Ivan Berlyn (1867 – 11 December 1934) was an English actor of stage and silent film whose career spanned four decades. An experienced and versatile actor, Beryln played "... weird and eccentric character parts" in everything from pantomime to Shakespeare.[1]
Early life
He was born in Kensington in London as Isaac Berlin,[2] the son of Emanuel Berlin (1839–1921) a Jewish "mercantile clerk" and a native of Hamburg who immigrated to England in 1857, and his wife Amelia née Joseph (1836–1915), who married in 1864. In the 1906 edition of the actors' directory The Green Room Book Berlyn made the spurious claim that he had been born as Ivan Emanuel Julian von Berlin and was descended from an ancient family from Alsace-Lorraine. He further claimed he had originally planned to join the legal profession but instead decided on a career on the stage, training at the London School of Elocution (the South London School of Elocution and Dramatic Art) established by Samuel Brandram.[1] In 1888 as Ivan Berlin he organized a concert at the Prince's Hall on Piccadilly in London.[3] Also as Ivan Berlin he is listed in the 1891 Census as residing at 17 All Saints Road, Kensington with his parents and his sisters, Emily and Jenny Berlin and his brother, Joachim Norman Berlin (1875–1943), described as the "Manager of the Chelsea Palace".[4]
In the 1911 Census Ivan Berlyn is listed as living at 3 King William Street in London; also listed is his boarder, Australian actor-manager Henry Louis Winthrop Armstrong (1881–1915).[20] Berlyn and Armstrong appeared together in The Great Young Man, a comedy by Prince Vladimir Vladimirovich Baryatinsky and produced at the Kingsway Theatre in London in October 1911.[4] In about 1915, Berlyn became the third husband of Hiene Riva Grinblat (Khana Rebecca Greenblatt, 1870–1949) and with her had two step-children: Abraham (Albert) Berlyn (Abrahams) (1903–1992) and Katie Berlyn (Abrahams) (1904–1934).
Ivan Berlyn died in 1934 at the National Hospital in Queen Square in Holborn. In his will he left £2,000 7s 4d.[2]
References
^ abThe Green Room Book and Who's Who on the Stage 1906, London. T.Sealey Clark & Co. Ltd (1906), p. 30.