Elmer Booth

Last updated • 2 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Elmer Booth
EBThief6.jpg
Booth as Jack Doogan in the
1913 play Stop Thief!
Born
William Elmer Booth

(1882-12-09)December 9, 1882
DiedJune 16, 1915(1915-06-16) (aged 32)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
OccupationStage and film actor
Years active1901–1915
Spouse(s)
Irene Outtrim
(m. 1908)
Children1
Relatives Margaret Booth (sister)

William Elmer Booth (December 9, 1882 – June 16, 1915) was an American stage and film actor. He was born in Los Angeles, California and was the elder brother of Margaret Booth, a renowned film editor for Hollywood productions for nearly 70 years. [1]

Contents

Career

Elmer began acting in touring stock companies as a teenager and achieved great success in the stock company at the Central Theater in San Francisco from 1903-1906. Between 1910 and 1915 he starred in 40 movies; one of those was D. W. Griffith's The Musketeers of Pig Alley (1912), cited by many film experts as the first gangster movie.[ citation needed ]

Playing "The Snapper Kid", a Manhattan street tough engaged in a turf war on the Lower East Side, Booth interpreted the gangster as a cocky, entertaining antihero, far different from the standard teeth-gnashing movie bad guys of his time.[ citation needed ]

Death

In the early hours of June 16, 1915, Booth died in an accident in California while riding in a car driven by Tod Browning, an actor and new director with Reliance-Majestic Studios in Hollywood. [2] Actor George Siegmann was also a passenger in Browning's car. The day after the accident, the Los Angeles Times reported that the three men were returning to downtown Los Angeles from a roadhouse when Browning's car crashed into a train of the Salt Lake Railroad:

Elmer Booth was killed instantly. The motor car in which he was speeding towards Los Angeles with his two companions rammed the rear part of a flat car loaded with steel rails at Santa Fe avenue and Salt Lake tracks early yesterday morning. The conductor of the train, Harry Jones, approaching, had waved his lantern as a danger signal, and then had come to the crash that sent Elmer Booth, who was just realizing his dramatic ambitions, headforemost into the rails. [2]

Browning and Siegmann survived, although they both suffered serious injuries. [2] [3] Later reports blamed the accident on heavy fog; nevertheless, Elmer's sister Margaret never forgave Browning for the loss of her brother. [3] [4]

D. W. Griffith, who had planned to cast Booth in an important role in Intolerance , delivered the actor's graveside eulogy.[ citation needed ]

Personal life

Booth married actress Irene Outtrim in 1908. That same year, their son was born; he died of pneumonia in March 1910. [5]

Selected filmography

Related Research Articles

D. W. Griffith American film director and producer

David Wark Griffith was an American film director. Considered one of the most influential figures in the history of the motion picture, he pioneered many aspects of film editing and expanded the art of the narrative film.

Billy Bitzer American cinematographer

Gottfried Wilhelm Bitzer was an American cinematographer, notable for his close association and pioneering work with D. W. Griffith.

Inglewood Park Cemetery Cemetery in Inglewood, California

Inglewood Park Cemetery, 720 East Florence Avenue in Inglewood, California, was founded in 1905. A number of notable people, including entertainment and sports personalities, have been interred or entombed there.

Keystone Studios American film studio (Los Angeles; 1912–1935)

Keystone Studios was an early film studio founded in Edendale, California on July 4, 1912 as the Keystone Pictures Studio by Mack Sennett with backing from actor-writer Adam Kessel (1866–1946) and Charles O. Baumann (1874–1931), owners of the New York Motion Picture Company. The company, referred to at its office as The Keystone Film Company, filmed in and around Glendale and Silver Lake, Los Angeles for several years, and its films were distributed by the Mutual Film Corporation between 1912 and 1915. The Keystone film brand declined rapidly after Sennett went independent in 1917.

<i>The Musketeers of Pig Alley</i> 1912 film

The Musketeers of Pig Alley is a 1912 American short drama and a gangster film. It is directed by D. W. Griffith and written by Griffith and Anita Loos. It is also credited for its early use of follow focus, a fundamental tool in cinematography.

Alice Joyce American actress

Alice Joyce Brown was an American actress who appeared in more than 200 films during the 1910s and 1920s. She is known for her roles in the 1923 film The Green Goddess and its 1930 remake of the same name.

Victor Sutherland

Victor Sutherland was an American stage, film, and television actor.

Antonio Moreno Spanish-American actor (1887–1967)

Antonio Garrido Monteagudo, better known as Antonio Moreno or Tony Moreno, was a Spanish-born American actor and film director of the silent film era and through the 1950s.

Robert Harron American actor

Robert Emmett Harron, also known as Bobby Harron, was an American motion picture actor of the early silent film era. Although he acted in over 200 films, he is possibly best recalled for his roles in the D.W. Griffith directed films The Birth of a Nation (1915) and Intolerance (1916).

Frank Powell Canadian actor and director

Frank Powell was a Canadian-born stage and silent film actor, director, producer, and screenwriter who worked predominantly in the United States. He is also credited with "discovering" Theda Bara and casting her in a starring role in the 1915 release A Fool There Was. Her performance in that production, under Powell's direction, quickly earned Bara widespread fame as the film industry's most popular evil seductress or on-screen "vamp".

Charles Avery was an American silent-film actor, film director, and screenwriter.

William C. Dowlan

William C. Dowlan was an American stage performer and a film actor and director during the silent era. Most of his directorial projects were done in collaboration with his wife, screenwriter Leonora Ainsworth. Between 1915 and 1917 he and Ainsworth did extensive work together for Universal Film Manufacturing Company in Los Angeles and for the American Film Company at its facilities in Santa Barbara.

George Siegmann American actor

George A. Siegmann was an American actor and film director in the silent film era. His work includes roles in notable productions such as The Birth of a Nation (1915), Intolerance (1916), The Three Musketeers (1921), Oliver Twist (1922), The Cat and the Canary (1927), and The Man Who Laughs (1928).

Christy Cabanne American film director, screenwriter and actor

William Christy Cabanne was an American film director, screenwriter, and silent film actor.

Clara T. Bracy was an English stage and silent film actress.

John T. Dillon (actor) American actor

John T. Dillon was an American actor of the silent era. He appeared in 136 films between 1908 and 1936. He died in Los Angeles, California from pneumonia. Actor Edward Dillon was his brother. They are not related to director John Francis Dillon.

Harold M. Shaw American film director (1877-1926)

Harold Marvin Shaw was an American stage performer, film actor, screenwriter, and notable director of the silent era. A native of Tennessee, he worked professionally in theatrical plays and vaudeville for 16 years before he began acting in motion pictures for Edison Studios in New York City in 1910 and then started regularly directing shorts there two years later. Shaw next served briefly as a director for Independent Moving Pictures (IMP) in New York before moving to England in May 1913 to be "chief producer" for the newly established London Film Company. During World War I, he relocated to South Africa, where in 1916 he directed the film De Voortrekkers in cooperation with African Film Productions, Limited. Shaw also established his own production company while in South Africa, completing there two more releases, The Rose of Rhodesia in 1918 and the comedy Thoroughbreds All in 1919. After directing films once again in England under contract with Stoll Pictures, he finally returned to the United States in 1922 and later directed several screen projects for Metro Pictures in California before his death in Los Angeles in 1926. During his 15-year film career, Shaw worked on more than 125 films either as a director, actor, or screenwriter.

Barnwell, originally a rail camp named Summit, then Manvel, was a former railhead serving local mining camps, now a ghost town, in San Bernardino County, California. It lies at an elevation 4806 feet in the New York Mountains.

Adolph Lestina American actor

Adolph Lestina was an American stage and film actor who was a member of D. W. Griffith's stock company of film actors.

References

  1. Brownlow, Kevin (1968). The Parade's Gone By. Ballantine Books. p. 342.
  2. 1 2 3 "Investigating Ride to Death", Los Angeles Times, Pictorial City Sheet II, June 17, 1915, p. 1. ProQuest Historical Newspapers
  3. 1 2 "Elmer Booth Killed", Moving Picture World , July 3, 1915, p.75. Internet Archive, San Francisco, California. Retrieved November 18, 2019.
  4. Ska, David J. (2001). The Monster Show: A Cultural History of Horror . Macmillan. p.  35. ISBN   978-0571199969.
  5. "Parents Permitted to Have Child Only Day Before Death Comes". The Salt Lake Tribune. March 23, 1910. p. 20. Retrieved April 7, 2021 via Newspapers.com.