J. Warren Kerrigan

George Jack Warren Kerrigan (July 25, 1879 – June 9, 1947) was an American silent film actor and film director.[citation needed]

J. Warren Kerrigan
Kerrigan c. 1918
Born
George Jack Warren Kerrigan

(1879-07-28)July 28, 1879
DiedJune 9, 1947(1947-06-09) (aged 67)
Burial placeForest Lawn Memorial Park
Other namesJack Kerrigan
Occupation(s)Actor, director
Years active1910–1924
PartnerJames Carroll Vincent (c. 1914–1947; his death)

Controversy

In May 1917, Kerrigan was nearing the end of a four-month-long personal appearance publicity tour that had taken him across the United States and into Canada. At one of the final stops, a reporter for The Denver Times asked Kerrigan if he would be joining the war. Kerrigan replied:

I am not going to war. I will go, of course, if my country needs me, but I think that first they should take the great mass of men who aren't good for anything else, or are only good for the lower grades of work. Actors, musicians, great writers, artists of every kind—isn't it a pity when people are sacrificed who are capable of such things—of adding to the beauty of the world.

Picked up and reprinted in newspapers across the country, this statement stunned his fans and his popularity plummeted, never to fully recover.[citation needed]

Family members later claimed in Behind the Screen (2001) by William J. Mann that his slump in popularity was more due to his living with his mother and partner James Vincent in the same house, and not having a business manager to overcome the negative publicity.[citation needed]

Revival

In the spring of 1924, after John Barrymore bowed out, Kerrigan was assigned the starring role in Captain Blood. While the film was a moderate success, critics were unmoved and Kerrigan found himself working less and less and in smaller roles. In December 1924, Kerrigan was injured in an automobile accident in Illinois. According to the Des Moines Tribune (page 1, Monday, December 8, 1924) his face was badly scarred and it was stated that "he may never star in films again".[1]

Personal life and death

Kerrigan lived with his domestic partner James Carroll Vincent from about 1914 until Kerrigan's death in 1947.[citation needed]

James Carroll Vincent

James Carroll Vincent (November 9, 1897 – May 15, 1948) was a silent movie actor. He was born in Baltimore, Maryland, and moved to California to be an actor where he met Kerrigan. Vincent moved into Kerrigan's home at 2307 Cahuenga Boulevard in Los Angeles, where they began a long-term relationship. He was listed at various times as Kerrigan's secretary or gardener.[2] Not to be confused with actor James Vincent, born in 1882 and only three years younger than Kerrigan, while his partner is described as being much younger than Kerrigan;[3] or stage manager James Vincent (who worked with Katharine Cornell and was long-time friend of George Cukor), born in 1900 who committed suicide in 1953 in New York City.[4]

In 1919 Vincent, who was a "juvenile" actor with Bessie Barriscale, appeared in the cast of Out of Court,[5] in 1920 he was in the cast of The Coast of Opportunity[6] and in 1924 in the cast of $30,000, all three of them movies with or by Kerrigan.[7] In 1924, Kerrigan and Vincent, along with several of their friends, were in an automobile accident in Dixon, Illinois, on the route from Sterling to Chicago. In news reports Vincent was again named as Kerrigan's secretary.[8]

On June 9, 1947, Kerrigan died from pneumonia at the age of 67. He is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.[9]

After Kerrigan's death, Vincent married Mitty Lee Turner (1894–1968) on October 24, 1947. On March 15, 1948, Vincent committed suicide by gas in his bedroom at 14716 Magnolia Boulevard in Van Nuys, California, nine months after the death of Kerrigan.[10] He is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.[11]

Filmography

A Man's Man (1917)
Lobby card with Kerrigan (left) in The Drifters (1919)
YearTitleRoleNotes
1913Calamity Anne's InheritanceWilliams - the Mining AgentShort
Calamity Anne's VanityOne of the Village Belle's SweetheartsShort
Calamity Anne's BeautyThe Handsome Young DrummerShort
Woman's HonorFather BobShort
Her Big StoryJoel Hammond - the Managing EditorShort
QuicksandsFrankShort
Truth in the WildernessBruce WillardShort
For the FlagLieutenant Jack BronsonShort
For the CrownJacques le GrandShort
Calamity Anne, HeroineMinor RoleShort
The Restless SpiritThe Husband - the Restless SpiritShort
The Girl and the GreaserDave LewisShort
The Tale of the TickerTom BurnsShort
Back to LifeDestiny's VictimShort
Rory o' the BogsRory o' the BogsShort
1914SamsonSamson
1915The Stool PigeonWalter JasonShort
For CashArthen OwenShort
The Oyster DredgerJack, the Oyster DredgerShort
The New Adventures of Terence O'RourkeTerence O'Rourke
1916Langdon's LegacyLangdon
The Pool of FlameTerence O'Rourke
The Gay Lord WaringLord Arthur Waring
A Son of the ImmortalsPrince Alexis Delgrade
The Silent BattleTom Gallatin
The Beckoning TrailCarter Raymond
The Social BuccaneerChattfield Bruce
The Measure of a ManJohn Fairmeadow
1917A Man's ManJohn Stuart Webster
1918The Turn of a CardJimmie Montgomery Farrell
One Dollar BidToby
A Burglar for a NightKirk Marden
Prisoners of the PinesHillaire Latour
Three X GordonHarold Gordon
1919The DriftersBurke Marston
Come Again SmithJoe Smith
The End of the GameBurke Allister
The Best ManCyril Gordon
A White Man's ChanceDonald Joseph Blenhorn
The Lord Loves the IrishMiles Machree
The Joyous LiarBurke Harlan
1920Live SparksNeil Sparks
The Dream CheaterBrandon McShane
A Man's ManJohn Stuart Webster
Number 99Arthur Penryn
The Green FlameFrank Markham
$30,000John Trask
The House of WhispersSpaulding Nelson[12]
The Coast of OpportunityDick Bristow
1922Night Life in HollywoodHimselfCameo
1923The Covered WagonWill Banion
The Girl of the Golden WestRamerrez
Mary of the MoviesHimselfCameo, Uncredited
HollywoodHimselfCameo
The Man from Brodney'sHollingsworth Chase
Thundering DawnJack Standish
1924Captain BloodCaptain Peter Blood(final film role)

References

External links