William Gillette

William Gillette

WriterActor
Born
July 24, 1853
Died
April 29, 1937

Handsome American actor, playwright and stage director/producer William Gillette was born in Hartford, CT, in 1853. His father Francis was a former United States Senator and crusader for women's suffrage and the abolition of slavery; his mother Elisabeth Daggett Hooker is a descendant of Rev. Thomas…

Biography

Handsome American actor, playwright and stage director/producer William Gillette was born in Hartford, CT, in 1853. His father Francis was a former United States Senator and crusader for women's suffrage and the abolition of slavery; his mother Elisabeth Daggett Hooker is a descendant of Rev. Thomas Hooker, who either wrote or inspired the first written constitution in history to form a government.

In 1873 William left Hartford to begin his apprenticeship as an actor, briefly working for a stock theatre company in New Orleans and then returning to New England. He made his debut at the Globe Theatre in Boston with Mark Twain's play "The Guilded Age" in 1875. His first major Civil War drama, "Hold by the Enemy", was a major step forward to modern theatre in that it abandoned many crude devices of Victorian melodrama and introduced realism into the sets, props, costumes, sound effects and performances; it was a critical and commercial success in America and Britain.

Gillette is probably best remembered, however, as the first actor to be universally acclaimed for portraying Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's famed detective Sherlock Holmes, playing the role first on stage in 1899 and continuing for more than 35 years. He also wrote many stage versions from Doyle's Sherlock Holmes novels and even starred in the film version, Sherlock Holmes (1916), directed by Arthur Berthelet for the Essanay Film Co. He had previously appeared in two other films, his debut being in J.P. McGowan's The Battle at Fort Laramie (1913) and the following year he played support as Jack Lane in The Delayed Special (1914), both of which starred Helen Holmes and were made for the Kalem Film Co. Gillette also became popular on radio, performing the first radio serial version of Sherlock Holmes in 1930 and in 1935. His last stage appearance was in Austin Strong's "Three Wise Fools" in 1936. He wrote 13 original plays, seven adaptations and some collaborations, encompassing farce, melodrama and novel adaptation. He also wrote two pieces based on the US Civil War, "Held by the Ememy" and "Secret Service", which were highly acclaimed. In 1882 he married Helen Nichols, who died in 1888 from peritonitis; he never remarried.

Gillette died from pulmonary hemorrhage in Connecticut in 1937 at age 83.

Actor

Sherlock HolmesSherlock Holmes(1916)as Sherlock Holmes

Archive Footage

The Diogenes DocumentariesThe Diogenes Documentaries(2014)as Sherlock Holmes
In Search of...In Search of...(1976)as Sherlock Holmes

Known for

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Credit Score: William Gillette

876
191519161917
Sherlock Holmes
Mon May 15 1916
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownWinsNomsVotes
1Sherlock Holmes3.2519166.200545

Photos 14

William Gillette in Sherlock Holmes (1916)William Gillette in Sherlock Holmes (1916)William Gillette in Sherlock Holmes turns Engineer (1927)William Gillette in Sherlock Holmes (1916)William Gillette and Stewart Robbins in Sherlock Holmes (1916)William Gillette in Sherlock Holmes (1916)