Alexander Kirkland


William Alexander Kirkland was a leading man in Hollywood during the early sound era, as well as a notable stage actor who starred in productions of the Group Theatre in New York.

Biography

Kirkland was born on September 15, 1901, in Mexico City, the son of Robert Gowland Kirkland and Charlotte Megan. He was the grandson of rear admiral William Alexander Kirkland and Consuela Gowland.
Kirkland attended the Taft School, Watertown, Connecticut, and the University of Virginia. He later attended the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and while in Philadelphia he began his acting career at the Hedgerow Theatre in Media, Pennsylvania. His first play on Broadway was The Devil to Pay.
He was also a freelance writer and contributed stories to popular national magazines of the time. In the late 1920s Kirkland moved to Hollywood and starred as leading man to Tallulah Bankhead in Tarnished Lady. Other credits include Charlie Chan's Chance, Social Register A Face In The Crowd, A Passport to Hell and Devil's Lottery.
In the 1930s he was associated with the Group Theatre, founded by Harold Clurman, Cheryl Crawford and Lee Strasberg.
On radio, Kirkland played David Brewster in the soap opera Big Sister in the early 1940s, Curt Lansing in John's Other Wife, and Russell Barrington in Society Girl in that same era.
He toured as one of the Yale Puppeteers and then worked with the troupe at the Turnabout Theatre in Los Angeles, which operated from 1941 to 1956. His friend and theater colleague Forman Brown used him as the model for one of his characters in the early gay romance novel Better Angel.
He married entertainer Gypsy Rose Lee in 1942. Carl Van Doren introduced them. They separated after three months and finally were divorced in 1944. Their son Eric was later recognized as the son of director Otto Preminger.
From 1944 to 1950, he was married to socialite, actress, and TV producer Phyllis Adams, whom he had a story before Lee, and they had one daughter, Alexandra "Sandy" Marsh, who committed suicide falling down from the Park Belvedere 28th floor in 1987. Adams later remarried, in 1955, to art director George Jenkins.
In the 1950s Kirkland owned an art gallery in Palm Beach, Florida, and in 1945 he purchased Villa del Sarmiento, an oceanfront Palm Beach estate.
In 1959 he married Greta Hunter-Thompson Baldridge, a former Ziegfeld Follies girl, widow of a co-heir of the National Steel Corporation. They lived in Palm Beach, Fairfield, Connecticut and Cuernavaca, Mexico. Greta died in 1972 in Mexico City.
After the death of his third wife, Kirkland was connected to British actress Margot Grahame.
Little is known about his later years, but there have been no sources indicating his death, save from a source on IMDB, claiming his death sometime in the 1980s. At the time of his death, Kirkland was living in Cuernavaca and his daughter said he had wasted all his money.

Broadway credits

This filmography is believed to be complete.
YearTitleRoleNotes
1931Tarnished LadyDeWitt Taylor
SurrenderMajor Dietrich Reichendorf-
1932Charlie Chan's ChanceJohn R. Douglas
1932Devil's LotteryStephen Alden
1932Almost MarriedLouis Capristi / Charles Pringle
1932A Passport to HellLt. Erich von Sydow
1932Strange InterludeSam Evans
1933Black BeautyHenry Cameron
BondageDr. Nelson-
HumanityBill MacDonald-
1934The Social RegisterCharlie Breene
194713 Rue Madeleineuncredited
1957A Face in the CrowdJim Collier