Julian L'Estrange
Julian L'Estrange (born Julian Boyle; 6 August 1880 - 22 October 1918) was an English-born stage actor who later made a handful of silent films for Paramount Pictures. He married fellow performer Constance Collier at All Saints Church in London on 25 November 1905. They were a well-known married stage couple on both sides of the Atlantic. He died in the Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918. Collier talks about him in her 1929 autobiography Harlequinade. She never remarried.[1]
Julian L'Estrange | |
---|---|
Born | Julian Boyle 6 August 1880 Weston-super-Mare , England |
Died | 22 October 1918 (aged 38) New York City, New York, U.S. |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1902-18 |
Spouse(s) |
Partial stage roles
Broadway only
- Imprudence (November 1902 - January 1903)
- Myself -- Bettina (October - November 1908)
- Suzanne (December 1910 - February 1911)
- White Magic (January–February 1912) (written by Roi Cooper Megrue)
- The Paper Chase (November–December 1912)
- The Spy (January–March 1913)
- Her First Divorce (May 1913)
- The Yellow Ticket (January–June 1914)
- The Merchant of Venice (May 1916)Shakespeare 300th
Filmography
- The Morals of Marcus (1915)
- Sold (1915)
- Zaza (1915)
- Bella Donna (1915)
- The Girl with the Green Eyes (1916) *short
- The Quest of Life (1916)
- Daybreak (1918)
References
- Silent Film Necrology 2nd Edition c. 2001 by Eugene M. Vazzana
External links
- Julian L'Estrange at IMDb
- Julian L'Estrange at the Internet Broadway Database
- Portrait (Wayback Machine)
- Portrait (NY Public Library, Billy Rose collection)
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