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DeWolf Hopper

William DeWolf Hopper (March 30, 1858 – September 23, 1935) was an American actor, singer, comedian, and theatrical producer. A star of vaudeville and musical theater, he became best known for performing the popular baseball poem "Casey at the Bat".

DeWolf Hopper
Hopper in 1901
Born
William D'Wolf Hopper

(1858-03-30)March 30, 1858
New York City, U.S.
DiedSeptember 23, 1935(1935-09-23) (aged 77)
New York City, U.S.
Occupations
  • Actor
  • singer
  • comedian
  • theatrical producer
Years active1878–1935
Spouses
Helen Gardiner
(m. 1880; div. 1885)
Ida Mosher
(m. 1886; div. 1892)
(m. 1893; div. 1898)
(m. 1899; div. 1913)
(m. 1913; div. 1922)
Lillian Glaser
(m. 1925; div. 1935)
Children2; including William Hopper

Life and career Edit

Hopper was born William D'Wolf Hopper[1]: 5  in New York City, the son of John Hopper (born 1815) and Rosalie D'Wolf (born 1827). His father was a wealthy Quaker lawyer and his mother came from a noted Colonial family. His paternal grandfather Isaac Hopper was a Philadelphia Quaker, and conductor of the Philadelphia station of the Underground Railroad. Though his parents intended that he become a lawyer, Hopper did not enjoy that profession.[1]: 10  Hopper was called Willie as a child, and then Will or Wolfie, but when he set out on an acting career he chose his more distinguished middle name as his stage name. It was modified to "DeWolf" because of the frequency that it was mispronounced "Dwolf".[1]: 9–10 

He made his stage debut in New Haven, Connecticut, October 2, 1878. Originally, he wanted to be a serious actor, but at 6' 5" (196 cm) and 230 pounds, he was too large for most dramatic roles. He had a loud bass singing voice, however, and made his mark in musicals, beginning in Harrigan and Hart's company. He achieved the status of leading man in The Black Hussar (1885) and appeared in the hit Erminie in 1887. Eventually, he starred in more than thirty Broadway musicals, including Castles in the Air (1890), Wang (1891), Panjandrum (1893), John Philip Sousa's El Capitan (1896), and Reginald De Koven's Happyland. The role that he remembered with greatest pleasure was Old Bill in The Better 'Ole (1919).

 
Hopper and Viola Gillette in Beggar Student (1913)

Known for his comic talents, Hopper popularized many comic songs and appeared in a number of Gilbert and Sullivan comic "patter" roles from 1911 to 1915, including The Mikado, Patience, and H.M.S. Pinafore.[2]

A lifelong baseball enthusiast and New York Giants fan, he first performed Ernest Thayer's then-unknown poem "Casey at the Bat" to the Giants and Chicago Cubs the day his friend, Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Tim Keefe had his record 19-game winning streak stopped, August 14, 1888. Hopper helped make the comic poem famous and was often called upon to give his colorful, melodramatic recitation, which he did about 10,000 times in his booming voice, reciting it during performances and as part of curtain calls, and on radio. He released a recorded version on phonograph record in 1906, and recited the poem in a short film made in the Phonofilm sound-on-film process in 1923.

 
DeWolf Hopper autographed sketch by Manuel Rosenberg for the Cincinnati Post, 1921

It was in The Black Hussar that Hopper first incorporated a baseball theme that drew notice in the sporting press. To accompany a song with a baseball stanza, "Mr. Hopper enacts the pitcher, Mr. [Digby] Bell, with a bird cage on his head and boxing gloves on his hands, plays catcher, while Mme. [Mathilde] Cottrelly handles a diminutive bat as striker and endeavors to make a 'home run.'"

In 1889, Hopper became founding president of the Actors' Amateur Athletic Association of America. Back in 1886, besides organizing a regular ball team among actors, he played in a benefit game for a demented playwright. The following year, he helped organize an actor's benefit for a sick young actress. In the first inning, someone presented him with an eight-inch sunflower.

Also in 1889, Bell, Hopper and fellow McCaull Comic Opera Company actor Jefferson De Angelis were doing the following skit for their third encore in Boccaccio. Bell returns "with a bat in his hand, followed by DeWolf Hopper and De Angelis. The latter has a ball, and as Hopper takes the bat in hand and Bell acts as catcher the former goes through the customary contortion act in pitching, and as Hopper hits the ball he runs off the stage, as if running the bases, and presently returns chased by De Angelis, who passes the ball to Bell as catcher just as Hopper makes a big slide for home base. The slider tumbles Bell, and when he rises from the somersault all three yell out to the audience for judgment [a ruling], and go off kicking like Anson and [New York captain Buck] Ewing. It is a rich gag and takes immediately", the Brooklyn Eagle said.

That year, Bell called Hopper "the biggest baseball crank that ever lived. Physically, of course, he is a corker, but when I say big I mean big morally and intellectually. Why, he goes up to the baseball [Polo] grounds at One Hundred and Fifty-fifth street after the matinees on Saturday, and he travels this six miles simply to see, perhaps, the two final innings, and any one can imagine the rapidity with which he must scrape off the makeup and get into his street clothes in order to secure even this much. But he says the Garrison finishes are worth it, and he is perfectly right. Hopper always was a baseball crank, long before the public knew anything about it."

Bald from childhood (he had alopecia), Hopper wore wigs both on and offstage. In later years, a reaction to harsh medicines that he took for throat problems gave his skin a bluish tinge. Regardless, his powerful voice and great sense of humor seemed an attraction to women all his life. With an insatiable appetite for young actresses, he left a long trail of six wives and countless mistresses in his wake, he became known by the nickname "The Husband of His Country."

Hopper also appeared in several silent motion pictures, two examples being Don Quixote (1915) and Casey at the Bat (1916). Hopper also appeared in a few short sound films, including one in 1923 when he actually recites Casey at the Bat in an experimental sound film produced by Lee De Forest's Phonofilm process.[citation needed]Hopper was a part of the Triangle Film Corporation, which he described as “the first great flourish” of a “prattling, infant industry”.[3]

He made a Broadway appearance in White Lilacs (1928). He then did Radio City Music Hall Inaugural (1932), and played Dr. Gustave Ziska in The Monster (1933). At the time of his death, he was in Kansas City, Missouri, making a radio appearance. His funeral was at the Little Church Around the Corner, in New York City[4]

His autobiography, Once a Clown, Always a Clown, written with the assistance of Wesley W. Stout, was published in 1927.

Marriages Edit

 
Edna Wallace and Hopper in the musical Panjandrum (1893)

All of Hopper's marriages ended in divorce.

  • At age 21, Hopper was married to his first wife, actress Helen Gardiner, his second cousin.[3][5]
  • His second wife was Ida Mosher. They had one son in 1886, John Allan Hopper,[5] and divorced in 1893.[6]
  • 1893–1898: His third wife was Edna Wallace.[6][7]
  • 1899–1913: His fourth wife was choir singer Nella Bergen (née Reardon), whom he married in London. She was divorced from actor James Bergen.[5][8]
  • 1913–1922: His fifth wife was actress and gossip columnist Hedda Hopper; they had one son, actor William Hopper.[9]
  • 1925–1935: His sixth wife was vocal instructor Lillian E. "Lulu" Glaser (née Faulkes), a widow.[5]

Theatre credits Edit

 
Hopper in The Charlatan (1898)
 
Poster for Hopper in John Philip Sousa's El Capitan (1896)
 
Poster for Hopper in Wang (1897)
 
Poster for Hopper in Happyland (1905)
 
Hopper and Marguerite Clark in The Pied Piper (1908)
 
Poster for Hopper in A Matinee Idol (1910)
 
Hopper as the Sergeant of Police in The Pirates of Penzance (1912)

DeWolf Hopper Opera Company productions Edit

The Charlatan [Original, Musical, Comedy, Opera]
Dec 5, 1889 – Jun 17, 1899
Mr. Pickwick [Original, Musical]
Jan 19, 1903 – May 1903

Stage roles Edit

Lorraine [Original, Musical, Comedy, Opera]
Feb 28, 1887 – Mar 12, 1887, Gaspard de Chateauvieux
The Begum [Original, Musical, Comedy, Opera]
Sep 21, 1887 – Dec 10, 1887, Howja-Dhu
Casey at the Bat [Original, Special, Poem, Solo]
Aug 14, 1888 – Aug 14, 1888, Himself
The Charlatan [Original, Musical, Comedy, Opera]
Dec 5, 1889 – Jun 17, 1899, Demidoff
Wang [Original, Musical, Comedy, Operetta]
May 4, 1891 – Oct 3, 1891, Wang
Fiddle-dee-dee [Original, Musical, Burlesque, Extravaganza]
Sep 6, 1900 – Apr 20, 1901
Fiddle-dee-dee, Hoffman Barr
Quo Vass Iss?, Petrolius
Arizona, Henry Cannedbeef
Exhibit II, The Gay Lord Quex
Hoity Toity [Original, Musical, Burlesque]
Sep 5, 1901 – Apr 19, 1902
Hoity Toity, General Steele
Depleurisy, Countess Zicka
A Man From Mars, An A.D.T. Man from Mars
The Curl and the Judge, Judge Charges
DuHurry
Mr. Pickwick [Original, Musical]
Jan 19, 1903 – May 1903, Pickwick
Wang [Revival, Musical, Comedy, Operetta]
Apr 18, 1904 – Jun 4, 1904, Wang
Happyland [Original, Musical, Comedy, Opera]
Oct 2, 1905 – Jun 2, 1906, Ecstaticus
The Pied Piper [Original, Musical, Comedy]
Dec 3, 1908 – Jan 16, 1909, The Pied Piper
A Matinee Idol [Original, Musical, Comedy]
Apr 28, 1910 – May 1911, Medford Griffin
H.M.S. Pinafore [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
May 29, 1911 – Jul 8, 1911, Performer
Patience [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
May 6, 1912 – Jun 1, 1912, Reginald Bunthorne
The Pirates of Penzance [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
Jun 3, 1912 – Jun 26, 1912, Edward
H.M.S. Pinafore [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
Jun 27, 1912 – Jun 28, 1912, Dick Deadeye
The Mikado [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
Jun 29, 1912 – Jun 29, 1912, Ko-Ko
The Beggar Student [Revival, Musical, Comedy, Opera]
Mar 22, 1913, General Ollendorf
The Mikado [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
Apr 21, 1913 – May 3, 1913, Ko-Ko
H.M.S. Pinafore [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
May 5, 1913 – May 10, 1913, Dick Deadeye
Iolanthe [Revival, Musical, Comedy, Operetta]
May 12, 1913 – Jun 14, 1913, The Lord Chancellor
Lieber Augustin [Original, Musical, Operetta]
Sep 3, 1913 – Oct 4, 1913, Bogumil
Hop o' My Thumb [Original, Play, Pantomime]
Nov 26, 1913 – Jan 3, 1914, King Mnemonica
H.M.S. Pinafore [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
Apr 19, 1915 – Jun 19, 1915, Dick Deadeye
Trial by Jury [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
Apr 19, 1915 – Jun 19, 1915, The Learned Judge
The Yeomen of the Guard [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
Apr 19, 1915 – May 8, 1915, Jack Point
The Mikado [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
May 10, 1915 – Jun 19, 1915, Ko-Ko
The Sorcerer [Revival, Musical, Comedy, Operetta]
May 24, 1915 – Jun 5, 1915, John Wellington Wells
The Pirates of Penzance [Revival, Musical, Operetta]
Jun 7, 1915 – Jun 18, 1915, Major General Stanley
Iolanthe [Revival, Musical, Comedy, Operetta]
Jun 10, 1915 – Jun 17, 1915, The Lord Chancellor
The Passing Show of 1917 [Original, Musical, Revue]
Apr 26, 1917 – Oct 13, 1917, Performer
Everything [Original, Musical, Revue, Spectacle]
Aug 22, 1918 – May 17, 1919, Performer
Erminie [Revival, Musical, Comedy, Opera]
Jan 3, 1921 – Feb 26, 1921, Ravennes
Snapshots of 1921 [Original, Musical, Revue]
Jun 2, 1921 – Aug 6, 1921, Performer
Some Party [Original, Musical, Revue]
Apr 15, 1922 – Apr 29, 1922, Producer and Performer
White Lilacs [Original, Musical, Operetta, Romance]
Sep 10, 1928 – Jan 12, 1929, Dubusson
Radio City Music Hall Inaugural Program [Original, Special]
Dec 27, 1932 – Dec 27, 1932, Himself
The Monster [Revival, Play, Drama]
Feb 10, 1933 – Mar 1933, Dr. Gustave Ziska

Filmography Edit

 
 
Casey at the Bat (1916)
  • Don Quixote (1915), Alonso Quijano / Don Quixote
  • Rough Knight (1916)
  • Mr. Goode, the Samaritan (1916), Alphonse Irving Goode
  • Sunshine Dad (1916), Alonzo Evergreen (extant; Library of Congress)
  • Casey at the Bat (1916), Casey
  • Stranded (1916), H. Ulysses Watts
  • Intolerance: Love's Struggle Throughout the Ages (1916), extra (extant)
  • Puppets (1916), Pantaloon
  • Casey at the Bat (1922), Himself, reading the poem in experimental film made in Phonofilm sound-on-film process; premiered April 15, 1923 at the Rivoli Theater in NYC
  • At the Round Table (1930) (extant; Library of Congress)
  • The March of Time (1930), Himself, Old Timer Sequence in unfinished MGM movie
  • Ladies Not Allowed (1932)

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c Hopper, DeWolf (1927). Once a Clown, Always a Clown: Reminiscences of DeWolf Hopper. Boston: Little Brown and Company.
  2. ^ Link to postcard showing Hopper in five Gilbert and Sullivan roles at The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive
  3. ^ a b New York Times, September 24, 1935
  4. ^ New York Times obituary, September 26, 1935
  5. ^ a b c d Douglass, Harvey (July 12, 1933). "DeWolf Hopper Calls 6th Wife the Only Perfect One". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Retrieved 2015-05-06.
  6. ^ a b "Abbreviated Telegrams". The Bloomington Leader. Bloomington, Illinois. June 30, 1893. DeWolf Hopper, whose second wife recently secured a divorce from him, has married Miss Edna Wallace, of Charles Frohman's company.
  7. ^ "De Wolf Hopper Divorced". The New York Times. May 6, 1898. Retrieved 2009-02-02. Edna Wallace Hopper was to-day granted a divorce from her husband, De Wolf Hopper, by Judge Hebbard.
  8. ^ "DeWolf Hopper To Marry? It Is Reported That He Will Wed Miss Nella Bergen Immediately". The New York Times. June 4, 1899. Retrieved 2009-02-03. Persistent rumors prevailed yesterday among members of the theatrical profession that De Wolf Hopper will this week or some time in the near future be ...
  9. ^ "Hopper and No. 5 at Parting of Ways". Chicago Tribune. July 21, 1922. Retrieved 2009-02-03.

External links Edit

  • DeWolf Hopper at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • DeWolf Hopper at IMDb
  • Info on Hopper from the comprehensive musicals 101 site
  • "Casey at the Bat" website
  • Links to a recording by Hopper of "Casey at the Bat"
  • Casey at the Bat (1923) at SilentEra with picture of Hopper in the film
  • Hopper reciting "Casey at the Bat" in 1909 on YouTube
  • De Wolf Hopper portrait gallery at New York Public Library(Billy Rose Collection)
  • Collected Works of DeWolf Hopper at archive.org
  • Once a Clown, Always a Clown: Reminiscences of DeWolf Hopper (1927) at the Internet Archive
  • The Bright Stars of Yesterday biographical rundown of De Wolfe Hopper's life
  • Grave site

dewolf, hopper, william, march, 1858, september, 1935, american, actor, singer, comedian, theatrical, producer, star, vaudeville, musical, theater, became, best, known, performing, popular, baseball, poem, casey, hopper, 1901bornwilliam, wolf, hopper, 1858, ma. William DeWolf Hopper March 30 1858 September 23 1935 was an American actor singer comedian and theatrical producer A star of vaudeville and musical theater he became best known for performing the popular baseball poem Casey at the Bat DeWolf HopperHopper in 1901BornWilliam D Wolf Hopper 1858 03 30 March 30 1858New York City U S DiedSeptember 23 1935 1935 09 23 aged 77 New York City U S OccupationsActorsingercomediantheatrical producerYears active1878 1935SpousesHelen Gardiner m 1880 div 1885 wbr Ida Mosher m 1886 div 1892 wbr Edna Wallace m 1893 div 1898 wbr Nella Bergen m 1899 div 1913 wbr Hedda Hopper m 1913 div 1922 wbr Lillian Glaser m 1925 div 1935 wbr Children2 including William Hopper Contents 1 Life and career 2 Marriages 3 Theatre credits 3 1 DeWolf Hopper Opera Company productions 3 2 Stage roles 4 Filmography 5 Notes 6 External linksLife and career EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Hopper was born William D Wolf Hopper 1 5 in New York City the son of John Hopper born 1815 and Rosalie D Wolf born 1827 His father was a wealthy Quaker lawyer and his mother came from a noted Colonial family His paternal grandfather Isaac Hopper was a Philadelphia Quaker and conductor of the Philadelphia station of the Underground Railroad Though his parents intended that he become a lawyer Hopper did not enjoy that profession 1 10 Hopper was called Willie as a child and then Will or Wolfie but when he set out on an acting career he chose his more distinguished middle name as his stage name It was modified to DeWolf because of the frequency that it was mispronounced Dwolf 1 9 10 He made his stage debut in New Haven Connecticut October 2 1878 Originally he wanted to be a serious actor but at 6 5 196 cm and 230 pounds he was too large for most dramatic roles He had a loud bass singing voice however and made his mark in musicals beginning in Harrigan and Hart s company He achieved the status of leading man in The Black Hussar 1885 and appeared in the hit Erminie in 1887 Eventually he starred in more than thirty Broadway musicals including Castles in the Air 1890 Wang 1891 Panjandrum 1893 John Philip Sousa s El Capitan 1896 and Reginald De Koven s Happyland The role that he remembered with greatest pleasure was Old Bill in The Better Ole 1919 nbsp Hopper and Viola Gillette in Beggar Student 1913 Known for his comic talents Hopper popularized many comic songs and appeared in a number of Gilbert and Sullivan comic patter roles from 1911 to 1915 including The Mikado Patience and H M S Pinafore 2 A lifelong baseball enthusiast and New York Giants fan he first performed Ernest Thayer s then unknown poem Casey at the Bat to the Giants and Chicago Cubs the day his friend Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Tim Keefe had his record 19 game winning streak stopped August 14 1888 Hopper helped make the comic poem famous and was often called upon to give his colorful melodramatic recitation which he did about 10 000 times in his booming voice reciting it during performances and as part of curtain calls and on radio He released a recorded version on phonograph record in 1906 and recited the poem in a short film made in the Phonofilm sound on film process in 1923 nbsp DeWolf Hopper autographed sketch by Manuel Rosenberg for the Cincinnati Post 1921It was in The Black Hussar that Hopper first incorporated a baseball theme that drew notice in the sporting press To accompany a song with a baseball stanza Mr Hopper enacts the pitcher Mr Digby Bell with a bird cage on his head and boxing gloves on his hands plays catcher while Mme Mathilde Cottrelly handles a diminutive bat as striker and endeavors to make a home run In 1889 Hopper became founding president of the Actors Amateur Athletic Association of America Back in 1886 besides organizing a regular ball team among actors he played in a benefit game for a demented playwright The following year he helped organize an actor s benefit for a sick young actress In the first inning someone presented him with an eight inch sunflower Also in 1889 Bell Hopper and fellow McCaull Comic Opera Company actor Jefferson De Angelis were doing the following skit for their third encore in Boccaccio Bell returns with a bat in his hand followed by DeWolf Hopper and De Angelis The latter has a ball and as Hopper takes the bat in hand and Bell acts as catcher the former goes through the customary contortion act in pitching and as Hopper hits the ball he runs off the stage as if running the bases and presently returns chased by De Angelis who passes the ball to Bell as catcher just as Hopper makes a big slide for home base The slider tumbles Bell and when he rises from the somersault all three yell out to the audience for judgment a ruling and go off kicking like Anson and New York captain Buck Ewing It is a rich gag and takes immediately the Brooklyn Eagle said That year Bell called Hopper the biggest baseball crank that ever lived Physically of course he is a corker but when I say big I mean big morally and intellectually Why he goes up to the baseball Polo grounds at One Hundred and Fifty fifth street after the matinees on Saturday and he travels this six miles simply to see perhaps the two final innings and any one can imagine the rapidity with which he must scrape off the makeup and get into his street clothes in order to secure even this much But he says the Garrison finishes are worth it and he is perfectly right Hopper always was a baseball crank long before the public knew anything about it Bald from childhood he had alopecia Hopper wore wigs both on and offstage In later years a reaction to harsh medicines that he took for throat problems gave his skin a bluish tinge Regardless his powerful voice and great sense of humor seemed an attraction to women all his life With an insatiable appetite for young actresses he left a long trail of six wives and countless mistresses in his wake he became known by the nickname The Husband of His Country Hopper also appeared in several silent motion pictures two examples being Don Quixote 1915 and Casey at the Bat 1916 Hopper also appeared in a few short sound films including one in 1923 when he actually recites Casey at the Bat in an experimental sound film produced by Lee De Forest s Phonofilm process citation needed Hopper was a part of the Triangle Film Corporation which he described as the first great flourish of a prattling infant industry 3 He made a Broadway appearance in White Lilacs 1928 He then did Radio City Music Hall Inaugural 1932 and played Dr Gustave Ziska in The Monster 1933 At the time of his death he was in Kansas City Missouri making a radio appearance His funeral was at the Little Church Around the Corner in New York City 4 His autobiography Once a Clown Always a Clown written with the assistance of Wesley W Stout was published in 1927 Marriages Edit nbsp Edna Wallace and Hopper in the musical Panjandrum 1893 All of Hopper s marriages ended in divorce At age 21 Hopper was married to his first wife actress Helen Gardiner his second cousin 3 5 His second wife was Ida Mosher They had one son in 1886 John Allan Hopper 5 and divorced in 1893 6 1893 1898 His third wife was Edna Wallace 6 7 1899 1913 His fourth wife was choir singer Nella Bergen nee Reardon whom he married in London She was divorced from actor James Bergen 5 8 1913 1922 His fifth wife was actress and gossip columnist Hedda Hopper they had one son actor William Hopper 9 1925 1935 His sixth wife was vocal instructor Lillian E Lulu Glaser nee Faulkes a widow 5 Theatre credits Edit nbsp Hopper in The Charlatan 1898 nbsp Poster for Hopper in John Philip Sousa s El Capitan 1896 nbsp Poster for Hopper in Wang 1897 nbsp Poster for Hopper in Happyland 1905 nbsp Hopper and Marguerite Clark in The Pied Piper 1908 nbsp Poster for Hopper in A Matinee Idol 1910 nbsp Hopper as the Sergeant of Police in The Pirates of Penzance 1912 DeWolf Hopper Opera Company productions Edit The Charlatan Original Musical Comedy Opera Dec 5 1889 Jun 17 1899 Mr Pickwick Original Musical Jan 19 1903 May 1903Stage roles Edit Lorraine Original Musical Comedy Opera Feb 28 1887 Mar 12 1887 Gaspard de Chateauvieux The Begum Original Musical Comedy Opera Sep 21 1887 Dec 10 1887 Howja Dhu Casey at the Bat Original Special Poem Solo Aug 14 1888 Aug 14 1888 Himself The Charlatan Original Musical Comedy Opera Dec 5 1889 Jun 17 1899 Demidoff Wang Original Musical Comedy Operetta May 4 1891 Oct 3 1891 Wang Fiddle dee dee Original Musical Burlesque Extravaganza Sep 6 1900 Apr 20 1901Fiddle dee dee Hoffman Barr Quo Vass Iss Petrolius Arizona Henry Cannedbeef Exhibit II The Gay Lord Quex dd Hoity Toity Original Musical Burlesque Sep 5 1901 Apr 19 1902Hoity Toity General Steele Depleurisy Countess Zicka A Man From Mars An A D T Man from Mars The Curl and the Judge Judge Charges DuHurry dd Mr Pickwick Original Musical Jan 19 1903 May 1903 Pickwick Wang Revival Musical Comedy Operetta Apr 18 1904 Jun 4 1904 Wang Happyland Original Musical Comedy Opera Oct 2 1905 Jun 2 1906 Ecstaticus The Pied Piper Original Musical Comedy Dec 3 1908 Jan 16 1909 The Pied Piper A Matinee Idol Original Musical Comedy Apr 28 1910 May 1911 Medford Griffin H M S Pinafore Revival Musical Operetta May 29 1911 Jul 8 1911 Performer Patience Revival Musical Operetta May 6 1912 Jun 1 1912 Reginald Bunthorne The Pirates of Penzance Revival Musical Operetta Jun 3 1912 Jun 26 1912 Edward H M S Pinafore Revival Musical Operetta Jun 27 1912 Jun 28 1912 Dick Deadeye The Mikado Revival Musical Operetta Jun 29 1912 Jun 29 1912 Ko Ko The Beggar Student Revival Musical Comedy Opera Mar 22 1913 General Ollendorf The Mikado Revival Musical Operetta Apr 21 1913 May 3 1913 Ko Ko H M S Pinafore Revival Musical Operetta May 5 1913 May 10 1913 Dick Deadeye Iolanthe Revival Musical Comedy Operetta May 12 1913 Jun 14 1913 The Lord Chancellor Lieber Augustin Original Musical Operetta Sep 3 1913 Oct 4 1913 Bogumil Hop o My Thumb Original Play Pantomime Nov 26 1913 Jan 3 1914 King Mnemonica H M S Pinafore Revival Musical Operetta Apr 19 1915 Jun 19 1915 Dick Deadeye Trial by Jury Revival Musical Operetta Apr 19 1915 Jun 19 1915 The Learned Judge The Yeomen of the Guard Revival Musical Operetta Apr 19 1915 May 8 1915 Jack Point The Mikado Revival Musical Operetta May 10 1915 Jun 19 1915 Ko Ko The Sorcerer Revival Musical Comedy Operetta May 24 1915 Jun 5 1915 John Wellington Wells The Pirates of Penzance Revival Musical Operetta Jun 7 1915 Jun 18 1915 Major General Stanley Iolanthe Revival Musical Comedy Operetta Jun 10 1915 Jun 17 1915 The Lord Chancellor The Passing Show of 1917 Original Musical Revue Apr 26 1917 Oct 13 1917 Performer Everything Original Musical Revue Spectacle Aug 22 1918 May 17 1919 Performer Erminie Revival Musical Comedy Opera Jan 3 1921 Feb 26 1921 Ravennes Snapshots of 1921 Original Musical Revue Jun 2 1921 Aug 6 1921 Performer Some Party Original Musical Revue Apr 15 1922 Apr 29 1922 Producer and Performer White Lilacs Original Musical Operetta Romance Sep 10 1928 Jan 12 1929 Dubusson Radio City Music Hall Inaugural Program Original Special Dec 27 1932 Dec 27 1932 Himself The Monster Revival Play Drama Feb 10 1933 Mar 1933 Dr Gustave ZiskaFilmography Edit nbsp Sunshine Dad 1916 nbsp Casey at the Bat 1916 Don Quixote 1915 Alonso Quijano Don Quixote Rough Knight 1916 Mr Goode the Samaritan 1916 Alphonse Irving Goode Sunshine Dad 1916 Alonzo Evergreen extant Library of Congress Casey at the Bat 1916 Casey Stranded 1916 H Ulysses Watts Intolerance Love s Struggle Throughout the Ages 1916 extra extant Puppets 1916 Pantaloon Casey at the Bat 1922 Himself reading the poem in experimental film made in Phonofilm sound on film process premiered April 15 1923 at the Rivoli Theater in NYC At the Round Table 1930 extant Library of Congress The March of Time 1930 Himself Old Timer Sequence in unfinished MGM movie Ladies Not Allowed 1932 Notes Edit a b c Hopper DeWolf 1927 Once a Clown Always a Clown Reminiscences of DeWolf Hopper Boston Little Brown and Company Link to postcard showing Hopper in five Gilbert and Sullivan roles at The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive a b New York Times September 24 1935 New York Times obituary September 26 1935 a b c d Douglass Harvey July 12 1933 DeWolf Hopper Calls 6th Wife the Only Perfect One Brooklyn Daily Eagle Retrieved 2015 05 06 a b Abbreviated Telegrams The Bloomington Leader Bloomington Illinois June 30 1893 DeWolf Hopper whose second wife recently secured a divorce from him has married Miss Edna Wallace of Charles Frohman s company De Wolf Hopper Divorced The New York Times May 6 1898 Retrieved 2009 02 02 Edna Wallace Hopper was to day granted a divorce from her husband De Wolf Hopper by Judge Hebbard DeWolf Hopper To Marry It Is Reported That He Will Wed Miss Nella Bergen Immediately The New York Times June 4 1899 Retrieved 2009 02 03 Persistent rumors prevailed yesterday among members of the theatrical profession that De Wolf Hopper will this week or some time in the near future be Hopper and No 5 at Parting of Ways Chicago Tribune July 21 1922 Retrieved 2009 02 03 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to DeWolf Hopper nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about DeWolf Hopper DeWolf Hopper at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp DeWolf Hopper at IMDb Info on Hopper from the comprehensive musicals 101 site Casey at the Bat website Links to a recording by Hopper of Casey at the Bat Casey at the Bat 1923 at SilentEra with picture of Hopper in the film Hopper reciting Casey at the Bat in 1909 on YouTube De Wolf Hopper portrait gallery at New York Public Library Billy Rose Collection Collected Works of DeWolf Hopper at archive org Once a Clown Always a Clown Reminiscences of DeWolf Hopper 1927 at the Internet Archive The Bright Stars of Yesterday biographical rundown of De Wolfe Hopper s life Grave site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title DeWolf Hopper amp oldid 1179060912, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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