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Stanley Farrar

American actor (1910–1974) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stanley Farrar
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Stanley Wendell Farrar[1][2] (October 4, 1910[3][2] – April 5, 1974[1])[2] was an American character actor in radio, film and television, perhaps best known as Mayor Terwilliger in the old time radio series The Great Gildersleeve.[1] He was also the co-star and narrator of the 1953 adventure film, Perils of the Jungle, starring animal trainer/circus owner Clyde Beatty.[4]

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Early life and career

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A native of Berkeley, California,[1] Farrar was one of three children born to Wendell Dale Farrar and Alma Carmin Boettiger.[5][6] He attended University of California, Berkeley,[1][7] and later the Faucit School of the Theatre in Oakland,[8] a school founded and directed by London-born actress and director Ursula Faucit, the grandniece of actress Helena Faucit.[9] From 1930 to 1936, Farrar was regularly featured in the school's on-air outlet, the dramatic anthology series, The Faucit Theatre of the Air,[10] at least one episode of which he also wrote, adapting J. S. Coyne's one-act comedy, One Night of Terror.[11] He was also featured opposite the school's director on at least two occasions. In 1930 they co-starred in Faucit's own play, Not the Type,[12] and in 1935 Faucit was Bea to Farrar's Benedick in Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing.[13] The Faucit Theatre Players also performed live on occasion, such as their 1935 production of Schiller's Mary Stuart—with Farrar's portrayal of Lord Burleigh deemed "extremely good" by the Oakland Tribune[14]—and their 1934 revival of Elmer Greensfelder's Broomsticks, Amen, of which the Tribune's Wood Soanes wrote:

Here is the stuff of which high tragedy is made, but Greensfelder succeeded in evolving only obvious melodrama. The fine performance by Stanley Farrar as Hoffnagel was the saving grace of the show. He pulled 'Broomsticks, Amen' along with a performance that was more professional than amateur, sincere, powerful, well balanced and acute.[15]

Beginning on October 4, 1937, Farrar appeared with Howard Duff, Jack Edwards, Marjorie Smith and Herb Allen in the Mutual Broadcasting serial The Phantom Pilot. The show aired for 2 weeks as a "sustaining" series before being sponsored by Young and Rubicam.[16][17]

In the spring of 1949, The Hollywood Reporter noted that Farrar had begun publishing The 24 Sheet, a news bulletin for actors.[18]

On August 26, 1953, Hollywood Citizen-News entertainment writer Zuma Palmer drew readers' attention to an uncommon occurrence: at a time when the prohibition of prerecorded network radio dramas had only recently been lifted, both Farrar and co-star Marian Richman appeared on Dr. Christian and simultaneously on the transcribed series, Family Theater.[19] Later that year, Farrar appeared onstage, co-starring with Lloyd Corrigan and Tommy Bernard—former radio son of Ozzie and Harriet and TV son of Charlie Ruggles[20][21]—in Corrigan's play The Upper Room, staged as part of an event held to benefit the St. Marks Episcopal Church of Van Nuys.[22]

In 1956, Farrar was elected treasurer, and, the following year, recording secretary of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists.[23][24]

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Personal life and death

From March 22, 1936 until his death, Farrar was married to fellow actor Margaret Mary "Margo" Klink,[25][26] with whom he had three sons.[1]

On April 4, 1974, while onstage at the Mendocino Arts Center, portraying Orgon in Molière's Tartuffe, Farrar suffered a heart attack and collapsed. He died shortly thereafter at Mendocino Coast Hospital in Fort Bragg,[27][28] survived by his wife, his sons, his mother and two brothers.[1]

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Works

Radio

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Partial filmography

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References

Further reading

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