logo
home/actors/

William Faversham

placeholder

William Faversham

Known For

Acting

Gender

Male

Birthday

Feb 12, 1868 (158 years old)

Place of Birth

London, England, UK

Biography

Fom Wikipedia William Faversham (born 12 February 1868 in London – d. 7 April 1940 in Bay Shore, Long Island, New York) William Faversham was an English stage and film actor, manager, producer. Father of William Jr. and Philip. One of the last of the legendary actor-managers, William Faversham became a major name on Broadway in the original production of The Importance of Being Earnest in 1895. Faversham was much admired in such potboilers as Brother Officers (1900), which he revived twice that same year and the next, and he produced, directed, and starred in the original production of The Squaw Man (1906). Productions of both Julius Caesar (1914) and Othello (1917) followed and he became a motion picture star in 1915 courtesy of the burgeoning Metro company. At one point, Faversham's popularity at Metro was second only to that of Francis X. Bushman, the leading matinee idol of the era. Quite elderly by then, Faversham later appeared in bit roles in talkies, including portraying the Duke of Wellington in the Technicolor production of Becky Sharp and, of all things, playing the heroine's father in the low-budget singing cowboy oater The Singing Buckaroo (1937). Faversham's Broadway swan song had come in a 1931 repertory presentation of Julius Caesar, Hamlet, and The Merchant of Venice. He was married to stage actresses Edith Campbell and Julia Opps and was the father of William Faversham (Harvard, Brown-Forman, Cassius Clay/Muhamed Ali) and actor Philip Faversham. He received a star on the Walk of Fame in 1940.

Known For

Acting
1937Arizona DaysProfessor McGill
1937The Singing BuckarooDad Evans
1935Becky SharpDuke of Wellington
1934Secret of the ChateauMonsieur Fos / Professor Racque
1924The Sixth CommandmentDavid Brant
1920The Man Who Lost HimselfVictor Jones / Earl of Rochester
1920The Sin That Was HisRaymond Chapelle
1919The Silver KingWilfred Denver
1915The Right of WayCharlie Steele
1915One Million DollarsRichard Duvall