Louise Hale

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Louise Closser Hale (October 13, 1872July 26, 1933) was an American actress, playwright, and novelist.

Born Louise Closser in Chicago, Illinois, she studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City, and at Emerson College of Oratory in Boston, Massachusetts. She made her theatrical debut in Detroit, Michigan in an 1884 production of In Old Kentucky. Her first theatrical success came in 1903, when she appeared in a Broadway production of George Bernard Shaw's Candida. In 1907, she made her London debut in Mrs Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch.

Louise Hale
Born Louise Closser
October 13, 1872 (1872-10-13)
Springfield, Massachusetts
Died July 26, 1933 (aged 60)
Los Angeles, California
Occupation Stage, film actress, author, playwright
Spouse(s) Walter Hale

In 1899, Closser married artist and actor Walter Hale, whose name she used for her stage career, and who illustrated a number of her travel books. At the age of fifty-seven, after her husband's early death from cancer in 1917, she left the stage for Hollywood.

Closser had a parallel career as an author and playwright, starting in the first decade of the 20th century. She died in Los Angeles, California at the age of sixty-one, of heat prostration.

[edit] External links