William Harris (theatrical producer)

William Harris
(New York Public Library)

William Harris or Bill Harris (1844 November 1916) was a Prussian-born American theatre producer and vaudevillian performer.[1] He performed as a blackface comedian in vaudeville with John Bowman from 1866-1873,[2] and with William Carroll, 1873-1879.[3] In the 1880s Harris oversaw the Howard Athenaeum in Boston, Massachusetts. As a theatre producer he worked in partnership with Isaac B. Rich, Klaw & Erlanger and Charles Frohman. By 1916 he had ownership in several theatres in the United States: the "Hudson, Fulton, Knickerbocker, Lyceum, Liberty, and New York Theatres" [in New York City]; the Hollis Street, Colonial, Boston and Tremont Theatres in Boston; and the Colonial Illinois, Blackstone, and Powers Theatres in Chicago."[1] His children included Henry B. Harris (1866-1912) and William Harris Jr. (1884-1946), both theatre producers.[1][4]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Harris (1844-1916).
  1. 1 2 3 "William Harris, Sr., stage veteran, dies", The New York Times, November 26, 1916
  2. John Bowman (b. 1842). Edward Le Roy Rice (1911), Monarchs of minstrelsy, from "Daddy" Rice to date, New York city, N.Y: Kenny publishing company
  3. William J. Carroll (1853-1896). Rice, 1911
  4. Gerald Martin Bordman, Thomas S. Hischak. The Oxford companion to American theatre, 3rd ed. Oxford University Press, 2004
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