Thurlow Weed Bergen (1875â€"1954) was an American actor of stage and
silent film.Bergen was born on January 14, 1875, East Saginaw,
Michigan to Issarella (Ella) Winner and the lawyer George B. Bergen.
Bergen went to study law in Washington D.C., but at the age of 19
decided to become an actor instead. As a kid he had written and
composed Esther's Lullaby, which around the turn of the century was a
well-known song. He played and sang it at the White House for
President Cleveland, who gave him permission to dedicate the song to
his daughter Esther. Bergen moved to Newton, Massachusetts, where he
married Clara Beatrice Farquhar in 1899, the daughter of the wealthy
Boston financier Samuel Farquhar. He started a successful touring
company, and dabbled in composition and writing as well (he wrote many
children's stories). Up to 1914 he performed on stage only, but then
made the switch to the movies, first starring in the Pathé movie The
Stain. By that time Farquhar and he had divorced, and in May 1914
Bergen married fellow Broadway performer Elsie Esmond née Sturkow
(1880â€"1958). They were the leading man and lady in most of the early
Whartons Studio movies (shot in Ithaca, New York), including The
Boundary Rider , The Kiss of Death, A Prince of India, The Fireman and
the Girl and The Stolen Birthright (all still in 1914) and The Lottery
Man of 1916. After 1920, he returned to the stage and performed on
Broadway as late as 1940, when he appears in the census as a single
theater actor living in an apartment in Manhattan, New York. He died
May 1, 1954.
silent film.Bergen was born on January 14, 1875, East Saginaw,
Michigan to Issarella (Ella) Winner and the lawyer George B. Bergen.
Bergen went to study law in Washington D.C., but at the age of 19
decided to become an actor instead. As a kid he had written and
composed Esther's Lullaby, which around the turn of the century was a
well-known song. He played and sang it at the White House for
President Cleveland, who gave him permission to dedicate the song to
his daughter Esther. Bergen moved to Newton, Massachusetts, where he
married Clara Beatrice Farquhar in 1899, the daughter of the wealthy
Boston financier Samuel Farquhar. He started a successful touring
company, and dabbled in composition and writing as well (he wrote many
children's stories). Up to 1914 he performed on stage only, but then
made the switch to the movies, first starring in the Pathé movie The
Stain. By that time Farquhar and he had divorced, and in May 1914
Bergen married fellow Broadway performer Elsie Esmond née Sturkow
(1880â€"1958). They were the leading man and lady in most of the early
Whartons Studio movies (shot in Ithaca, New York), including The
Boundary Rider , The Kiss of Death, A Prince of India, The Fireman and
the Girl and The Stolen Birthright (all still in 1914) and The Lottery
Man of 1916. After 1920, he returned to the stage and performed on
Broadway as late as 1940, when he appears in the census as a single
theater actor living in an apartment in Manhattan, New York. He died
May 1, 1954.
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