Conway Tearle
Conway Tearle was an American stage actor who went on to perform in silent and early sound films.
Early life
Tearle was born on May 17, 1878, in New York City, the son of the well-known British-born cornetist Jules Levy and American actress Marianne “Minnie” Conway. Tearle also had a sister, and a half-brother, musician Jules Levy, Jr., from his father's previous marriage. Minnie's mother was stage actress Sarah Crocker Conway. Minnie Conway was a direct descendant of William Augustus Conway, a British Shakespearean actor who became popular in America during the 1820s. Her father, the proprietor of the Brooklyn Theatre, was said to have organized the first stock company in America. After Tearle's parents separated, his mother married Osmond Tearle, a British Shakespearean actor popular in “the provinces”. Two half brothers, Godfrey and Malcolm Tearle, were born from Marianne's marriage to Osmond Tearle.Conway Levy was educated in England and America and took to the stage at an early age. By the age of ten he could recite twelve Shakespearean plays from memory. As an adult he adopted his step-father's surname to become Conway Tearle. His big break came at the age of twenty-one when in Manchester, England, without any preparation, he was called upon to play Hamlet after the lead actor took ill just prior to the first act.
Career
Tearle's performance that night led to his first appearance on the London stage playing the Viscomte de Chauvin, the lead role in The Queen's Double, on April 27, 1901, at the Garrick Theatre. He next toured Australia playing the title role in Ben Hur for some months before returning to London to star in the play The Best of Friends at the Theatre Royal. Tearle divided the following four seasons equally with companies headed by Ellen Terry and Sir Charles Wyndham.in the silent film Stella Maris
In 1905 Tearle returned to America to play opposite Grace George in the short-lived play Abigail. Over the next eight years or so Tearle played in a number of Broadway productions that failed to excite New York audiences. He did at times though garner singular praise for his performances in such plays as The New York Idea, The Liars, Major Barbara, and others. In 1908/09 Tearle reprised his title role in a lavish Klaw and Erlinger road production of Ben Hur.
Tearle turned to Hollywood in 1914 where he would find considerable success playing romantic leads. His first film was The Nightingale, a story by Augustus Thomas about a slum girl who rose to be a great opera star. His last was in a 1936 film adaptation of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet with John Barrymore. Tearle appeared in some 93 films over his career and at one point was thought to be the highest-paid actor in America. On December 16, 1931, Conway appeared with co-star Kay Francis at the grand opening of the Paramount Theater in Oakland, California, which hosted the premiere of their film The False Madonna, released by Paramount Pictures.
The following year Tearle scored a major hit on Broadway in the original 1932 production of Dinner at Eight, creating the role of fading screen idol Larry Renault, a role that would later be played on film by John Barrymore. His last two Broadway appearances were in short productions of Living Dangerously in 1935 and Antony and Cleopatra two years later.
Marriages
Conway Tearle married for the first time in 1901 in Sunderland, England. In 1908 Tearle filed for a divorce in Reno, Nevada on grounds of desertion, stating that his wife, Gertrude Tearle, had left him several years earlier.His second wife, actress Josephine Park, sued for divorce In March 1912 after learning that Tearle had set sail for Italy aboard the S.S. Amerika with actress Roberta Hill. Roberta's name had earlier appeared in print as a co-respondent in a divorce suit filed by the wife of John Jacob Astor.
Tearle's third wife, Roberta Hill, filed for a divorce in 1917 after detectives she hired found him in a hotel room with Adele Rowland, a musical-comedy actress and dancer. The two claimed they were just rehearsing a play. As Rowland explained later: “As to the robe in which I was clad, it's the custom in the profession to read plays attired like that.”
The following February Tearle and Rowland wed, remaining together until his death some twenty years later.
Death
One of Tearle's last starring roles was in Hey Diddle Diddle, a comedy play written by Bartlett Cormack. The play premiered in Princeton, New Jersey, on January 21, 1937, and also featured Lucille Ball playing the part of Julie Tucker, "one of three roommates coping with neurotic directors, confused executives, and grasping stars who interfere with the girls' ability to get ahead." The play received good reviews, but there were problems, chiefly with its star, because Tearle was in poor health. Cormack wanted to replace him, but the producer, Anne Nichols, said the fault lay with the character and insisted the part needed to be reshaped and rewritten. The two were unable to agree on a solution. The play was scheduled to open on Broadway at the Vanderbilt Theatre, but closed after one week in Washington, D.C., due in part to Tearle's declining health.Tearle died in Hollywood, California, from a heart attack, on October 1, 1938, aged 60.
Filmography
- The Nightingale as Charles Marden
- Shore Acres as Sam Warner
- The Seven Sisters as Count Horkoy
- Helene of the North as Ralph Connell, aka Lord Traverse
- Poor Schmaltz as Jack
- The Foolish Virgin as Jim Anthony
- The Common Law as Neville
- The Heart of the Hills as Redgell
- The Fall of the Romanoffs as Prince Felix Yussepov
- The Judgment House as Ian Stafford
- The World for Sale as Ingolby
- Stella Maris as John Risca - also Spelled Riska
- Virtuous Wives as Andrew Forrester
- The Way of a Woman as Anthony Weir
- Atonement as Theodore Proctor
- Her Game as Alan Rutherford/Bruce Armitage
- The Mind the Paint Girl as Capt. Nicholas Jeyes
- A Virtuous Vamp as Jame Crowninshield
- Human Desire as Robert Lane
- Two Weeks as Kenneth Maxwell
- She Loves and Lies as Ernest Lismore
- The Forbidden Woman as Malcolm Kent
- April Folly as Kerry Sarle
- Marooned Hearts as Dr. Paul Carrington
- Whispering Devils as Rev. Michael Faversham
- The Road of Ambition as Bill Matthews
- Society Snobs as Lorenzo Carilo/Duke d'Amunzi
- The Oath as Hugh Coleman
- Bucking the Tiger as Ritchie MacDonald
- The Fighter as Caleb Conover
- After Midnight as Gordon Phillips/Wallace Phillips
- A Man of Stone as Capt. Deering
- Shadows of the Sea as Captain Dick Carson
- A Wide Open Town as Billy Clifford
- Love's Masquerade as Russell Carrington
- The Referee as John McArdle
- The Eternal Flame as Général de Montriveau
- One Week of Love as Buck Fearnley
- Bella Donna as Mahmoud Baroudi
- The Rustle of Silk as Arthur Fallaray
- Ashes of Vengeance as Rupert de Vrieac
- The Common Law as Louis Neville
- The Dangerous Maid as Capt. Miles Prothero
- Black Oxen as Lee Clavering
- The Next Corner as Robert Maury
- Lilies of the Field as Louis Willing
- The White Moth as Vantine Morley
- Flirting with Love as Wade Cameron
- The Great Divide as Stephen Ghent
- Bad Company as James Hamilton
- The Heart of a Siren as Gerald Rexford
- School for Wives as Richard Keith
- Just a Woman as Robert Holton
- The Mystic as Michael Nash
- Morals for Men as Joe Strickland
- The Dancer of Paris as Noel Anson
- Dancing Mothers as Jerry Naughton
- The Greater Glory as Count Maxim von Hurtig
- The Sporting Lover as Captain Terrance Connaughton
- My Official Wife as Alexander, aka Sascha
- Altars of Desire as David Elrod
- Enemies of Society as Dr. William Matthews
- The Isle of Forgotten Women as Bruce Paine
- Smoke Bellew as Kit 'Smoke' Bellew
- Gold Diggers of Broadway as Stephen Lee
- Evidence as Harold Courtenay
- The Lost Zeppelin as Commander Donald Hall
- The Truth About Youth as Richard Carewe
- The Lady Who Dared as Jack Norton
- Captivation as Hugh Somerton
- Pleasure as Gerald Whitney
- Morals for Women as Van Dyne
- The False Madonna as Grant Arnold
- The False Idol
- Vanity Fair as Rawdon Crawley
- Man About Town as Bob Ashley
- The Hurricane Express as Stevens
- The King Murder as Detective Chief Henry Barton
- Her Mad Night as Steven Kennedy
- Day of Reckoning as George Hollins
- Should Ladies Behave as Max Lawrence
- Stingaree as Sir Julian Kent
- Fifteen Wives as Insp. Decker Dawes
- Sing Sing Nights as Floyd Harding Cooper
- The Headline Woman as Police Commissioner Frank Desmond
- Trails End as Jim 'Trigger' Malloy
- The Judgement Book as Steve Harper
- Desert Guns as Kirk Allenby/Bob Enright
- Murder in the Dark as Jim Stafford
- Klondike Annie as Vance Palmer
- The Preview Murder Mystery as Edwin Strange
- Romeo and Juliet as Prince Escalus