Louise Rutter (born September 15, 1887 – died before 1972) was an American actress of the stage and screen.
Early life
editLouise Rutter was born on September 15, 1887, in Baltimore, Maryland, although some sources give Philadelphia as her birthplace.[1][2]
Career
editRutter acted on stage from her youth, in The Bonnie Brier Bush, The College Widow, The Lion and the Mouse, and The Heir to the Hoorah. On Broadway, she had roles in such shows as Secret Service, The Devil, Held by the Enemy, The Sins of Society (1909), Know Thyself (1909), Mid-Channel (1910), Sherlock Holmes (1910), Passers-by (1911), A Rich Man's Son (1912), Moloch (1915), Turn to the Right (1916-1917), The Man of the Hour, and A Successful Calamity.[1][3][4][5][6][7]
Rutter appeared in three silent films in 1915: Milestones of Life (Thanhouser), An Affair of Three Nations (Pathé), and The Menace of the Mute (Pathé).[8][9] The latter two films were part of a detective series based on stories by John T. McIntyre.[10] "I realize that the motion picture will soon take the place of the speaking stage," she said at the time. "Motion pictures are just beginning. Imagine, then, what the future has in store, figuring on this basis."[11]
Personal life
editLouise Rutter married Charles Perkins, an English brewer, in 1911. In 1972, a Sherlock Holmes deerstalker cap and other memorabilia from the career of actor William Gillette were donated to the State of Connecticut for display at Gillette Castle, by Doreen Carlos-Perkins, daughter of Louise Rutter. Rutter had starred with Gillette in several plays, and played "Alice Faulkner" alongside his famous rendition of Sherlock Holmes.[12]
References
edit- ^ a b Q. David Bowers, "Louise Rutter" Thanhouser.org (1995).
- ^ "Cried Herself Into Job" Brooklyn Daily Eagle (April 22, 1917): 20. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "The Devil" Catalogue of Plays 1916 (Sanger & Jordon 1916): 64, 92, 102, 118, 133, 169.
- ^ "Gaiety: Turn to the Right" The Theatre (August 1916): 140.
- ^ "Gillette at the Bronx" Dramatic Mirror (March 2, 1918): 2.
- ^ "'Devil' 's Lady to Pay Bet" Washington Post (November 9, 1908): 12. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "The Heir to the Hoorah" Chicago Tribune (October 16, 1905): 8. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Thanhouser Adds Another Star" Motography (May 29, 1915): 860.
- ^ "Star Deserts Broadway for Thanhouser Studio" Altoona Tribune (June 12, 1915): 9. via Newspapers.com
- ^ Michael R. Pitts, Famous Movie Detectives III (Scarecrow Press 2004): 2-3. ISBN 9780810836907
- ^ "'Screen Surpasses Stage' Says Louise Rutter, Former Broadway Star" Charlotte News (September 27, 1915): 11. via Newspapers.com
- ^ "Gillette Memorabilia Given State By Kin of Actor's Leading Lady" Hartford Courant (October 22, 1972): 6. via Newspapers.com
External links
edit- Louise Rutter at IMDb
- Louise Rutter at the Internet Broadway Database
- A 1906 photograph of Louise Rutter in costume for The College Widow, from University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections Division; at The Early History of Theatre in Seattle.