Eleanor Woodruff(1891-1980)
- Actress
Eleanor Woodruff was born September 21, 1891, probably in Towanda,
Bradford County, Pennsylvania to George (1863-1937) and Harriet
Woodruff (1867-1959). Her father, of Scottish ancestry on his mother's
side, was a grocer in Towanda in 1900. Harriet Little Woodruff's father
was a prominent Bradford County lawyer, and his daughter was equally
well-known in Towanda social affairs. The Woodruffs were Republicans
and members of the Presbyterian Church. Eight-year-old Eleanor, an only
child, was living with her parents and maternal aunt on Chestnut Street
in Towanda in 1900, but for some reason can't be found in the 1910
census. In 1901, she was one of my paternal grandmother's piano
students. According to The Motion Picture Studio Directories for
1919-1921, after public schools, Eleanor studied at the National School
of Oratory in Philadelphia. According to the Encyclopedic Dictionary of
Women in Early American Films, she joined a touring stock company in
1909 when she would have been about seventeen. The New York Dramatic
Mirror identifies this as the Philadelphia Orpheum Stock Company, where
she remained for a year and a half. The Encyclopedic Dictionary has her
Broadway debut taking place in 1911 in The Five Frankfurters at the
Thirty Ninth Street Theater. The April 1, 1916 Dramatic Mirror claims
that her passion for the stage was opposed by her parents, but this
writer finds nothing on which to base the assertion. A March, 1911
article in the Schenectady Gazette mentioned two plays she had been and
was about to be in, they being Beverly of Graustark by George Barr
McCutcheon and The Prince Chap. Her first film appearance, in 1913, was
in the Pathe Pictures short The Finger of Fate. She was with New
Jersey-based Pathe until early 1915 when she moved to Vitagraph. The
Gazette article indicated she was "perhaps the youngest leading woman
in America." According to Moving Picture World, while at Pathe, Eleanor
was "one of the highest salaried stars in the moving picture business."
In early August, 1913, she was injured while filming the movie Depth of
Hate. The scene involved an auto accident, but the car failed to stop,
and its front wheel when ran over her back, though it appears she was
not severely nor permanently injured. While with Pathe Pictures,
Eleanor engaged in what today would be called social welfare work. In
November, 1914, she formed a "club" of young actresses in need of work
during a difficult economic time, this effort being successful in
finding jobs for some of the girls. Around the same time and shortly
after World War I began in Europe, she had planned to suspend her
career for a short time to go to France to be involved with the Red
Cross, but an her mother's illness at least postponed then sailing.
"I'm going to get that vacation," she remarked, "if I have to spend it
in the picture theater on the corner looking at war pictorials while I
knit socks for the Belgians." However, it appears she was involved in
the Red Cross to some degree. As alluded to above, Eleanor left Pathe
Pictures for Vitagraph in late 1914. It would appear from this that she
made fifteen pictures with the former company and ten with the latter.
While with Pathe, she appeared in The Stain with the famous vamp Theda
Bara, this being Bara's first film, the now-famous sex symbol being
simply an extra with lower billing than Eleanor. Perhaps her most
famous venture while at Pathe was the serial The Perils of Pauline with
Pearl White. Five of her Pathe films included Irving Cummings who went
on to have a very impressive career as a director from the early 1920s
to the mid 1940s. Eleanor's first film with Vitagraph was West Wind in
September, 1915 which was filmed in Texas. Eleanor appeared on the
cover of the Dramatic Mirror at least a couple of times, and when she
did so in June, 1915, the magazine commented there were "few leading
women who surpass (her) in charm or ability." In 1916, she left the
movies for the stage once again, playing Otis Skinner's leading lady in
Booth Tarkington's Mister Antonio. Though she appeared in one last
film, A Pasteboard Crown in 1922, the last days of her career were
spent on the stage both in the United States and Europe. Among other
plays throughout the 1920s, Eleanor appeared in Six Characters in
Search of an Author, the London production of George M. Cohan's So This
Is London and Back to Methuselah by George Bernard Shaw. She last
appeared in Somerset Maugham's The Breadwinner in 1931, the same year
in which she married Dorsey Richardson, banker and later economic
advisor to both Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. Her last days were
spent in Republican political work and operating an interior decorating
business in Princeton, New Jersey. Long a hobbyist in this line, in
1926, she decorated the Queen's suite at New York's Ambassador Hotel in
preparation for a visit by Queen Marie of Rumania. She died in
Princeton on October 7, 1980.
Sources:
United States Federal Census Records, 1900 Biographical and Genealogical Sketches from Central Pennsylvania, Frederick A. Godcharles, Clearfield Publishing Company, 1999 1901 Diary, Annie Benedict Cassada Kelly The Motion Picture Studio Directories for 1919-1921 Encyclopedic Dictionary of Women in Early American Films, 1895-1930, Denise Lowe The New York Dramatic Mirror, various articles Schenectady Gazette, March 9, 1911 Syracuse Herald, July 28, 1913 Brooklyn Daily Eagle, August 5, 1913 New York Glippee(?), December 26, 1914 Billboard, January 2, 1915 Daily Star, October 9, 1926 Brooklyn Standard Union, April 4, 1931 Brooklyn Daily Eagle, April 4, 1931 Moving Picture World, 1907-1927, Volume 19, January-March, 1914 Internet Movie Data Base
Sources:
United States Federal Census Records, 1900 Biographical and Genealogical Sketches from Central Pennsylvania, Frederick A. Godcharles, Clearfield Publishing Company, 1999 1901 Diary, Annie Benedict Cassada Kelly The Motion Picture Studio Directories for 1919-1921 Encyclopedic Dictionary of Women in Early American Films, 1895-1930, Denise Lowe The New York Dramatic Mirror, various articles Schenectady Gazette, March 9, 1911 Syracuse Herald, July 28, 1913 Brooklyn Daily Eagle, August 5, 1913 New York Glippee(?), December 26, 1914 Billboard, January 2, 1915 Daily Star, October 9, 1926 Brooklyn Standard Union, April 4, 1931 Brooklyn Daily Eagle, April 4, 1931 Moving Picture World, 1907-1927, Volume 19, January-March, 1914 Internet Movie Data Base