Volume III: Biographies

 

MARSHALL, Boyd **

Actor (1913-1917)

Boyd Marshall in a candid photograph from the scrapbook of Ardice Blanchard, circa 1914-1915. Courtesy of Donald Collins (X-310-2)

Nick S. Woods leading Muriel Ostriche and Boyd Marshall in a circa 1914 still. Courtesy of Dominick Bruzzese (X-355)

 

Thanhouser Career Synopsis: Boyd Marshall was a leading man in many pictures, particularly of the Princess Department, during his 1913-1917 tenure with Thanhouser.

Biographical Notes: Boyd Marshall was born in 1885 in Port Clinton, Ohio, and was educated at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Against his family's wishes, he pursued a stage career singing and acting. He appeared with Fritzi Scheff in Mlle. Modiste, with Kolb & Dill, and in vaudeville in The Wall Between. For Lasky Productions he was a juvenile baritone at the Hippodrome in New York City.

Boyd Marshall came to Thanhouser in the autumn of 1913 and was employed as the leading man to Muriel Ostriche in the newly-formed Princess Department. For much of the next year, he and Muriel Ostriche played in one Princess film each week. For a time, Thanhouser billed him as the "handsomest man in the movies," but the idea didn't catch on, and outside of Thanhouser advertisements and local publicity he was never well known. Later, when Muriel Ostriche was employed in other films outside of the Princess Department, he played opposite Reenie Farrington, Mayre Hall, and others. He also appeared in numerous regular Thanhouser films.

A 1914 Sketch: The New Rochelle Pioneer, October 31, 1914, printed this biographical sketch by John William Kellette: "Boyd Marshall has the distinction of being the 'handsomest man in pictures,' and locally he gained the pennant in the league of good fellowship, and he's enjoyed every one of his hours in New Rochelle with the exception of a certain five, the 300 minutes of which escaped him on one dark, damp night, somewhere between New York City and New Rochelle, and he's never been able to account for them. He's still searching for them without success. Boyd came to the Princess films after a considerable stage experience, both in musical comedy and vaudeville, and his wonderful voice is lost in the silent drama. Were his audiences to hear his voice as they look at him upon the screen their appreciation would grow and Marshall would be wafted along on to Popularity Boulevard with one fell swoop. But at that he has a great following.

"He was born in Port Clinton, Ohio, some time after the close of the Civil War, just when Boyd won't divulge. He studied with the idea of becoming a professor of languages and spent one year in the preparatory and one year in the literary department of the University of Michigan. Time changed his mind and he decided to go into grand opera. He studied at Michigan University of Music for three years (voice), and graduating in the Detroit institution went directly to the stage; with Fritzi Scheff later, he had a small part in Mlle. Modiste; was leading man for Kolb & Dill on the coast, and was with Lasky's Night on a Houseboat; in vaudeville, was half of the team, Boyd Marshall and Katherine Bell, playing The Wall Between. He was baritone juvenile at the Hippodrome for a year; went to Elmira in musical stock and was a big favorite; he had never seen a camera when he heard Princess was in the market for a leading man, and came here little over a year ago.

"His first picture was with Muriel Ostriche in The Campaign Manageress, which Carl Louis Gregory wrote and directed. He has played in almost 100 pictures, and was with Maude Fealy in The Musician's Daughter. It seems strange to see a picture billed like a circus, but they say when a Princess goes on at Elmira with Boyd in it that's the kind of billing he gets. He's 5 feet 11 inches, has brown hair, brown eyes, fair complexion, weighs 160 pounds, and can make a piano talk."

Other Information: After the Falstaff Department succeeded the Princess Department in early 1915, Boyd Marshall was in many comedy productions. In January 1916 his New Rochelle home address was 74 Main Street. In the spring of 1916 he was working in Falstaff comedies at the Jacksonville studio. He stayed with Thanhouser through early 1917.

An article in The Moving Picture World, February 14, 1914, told of a misunderstanding: "The other week the Princess company, at New Rochelle, sent out a story, which some of the papers fell for, on the speech of Boyd Marshall, their leading man, in favor of Sunday closing of picture shows, before the Woman's Club of New Rochelle. It seems that the press department of the Princess company was in error about the speech ascribed to Mr. Marshall. That player is now quoted as saying: 'It would likely have been a novelty for a man who gets his living from the movies, to address a public body in behalf of an ordinance that would prevent their exhibition at any time, but I wouldn't be novel that way! I merely advocated an editing of Sunday programs that would result in exhibitions that were more or less educational in nature. If the ministers are against the showing of red-blooded dramas on this day, we can give them light drama of an educational nature or straight educational pictures, for certainly there are enough films of that kind to go around.'"

Boyd Marshall married Mitzi Hajos, a well-known Hungarian dancer and stage personality, who sometimes used the stage name of Dixie Crane. In the 1920s Marshall was often seen with his wife in musical stage plays, including Pom-Pom and Head Over Heels. In 1930 they were in Sari at the Liberty Theatre in New York City. The actor was 5'10" tall, weighed 160 pounds, and had brown hair and brown eyes. Boyd Marshall died on November 9, 1950 at his home in Jackson Heights, New York. He was survived by his wife and two siblings, Tom and Helen.

Thanhouser Filmography:

1913: Friday the Thirteenth (Princess 11-7-1913), The Campaign Manageress (11-11-1913), Bread Upon the Waters (Princess 11-14-1913), A Shot Gun Cupid (Princess 11-21-1913), Her Right to Happiness (Princess 11-28-1913), The Little Church Around the Corner (Princess 12-5-1913), His Imaginary Family (Princess 12-12-1913), The Law of Humanity (Princess 12-19-1913), Cupid's Lieutenant (Princess 12-26-1913)

1914: A Rural Free Delivery Romance (Princess 1-2-1914), A Circumstantial Nurse (Princess 1-9-1914), When the Cat Came Back (Princess 1-16-1914), The Vacant Chair (Princess 1-23-1914), The Purse and the Girl (Princess 1-30-1914), Where Paths Diverge (Princess 2-6-1914), Percy's First Holiday (2-8-1914), The Tangled Cat (Princess 2-13-1914), All's Well That Ends Well (Princess 2-20-1914), The Hold-Up (Princess 2-27-1914), Her Way (Princess 3-6-1914), Billy's Ruse (3-13-1914), The Musician's Daughter (4-14-1914), The Strategy of Conductor 786 (4-26-1914), Lost - A Union Suit (5-10-1914), A Telephone Strategy (Princess 5-29-1914), When the Wheels of Justice Clogged (5-31-1914), His Enemy (Princess 6-5-1914), The Toy Shop (Princess 6-12-1914), Remorse (6-16-1914), The Little Senorita (Princess 6-19-1914), The Outlaw's Nemesis (6-21-1914), Professor Snaith (Princess 6-26-1914), The Decoy (Princess 7-3-1914), The Girl of the Seasons (Princess 7-10-1914), The Veteran's Sword (Princess 7-17-1914), The Target of Destiny (Princess 7-31-1914), Her Duty (Princess 8-7-1914), A Rural Romance (Princess 8-14-1914), The Belle of the School (Princess 8-21-1914), The Keeper of the Light (Princess 8-28-1914), His Winning Way (Princess 9-4-1914), Sis (Princess 9-11-1914), The Master Hand (9-18-1914), The Final Test (Princess 9-25-1914), The Balance of Power (Princess 10-2-1914), The One Who Cared (Princess 10-9-1914), The Touch of a Little Hand (Princess 10-16-1914), The Face at the Window (Princess 10-23-1914), The Dead Line (Princess 10-30-1914), When Vice Shuddered (Princess 11-6-1914), Seeds of Jealousy (Princess 11-13-1914), A Bum Mistake (Princess 11-20-1914), The Wild, Wooly West (Princess 11-27-1914), The Creator of "Hunger" (Princess 12-4-1914), In the Conservatory (Princess 12-11-1914), The White Rose (12-25-1914)

1915: When Fate Rebelled (Princess 1-1-1915), Check No. 130 (Princess 1-8-1915), Pleasing Uncle (Princess 1-15-1915), An Innocent Burglar (Princess 1-22-1915), The Home of Silence (Princess 1-29-1915), Nell's Strategy (Princess 2-5-1915), Across the Way (Princess 2-12-1915), Who Got Stung? (Princess 2-19-1915), On Account of a Dog (Princess 2-26-1915), And He Never Knew (Princess 3-5-1915), Joe Harkins' Ward (Princess 3-19-1915), The Actor and the Rube (Falstaff 4-16-1915), The Handicap of Beauty (Falstaff 4-23-1915), The Angel in the Mask (5-30-1915), Truly Rural Types (Falstaff 6-4-1915), In the Valley (6-18-1915), Crossed Wires (6-29-1915), The Flying Twins (7-1-1915), Fifty Years After Appomattox (7-4-1915), Tracked Through the Snow (7-11-1915), A Plugged Nickel (Falstaff 8-6-1915), The Marvelous Marathoner (Falstaff 8-16-1915), Glorianna's Getaway (Falstaff 8-23-1915), From the River's Depths (9-5-1915), Weary Walker's Woes (Falstaff 9-10-1915), Superstitious Sammy (Falstaff 9-13-1915), A Disciple of Nietzsche (9-25-1915), At the Patrician Club (10-24-1915), Hannah's Hen-Pecked Husband (Falstaff 11-15-1915), The Baby and the Boss (11-23-1915), The Mill on the Floss (12-16-1915), Their Last Performance (12-28-1915)

1916: The Optimistic Oriental Occults (Falstaff 1-3-1916), Lucky Larry's Lady Love (Falstaff 1-25-1916), The Oval Diamond (2-24-1916), The Cruise of Fate (3-8-1916), Her Father's Gold (5-11-1916), Hidden Valley (11-5-1916), The World and the Woman (11-19-1916), King Lear (12-17-1916)

1917: The Image Maker (1-21-1917), A Modern Monte Cristo (2-4-1917), The Vicar of Wakefield (2-25-1917), When Love Was Blind (4-15-1917)

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Copyright © 1995 Q. David Bowers. All Rights Reserved.