Powers played Brutus in the Mercury Theatre's national touring production of Caesar, then succeeded Orson Welles in the Broadway production (1938).
Thomas McCreery Powers[1] was born in 1890 in Owensboro, Kentucky. His father, Colonel Joshua D. Powers, was a banker; his uncle was sculptor Hiram Powers. Tom Powers' mother loved the theatre and enrolled him at ballet school at age three. He entered the American Academy of Dramatic Arts at age 16, and he studied drama, wrote and produced plays, and practiced stage design in a small theatre in the attic of his home.[2] Powers apprenticed to a pantomime troupe for ten years and became a star of Vitagraph Westerns.[3] Powers appeared in over 70 silent films from 1911 to 1917 opposite such actors as Florence Turner, Harry T. Morey, Clara Kimball Young, Alma Taylor and John Bunny.
His radio credits include Tom Powers' Life Studies (1935–36), a 15-minute series consisting of true-life stories broadcast on NBC.[5][6] Powers published two books of monologues, Life Studies (1939)[7] and More Life Studies (1940).[8] He also wrote four plays and two romantic novels,[3]Virgin with Butterflies (1945)[9] and Sheba on Trampled Grass (1946).[10]
Powers moved to the West Coast after becoming ill with arthritis,[3] and became a full-time movie actor when Billy Wilder invited him to play the murder victim in the 1944 film noir classic, Double Indemnity. For the next dozen years or so, Powers appeared in over 80 film and television roles, usually playing middle-aged business men, military or police officers. His performance as Metallus Cimber in Julius Caesar (1953) is regarded as Powers' best during his Hollywood years.[3]