Clara Whipple


Clara Whipple '' was an American actress who flourished in theatre from 1913 to 1915 and in silent film from 1915 to 1919. She was also a silent film scenario writer.

Early years

Whipple was born in Saint Louis. Sometime before 1910, she attended school in Germany, on the wooded isle of Nönnenwerth, Trier, and Eschweiler. Hildegard zur Bonsen of Göttingen was her classmate and friend at all three locations. Whipple's biography states that she was educated at a convent in Germany and a finishing school in Switzerland. A 1915 article in The St. Louis Star stated that Whipple left Saint Louis "early in life to go to a school in Ohio" and later went to Ladycliff, on the Hudson." The article continued: "She then went to Nonnenwerth, a convent on an island in the Rhine, near Honnef." "Later, she went to Switzerland." "She completed her education in the Women's College at Trier, Germany."

Career

Stage

From 1913 to 1915, Whipple was a stage actress in Pittsburgh, where her father and mother had been living. Her father, Thomas Hearne Bailey Whipple, was a Westinghouse publicist and advertising executive. Whipple debuted in Pittsburgh in June 1913 with the Harry Davis Players at the Grand Opera House in a production of The Christian, by Hall Caine.
Whipple subsequently joined the Pitt Players, a Pitt Theatre Company stock company, founded in 1913 and managed by William Moore Patch. At its founding, the Pitt Players were billed as "The Most Expensive and Evenly Balanced Stock Company in America." Patch's mission was to offer new and original plays and encourage native and Pittsburgh playwrights.

Film

Whipple, from 1915 to 1919, was a silent film actress. She co-starred in the film The Prima Donna's Husband, a crime drama directed by William A. Brady, Julius Steger, and Joseph A. Golden. The screenplay was written by Edna Riley, who adapted it from a play by Wildbrandt. The film, five reels, was released by Triumph Films. The film also featured Kathryn Brown Decker and Holbrook Blinn.
Whipple was the leading lady in
The Reapers, starring opposite John B. Mason. The drama exemplified the biblical truth, "As ye sow, so shall ye reap," from the Old Testament. The movie instructs about a high moral truth without preaching. Whipple was cast with Willard Mack and Gerda Holmes in His One Big Chance, directed by John Ince.
The Heart of a Hero was adapted from the Clyde Fitch play entitled Nathan Hale. Robert Warwick played Hale, and Gail Kane performed the role of Alice Adams, his girlfriend. The theme of the American Revolution was made more true-to-life with the inclusion of Charles Jackson as Thomas Jefferson. Whipple played the Widow Chichester.
Whipple, Decker, and Blinn teamed again to make a powerful wikt:photodrama, Would You Forgive. In Pettigrew's Girl, her last film, she portrays Piggy, a chorus girl friend of the heroine, Daisy Heath. The leading lady was Ethel Clayton.

Family

Parents

Clara Brimmer Whipple was born November 7, 1887, in Saint Louis, Missouri, to the marriage of Thomas Hearne Bailey Whipple and Frances Bell Mitchell, who married January 25, 1887, in Columbia, Tennessee. Clara Whipple lived with her parents in Cleveland in 1900 and Pittsburgh in 1910. In Pittsburgh, T.H.B. Whipple had, for about 30 years, been a publicist with Westinghouse. In 1926, he became an instructor of business communication at Duquesne University. Clara's parents, T.H.B. and Frances, separated in 1907. T.H.B. filed for divorce in June 1914 in Pittsburgh. Clara's first and middle names are drawn from those of her great-grandmother Clarissa Whipple '' and her aunt, Clarissa Brimmer Whipple, who was twice married, first on February 6, 1881, in Manhattan, New York, to Frederick H. Prentiss , then on March 2, 1900, in Pittsburgh to Burcham Harding.
Clara Whipple's father, T.H.B. Whipple, remarried May 4, 1923, to Laura Evangeline Williamson. From that marriage, Clara gained a half-sister, Frances Jane Whipple, who in 1943 married Joseph John Kerchner.

Marriages

On April 10, 1919, Whipple married motion picture director James Young Jr. at the Mission Inn, Riverside, California. For Young, it was his third of four marriages. Whipple, at the time, was a well-regarded silent film scenario writer. From 1910 to 1917, James Young was married to the movie actress Clara Kimball Young, his second marriage. Clara Whipple retired from the screen after marrying James Young. She returned to movies as Clara Young in 1920, despite objections by Clara Kimball Young concerning the use of the Young name.
Whipple separated from Young in June 1920 and divorced him in October 1921. The couple had a home at 2000 Holly Drive, Los Angeles, California. Young settled money and real estate amounting to $40,000 on Whipple.
In September 1922, Young sought to reverse the annulment with a cross-complaint filed by his attorneys. Depositions mentioned misconduct by Whipple with other men. Jack Pickford, Thomas J. Moore, Texas Guinan, and Doris Pawn were named in Young's preliminary moves. On October 12, 1922, a day before Whipple became entitled to her divorce decree, Young filed a $50,000 slander suit against her. The legal action came in response to Whipple's accusations that Young threatened her, pointed guns at her, and offered her $2,000 to return his Ku Klux Klan membership paper and bundles of correspondence he had received from women. A month later, in early December 1922, James Young became seriously ill of auto-intoxication in December 1922.
Clara Whipple married again, to Charles J. Dewey. They were married in Omaha in September 1928.

Death

Clara Whipple Dewey died November 6, 1932, in Manhattan, New York, a little more than two months after her brother, "Jamie" Whipple '', became Production Manager for NBC in Chicago. The cause of death was "Carcinoma of the Liver." Her residence at the time of her death was 180 Claremont Avenue, where her brother James lived, in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Manhattan, less than 2 blocks north of Juilliard's location from 1910 to 1969.

Extended family

Armide Whipple – Clara Whipple's niece, daughter of Jamie Whipple and Armide Whipple – was a jazz and big band vocalist with the orchestras of Jimmie Grier , Chico Marx, Les Brown, and Ben Pollack. She sang under the stagename "Kim Kimberly." She was briefly married to big band trumpeter Bobby Clark from about 1939 to about 1943.

Other litigation

Adelbert George Volck, who worked in the film industry, rented Whipple's Holly Drive home. In September 1923, she sued Volck, charging him with damaging household furnishings, particularly her tapestries and draperies. The court had to decide whether the tapestries and draperies were imported and, therefore, valuable, as Whipple contended.
Whipple filed suit for the collection of a promissory note from motion picture producer Dale Hanshaw in October 1925. She asked for $566.50, the same amount she claimed to have advanced Hanshaw, in various sums, around June 18, 1923. At the time of the court action, Hanshaw had only paid $50. He had given Whipple a radio as security, which she sold, and applied the proceeds to the payment of the note. $56 of the amount Whipple requested was for interest.

Extant productions and works

As writer

Stage acting

The Harry Davis Players

The Pitt Players
Other productions

Silent film acting

Mutual Film Corporation

Connes-Till Film Company, Toronto

B C Feature Film Company

George Brownridge

Equitable Motion Picture Corporation
'''Other films'''

Lost film

'''Equitable Motion Picture Corporation'''

Inline citations

General references

  • , Moving Picture World, Vol. 25, No. 10, September 4, 1915, p. 1657
  • Moving Picture World, Vol. 25, No. 12, September 18, 1915, p. 2003
  • Moving Picture World, Vol. 26, No. 4, October 23, 1915, p. 591
  • Moving Picture World, Vol. 27, No. 4, January 22, 1916, p. 612
  • Moving Picture World, Vol. 27, No. 6, February 12, 1916, p. 931
  • Moving Picture World, Vol. 27, No. 7, February 19, 1916, p. 1133
  • Moving Picture World, Vol. 27, No. 11, March 18, 1916, p. 1831
  • Variety, Vol. 42, No. 7, April 14, 2016, p. 22
  • "News Notes From Movieland", by Daisy Dean, Lima Times Democrat April 19, 1916, p. 4
    Paragraph: "Willard Mack, Gerda Holmes, Clara Whipple "

  • "News Notes From Movieland", by Daisy Dean, Racine Journal-News, May 13, 1916, p. 12
  • Moving Picture World, Vol. 40, No. 2, April 12, 1919, p. 218
  • Moving Picture World, Vol. 40, No. 4, April 26, 1919, p. 519
  • Moving Picture World, Vol. 51, No. 8, August 20, 1921, p. 793