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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Willard_MackWillard Mack - Wikipedia

    Willard Mack (September 18, 1873 – November 18, 1934) was a Canadian-American actor, director, and playwright. Life and career. He was born Charles Willard ...

  2. Willard Mack was born on 18 September 1873 in Morrisburg, Ontario, Canada. He was a writer and actor, known for What Price Innocence? (1933), The Voice of the City (1929) and Broadway to Hollywood (1933).

    • September 18, 1873
    • November 18, 1934
  3. www.imdb.com › name › nm0533102Willard Mack - IMDb

    Willard Mack was born on 18 September 1873 in Morrisburg, Ontario, Canada. He was a writer and actor, known for What Price Innocence? (1933), The Voice of the City (1929) and Broadway to Hollywood (1933).

    • January 1, 1
    • Morrisburg, Ontario, Canada
    • January 1, 1
    • Brentwood Heights, California, USA
  4. Jan 1, 2000 · Willard Mack (a.k.a. Charles W. McLaughlin) was born in Ontario, Canada, in 1887 and at an early age moved to the United States where he spent most of his adult life involved in the theatre and film as a playwright, actor, and director.

  5. So far as the New York public is concerned, the name of Willard Mack first flashed across the theatrical horizon in the Fall of 1913, when his melodrama, "Kick In," opened at the Longacre Theatre.

  6. Canadian-born Willard Mack was a theatrical quadruple-threat man: actor, director, playwright, manager. Mack grew wealthy from royalties accrued by such plays as The Dove, Tiger Rose, A Free Soul and Kick In, most of which were eventually filmed, sometimes more than once. He began his own movie career in 1916, once more wearing several creative ...

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  8. Willard Mack (a.k.a. Charles W. McLaughlin) was born in Ontario, Canada, in 1887 and at an early age moved to the United States where he spent most of his adult life involved in the theatre and film as a playwright, actor, and director. At the time of his death in Hollywood in 1934, Mr. Mack had written over forty plays, mostly adaptions of popular stories and novels or extensions of vaudeville pieces; none of them stands up to criticism and certainly none is to be found among the canon of ...