Josephine Victor Explained
Josephine Victor (born Josephine Gunczler; June 28, 1885 – 1963) was a Hungarian-born American stage actress, director, and playwright.
Early life
Victor was born in the Tokay Hills in Hungary in 1885,[1] and moved to New York City as a child. She may have attended the Wheatcroft School of Acting on a scholarship.[2] She used her brother Victor's first name for a surname when she began acting.[3] She began performing with the Howard Kyle Company,[4] and made headlines as early as 1906, when her costume caught fire on stage, and she doused the flames without breaking character.[5]
Career
On Broadway she debuted in The Secret Orchard by Channing Pollock (1908), and appeared in Temperamental Journey (1913),[6] The Yellow Ticket (1914),[7] The Bargain by Hermann Georg Scheffauer (1915),[8] Just a Woman by Eugene Walter (1916),[9] Martinique by Laurence Eyre (1920),[10] Dolly Jordan by Ben Iden Payne (1922),[11] The Cup (1923),[12] Judgment Day by Elmer Rice (1934), Wise Tomorrow (1937),[13] and finally Summer Night (1939).[14] She is credited as director of one play, Doctor X (1931), a "mystery thriller".[15] She toured the United States with a vaudeville show in 1921.[16] She also appeared on the London stage, in Pelican by F. Tennyson Jesse (1924), and in a few films.
Victor was also a playwright.[17] In 1910 she co-wrote a play, Ashes, with Eleanor Maud Crane. Later, as Josephine Victor Reid, she wrote The Prize Pig's Tea-party (1934), a play, How to Get Rich (1930). She also co-wrote two plays, Clay Pigeon (1936, with Marjorie Paradis) and Read about Laura Keene (1937, with I. S. Strouse). She collaborated with Laurence Eyre on creating the 1920 play Martinique, but was not credited as its co-author.[18]
Personal life
Josephine Victor married Francis E. Reid, a publicist and drama critic.[19] She was widowed in 1933.[20] She died in 1963, aged 78 years.
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|
1946 | The Stranger | Minor Role | Uncredited |
1947 | Desire Me | Woman | Uncredited, (final film role) | |
External links
Notes and References
- https://www.newspapers.com/clip/6617285/josephine_victor_in_secret_orchard/ "Miss Josephine Victor"
- https://www.newspapers.com/clip/6617019/josephine_victor_in_maid_of_france/ "Josephine Victor in Joan of Arc Play"
- https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1126&dat=19130914&id=211RAAAAIBAJ&sjid=SmYDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4332,2142454 "News and Gossip of Stageland"
- Alan Kreizenbeck, Zoe Akins: Broadway Playwright (Greenwood Publishin 2004): 171-172.
- https://www.newspapers.com/clip/6617707/josephine_victor_caught_fire_on_stage/ "Girl in Flames Says Her Line without Break"
- https://www.newspapers.com/clip/6616975/beauty_advice_from_josephine_victor/ "Beauty"
- https://www.newspapers.com/clip/6617415/josephine_victor_in_the_yellow_ticket/ "Shift in 'The Yellow Ticket'"
- Louis V. De Foe, "Personal Triumphs of the Season" Green Book Magazine (April 1916): 690-691.
- Gerald Bordman, American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama, 1914-1930 (OUP USA 1995): 41.
- https://books.google.com/books?id=lNlNAQAAMAAJ&dq=Josephine+Victor+actress&pg=PA509 Theatre Magazine
- Gerald Bordman, American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama, 1914-1930 (OUP USA 1995): 188.
- Thomas S. Hischak, Broadway Plays and Musicals: Descriptions and Essential Facts of More Than 14,000 Shows Through 2007 (McFarland 2007): 99-100.
- Gerald Bordman, American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama, 1930-1969 : 156-157. ISBN
- Arthur Pollock, "Summer Night at the St. James" Brooklyn Daily Eagle (November 30, 1939): 11. via Newspapers.com
- https://www.newspapers.com/clip/6617648/josephine_victor_as_director_of_doctor/ "And the Joke was on the Manager"
- https://books.google.com/books?id=pu1LAQAAIAAJ&dq=Josephine+Victor+actress&pg=RA1-PA242 "Heard on Broadway"
- Brenner, "Memory Lane" Amarillo Globe (June 25, 1936): 7. via Newspapers.com
- https://www.newspapers.com/clip/6617486/josephine_victor_1920/ "Teary Plaudits Disturb Miss Josephine Victor"
- Helen Ten Broek, "Is Stage Matrimony a Failure?" Theatre Magazine (Midsummer 1920): 24.
- A. H. Phillips, "Obituary: Francis E. Reid '87" Princeton Alumni Weekly 34(November 3, 1933): 157.