oath (1925) -- editor
- The Unguarded Hour (1925) as Andrea
- Puppets (1926) as Nicki
- Men of Steel (1926) as Jan Bokak
- Paradise (1926) as Tony
- The Silent Lover (1926) as Count Pierre Tornal
- The Sea Tiger (1927) as Justin Ramos
- Framed (1927) as Etienne Hilaire
- Hard-Boiled Haggerty (1927) as Hard-Boiled Haggerty
- The Valley of the Giants (1927) as Bryce Cardigan
- Burning Daylight (1928) as Elam 'Burning Daylight' Harnish
- The Hawk's Nest(1928) as The Hawk / John Finchley
- The Crash (1928) as Jim Flannagan
- The Barker (1928) as Nifty Miller
- His Captive Woman (1929) as Officer Thomas McCarthy
- Love and the Devil (1929) as Lord Dryan
- Man Trouble (1930) as Mac
- The Sea Wolf (1930) as 'Wolf' Larsen (final film role)
References
- ^ a b "Milton Sills, Film Star, Dies of Heart Attack". Los Angeles Times. September 16, 1930. pp. 1, 2. Retrieved November 9, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-7864-8354-9.
- OCLC 21432197.
- ^ "News from the Dailies – Los Angeles". Variety. October 7, 1925. p. 10 – via Internet Archive.
- ISBN 978-0-307-82918-4.
- ISBN 978-0-8166-3513-9.
- ^ Dirks, Tim. "Box-Office Hits By Decade and Year". filmsite. Archived from the original on November 21, 2015. Retrieved February 7, 2016.
- ^ "Men of Steel". Catalog of Feature Films. American Film Institute.
- ^ "Milton Sills's Last Film". The New York Times. October 6, 1930. Retrieved November 9, 2021.
- ^ "Milton Sills' Goodbye". Photoplay. December 1930. p. 96 – via Internet Archive.
- ISBN 978-1-135-87116-1.
- ISBN 978-1-60598-216-8.
- ISBN 978-0-7864-8790-5.
- ^ ""En er for lille og en er for stor" - Liva Weel i Scala Revyen "Omkring hesten" 1928". YouTube.
- ^ "Milton Sills". Hollywood Walk of Fame. Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
- ISBN 978-0-8032-5977-5.
External links
- Milton Sills at IMDb
- Milton Sills at the Internet Broadway Database
- Photographs and literature
- "The Actor's Part", article written by Sills in 1927