Mark Smith (April 16, 1887 – May 9, 1944) was an American actor of stage, radio, and film.[1] A fourth generation American actor, he was a member of the Smith family of performers.[2] He should not be confused with his grandfather and his father who also performed under the name Mark Smith.[3]
Smith had a prolific career as both a stage and radio actor in New York City, and served a term as president of the New York chapter of the American Federation of Radio Artists. One of his better known radio characters was the role of Jiggs in Bringing Up Father.[3] He also voiced the roles of Pop Foyle on Kitty Foyle, Deputy Paar on the murder mystery anthology Murder Clinic, and portrayed several characters on The Cisco Kid. He appeared in many Broadway plays and musicals from 1903 through 1941; notably creating roles in original musicals by Kurt Weil, Vincent Youmans, Rudolf Friml, and Silvio Hein, and starring in original plays by David Belasco, Edgar Selwyn, William Le Baron, Guy Bolton and George Middleton among others. Smith also had roles in seven silent films that were released between the years 1915 and 1920. At the time of his death in 1944 The New York Times stated that he had performed in 70 different theaters in New York during his career, and "had appeared in more than 2,000 radio programs".[1]
Early life: 1887-1903
Mark E. Smith III was born in New York City on April 16, 1887.[1][4] A fourth generation American actor,[2] both his grandfather and father were also actors who also performed under the name Mark Smith.[5] His great-grandfather was the actor and impresario Sol Smith.[2] His grandfather, Mark Smith I, was a Shakespearean actor and comedian who for a part of his career was manager of the 19th century Booth's Theatre on Broadway.[3] He was considered one of the great American stage actors of the 19th century and earned the moniker "The Farren of the American stage."[2]
Smith's father, Mark Smith II, was a baritone who had a career in comic operas and operettas with America's top light opera companies of the late 19th century.[3] Mark Smith III began his stage career performing in small roles with his father in productions of two musicals by Charles H. Hoyt: A Milk White Flag and A Trip to Chinatown.[1] Having never retired, Mark Smith II died from dropsy on September 20, 1903.[6] His son continued the family's acting legacy.[3]
In 1908 Smith toured as Richard Hampton in David Higgins's play Captain Clay of Missouri.[11] He then toured as Jack Walkham in Edgar Allan Woolf and George Sylvester Viereck's The Vampire;[2] including performances at Broadway's Hackett Theatre and the Grand Opera House in Chicago in 1909.[12] On May 9, 1909 Smith married the actress Anna Muriel Feeney.[13] At the time of his marriage he was starring in the title role of James Forbes's The Traveling SalesmanPark Theatre in Boston;[13] a work he toured in[2] opposite the actress Miriam Nesbitt as his character's love interest.[14]
Stage and silent film career in the 1910s and 1920s
Bousquet, Henri, ed. (2001). De Pathé Frères à Pathé Cinéma: 1919, 1920, 1921, 1922. ISBN2-9507296-7-3.
Braff, Richard E. (2002). The Braff Silent Short Film Working Papers: Over 25,000 Films, 1903-1929, Alphabetized and Indexed. McFarland & Company. ISBN9780786410316.
Connelly, Robert B. (1998). The Silents: Silent Feature Films, 1910-36. December Press. ISBN978-0913204368.