Oswald Yorke(néOswald Parkinson Harker; 24 November 1866 – 25 January 1943) was a British character actor who had a near sixty-year career performing on both sides of the Atlantic.
Oswald Yorke first performed on stage in 1884 and later as a member of a company headed by British actor Sir Francis Robert Benson. Yorke's London's debut on 26 February 1889, at The Royal Strand Theatre, was followed early the next year by performances at London's Vaudeville Theatre in such plays as School for Scandal, "A Pair of Lunatics" and "Meadow Sweet".[5][6][7] Oswald Yorke would remain a principal player with the Vaudeville Theatre throughout the balance of the 1890s.[8]
Over the remainder of his life, the balance of Yorke's career was spent in New York. He played in at least thirty-one Broadway productions between 1900 and 1938. Yorke was Black Dog in a 1915 adaption of Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island; Mr. Breen in the 1931 comedy "The Social Register" and Carter Hibbarb in George S. Kaufman's 1938 success, First Lady. Yorke's last Broadway performance, Justice Willis, came in the 1938 hit Oscar Wilde.[14]
Yorke first married – on 2 June 1897, in Manhattan at Grace Church – co-actress Agnes Palmer (full stage name Maude Agnes Palmer; née Maud Atkins Palmer; 1872–1962), who grew-up in the Beacon Hill neighborhood of Boston. Agnes was the daughter of Lowell Mason Palmer (1834–1871) and Sarah Evelyn Palmer (née Sarah Evelyn Rogers; 1852–1940). Sarah, Agnes' mother, during childhood, changed her maiden name to Sarah Evelyn Atkins, taking on the surname of her uncle and maternal aunt, who became her adoptive parents upon the early deaths of her parents, John Foster Rogers (1825–1852) and Mercy C. Eldridge (maiden; 1830–1862). Agnes Palmer had joined E. S. Willard around February 1897.[15] Their marriage ended in divorce in Colorado – Agnes filed, claiming non-support. Agnes Palmer, on 5 September 1914, in Manhattan, married English actor Henry C. Vincent (né Henry Rojas; 1877–1962), with whom she remained married until his death in 1962, 4 months before hers.
Yorke married a third time – on 19 April 1938, in New Jersey – to Ruth Antoinette Guiterman (maiden; 1907–1980).
Death
Oswald Yorke died on 25 January 1943 at his apartment on West Forty-Fifth Street after a battle with lobar pneumonia. He was survived by his third wife, Ruth Guiterman,[13] who had lost her uncle, writer Arthur Guiterman, just two weeks prior.[17]
References
^England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837–1915 – Births Registered in January, February, and March 1866, p. 204
Oswald Harker's birth year, 1866, as quoted by some sources, may actually be 1865. That is, assuming the month and day is correct (24 November), the birth was recorded in the first quarter of 1866 by the General Register Office, Southport, England
^Oswald Harker, Poole, Dorst – 1871 England Census
^Oswald Yorke (born Poole, Dorset), "SS Franconia Passenger Manifest" (RMS Franconia), 19 October 1926