Graham Moffat

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William Graham Moffat (February 21, 1866 - December 12, 1951)[1] was a Scottish actor, director and playwright. He is best known for his 1910 comedy Bunty Pulls the Strings.

His father was William Moffat and his mother was Helen Dobson.[2] The third of eight children, he was born in Glasgow, Scotland. There, he was exposed at an early age to the theatres and sixpenny galleries of the city and to numerous famous comedians and entertainers of the day.

He was married in 1897 to the stage actress and costume designer, Margaret Liddell Linck (Mrs. Graham Moffatt)(1882-1942).[3] His wife was also a suffragist, and in 1907 Graham Moffat founded the Men’s League for Women’s Suffrage in Glasgow. He also penned a suffrage propaganda play, The Maid and the Magistrate.[4]

Bunty Pulls the Strings was a huge hit in London’s West End, his biggest success, running for 617 shows at the Haymarket Theatre in 1911. In reviewing the play when it debuted on Broadway late in 1911, the New York Times classed Moffat beside J. M. Barrie and wrote, "it is the freshest and most wholesome thing that the theatres in New York have housed since the days of Peter Pan.[5]

He directed at least one film, Till the Bells Ring (1926), a 46-minute experimental sound film based on the comedy of the same name he mounted in 1908. The film starred Moffat, his wife and his daughter.[6] [7] He was living in Cape Town, South Africa by 1950 and he died there in 1951.[8]

[edit] Publications

The Pawky Scot, a book of Scotish humour, with illustrations by Arthur Moreland, was published in 1928.

In 1950 he published Towards Eternal Day: the Psychic Memoirs of a Playwright in which he revealed his belief that his dead father and brother helped from the dead in writing his plays. He also wrote on the supposed return from the dead of Sarah Bernhardt.

His autobiography, Join Me in Remembering, was published posthumously in 1955, incomplete upon his death and finished by his daughter.

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