Frank H. Wilson Explained

Frank H. Wilson
Birth Name:Frank Henry Wilson
Birth Date:4 May 1886
Birth Place:Harlem, New York
Death Place:Queens, New York
Occupation:Actor
Yearsactive:1914–1954

Frank Henry Wilson (May 4, 1886 – February 16, 1956) was an American stage, radio, and film actor and writer.

Career

His father was Thomas M. Wilson. Frank started out in show business in vaudeville and minstrelsy.[1] He appeared in many plays, including the original 1927 version of Porgy with Rose McClendon and Evelyn Ellis. In 1922, he appeared in Eugene O'Neill's play All God's Chillun Got Wings and a revival of O'Neill's The Emperor Jones in 1925.[2] He was also cast in Clifford Odets' 1949 play The Big Knife.

He made his film debut in 1932 and later played in films that had stage origins: The Emperor Jones (1933) and Warner Bros.' Green Pastures (1936) and Watch on the Rhine (1943). Wilson made his television debut in 1953 before dying in 1956.

Selected filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1932Wade Washington[3]
1933Jeff
1936Moses
1940Paradise in HarlemLem AndersonAlso writer (original story)
1941Murder on Lenox AvenueWriter (original story)
1941Sunday SinnersWriter (original story)
1943Watch on the RhineJoseph
1946BewareProfessor Drury

Family

Wilson married actress Effie King, the stage name of Anna Green (maiden; 1888–1944), on June 12, 1907. They married in Manhattan at St. Mark's Methodist Episcopal Church on West 53rd Street, a block that was a cultural center for artistic and intellectual African Americans. Effie King, at the time, was a dancer and contralto who performed as a duet with Lottie Gee (née Charlotte O. Gee; 1886–1973), a dancer and soprano in African-American vaudeville circuits. From about 1911 through 1913, King and Gee were known as Ford Dabney's Ginger Girls.

Notes and References

  1. Who Was Who in the Theatre: 1912–1976, vol. 4 Q–Z, p. 2592, originally published annually by John Parker; this 1976 & final edition compiled by Gale Research Company.
  2. Stanley Appelbaum, Great Actors & Actresses of the American Stage in Historic Photographs, c. 1983, p. 69.
  3. Web site: Frank Wilson . . . 2017-10-04.