Charles Eaton (actor)

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Charles Eaton (June 22, 1910 - August 15, 2004) was a juvenile stage and film performer, and the most important performing male member of the clan once referred to as The Seven Little Eatons. The siblings, all appeared, at one time or another, in The Ziegfeld Follies each year between 1918 through 1923.

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[edit] Career

On stage from early childhood, Eaton made his Broadway debut, with his sister Doris, in 1918's Mother Carey's Chickens. He achieved the latter distinction in a 1928 Broadway production called Skidding which ran for 472 performances. Eaton would act in ten Broadway shows in total, including The Awakening, The Ziegfeld Follies of 1921, in which he shared the stage with W.C. Fields, A Royal Fandango, with Ethel Barrymore, Peter Pan and Tommy. He also performed at vaudeville's storied Palace Theatre; toured in plays like Don't Count Your Chickens with Mary Boland; and acted in a dozen, mainly forgettable films in the late 1920s and early 1930s

He began his film career in 1921, and played Wallace Reid as a child in 1922's Forever, the first screen version of Gerald du Maurier's play Peter Ibbetson. He successfully made the jump to 'talkies', and starred opposite Helen Twelvetrees as the correspondence-school detective in the comedy The Ghost Talks, which was 20th Century Fox's first talking picture; and as Marguerite Churchill's brother in Harmony at Home. Offers from both, Broadway and Hollywood dried up with the arrival of the Depression, and eventually Eaton turned to alcohol, as did his sisters Pearl and Broadway star, Mary Eaton. Mary died in 1948 of liver problems brought on by her drinking, and Pearl was tragically murdered a decade later.

[edit] Later life

Long after his showbiz career was over, Eaton served as a captain in the Army Air Corps in Foggia, Italy during World War II. Following the war, he went into business with his sister Doris, who operated a thriving Arthur Murray Dance Studios franchise in Detroit, and did occasional theatrical engagements. In 2003, with his sister Doris, he co-wrote an Eaton family memoir entitled The Days We Danced. He died the following year in Norman, Oklahoma at age of 94.

[edit] Filmography

  • Forever (1921)
  • The Prodigal Judge (1922)
  • The Ghost Talks (1929)
  • Knights Out (1929)
  • Harmony at Home (1930)
  • Poor Little Rich Boy (1932)
  • The Divorce Racket (1932)
  • Enlighten Thy Daughter (Blind Fools) (1934)
  • Who Goes Next? (1938)
  • The Gaunt Stranger (The Phantom Strikes) (1938)
  • Blondes for Danger (1938)
  • Lightning Conductor (1938)
  • Sword of Honour (1938)
  • Sons of the Sea (1939)

[edit] External links