William Churchill Demille

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William Churchill Demille

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Washington, Beaufort, NC, United States
Death: March 05, 1955 (76)
Playa del Rey, Los Angeles, CA, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Henry Churchill de Mille and Matilda Beatrice de Mille
Husband of Clara K. DeMille
Ex-husband of Anna Angela deMille
Ex-partner of Lorna Moon
Father of Margaret George de Mille; Agnes George de Mille; Private and Richard DeMille
Brother of Cecil B. DeMille; Agnes Beatrice Demille; Helen C Demille and Annie C Demille

Managed by: George J. Homs
Last Updated:

About William Churchill Demille

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/demille-william-churchill

William Churchill deMille, playwright, the son of playwright Henry Churchill and Matilda Beatrice Samuel deMille, was born in Washington, N.C. He spent most of his boyhood in New York City and at Echo Lake, N.J., until 1891 when he moved with his family to Pompton, N.J. He well remembered that in the late eighties the family lived at 119 Waverly Place, New York, in an apartment directly opposite that of David Belasco, with whom his father collaborated. In those years, he and his young brother Cecil were students at the Horace Mann School, which was then on University Place. From 1891 to 1893 both attended a private school in Pompton and from then on the Henry C. deMille School for Girls, established by their mother, also in Pompton.

In the summer of 1895, his mother took William with her on a trip to Europe and left him for a year's study at Freiburg, in Baden, Germany. When he returned to America, he entered Columbia College at the age of eighteen. He was graduated from Columbia in 1900 and from the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in 1901. He took postgraduate courses for two years in Columbia University, where he concentrated on history and literature of the drama under Professor Brander Matthews, known affectionately as "Brandy" by his students. Beginning in 1902 he taught in his mother's school at Pompton, as well as in the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York, while continuing his stage training.

DeMille was a playwright, actor, and producer combined. In 1901 he produced his first dramatic sketch, A Mixed Foursome, at the Educational Alliance in New York. Both he and his brother Cecil were in the cast. The same year he also wrote and produced a longer dramatic work, The Forest Ring, a play for children. It was written in collaboration with Charles Barnard, who had also been his father's collaborator in The Main Line, and produced in the Children's Theater at Carnegie Lyceum, New York, with the author in the cast.

Until 1913 deMille wrote various other plays, sketches, and magazine articles. His best-known plays are probably Strongheart, produced in 1905; Classmates, written with Margaret Turnbull three years later; and The Warrens of Virginia and The Woman, produced by David Belasco in 1909 and 1911. Among his most familiar vaudeville sketches were In 1999, Food, Poor Old Jim, The Squealer, The Martyrs, and The Deceivers.

In 1914 deMille went to the West Coast to make motion pictures with his brother, Cecil B. deMille. In Hollywood they were associated with the Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Company, which later merged with the Famous Players and then became Paramount. For twenty years William deMille was busily engaged in motion pictures, as writer, director, and producer. During that period he directed nearly sixty films, in addition to the many he wrote but did not personally produce. He also wrote many magazine and newspaper articles, largely dealing with motion picture production as a growing art. In those years deMille was connected with Paramount, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and Pathé; he made films on both coasts. He was one of the first to believe in the new talking picture when it first appeared, and personally produced the second all-talking picture made by Paramount. For three years in the late 1920s he was president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Outside the world of drama, deMille was interested in sports and politics. An athlete during his college years, he was a member of the varsity track team for three years and as a senior represented Columbia in the International Fencing Contests. For many years he played tennis—he was a member of the West Side Tennis Club in New York and one of the founders of the Los Angeles Tennis Club. During his Hollywood period deMille was active politically as a believer in Henry George's theory of the single tax; consequently, in some circles he was considered somewhat of a radical. His late father had been one of George's early disciples and so the two families became friends.

In March 1903 deMille married Anna George, youngest daughter of Henry George; they were divorced in 1927. In August 1928, in Albuquerque, N.Mex., he married Clara Strousse, who under her professional name of Clara Beranger had been associated with him in the production of motion pictures. From his first wife, deMille had two children: Agnes, the well-known choreographer, and Margaret.

DeMille spent his last years as head of the drama department, which he founded, at the University of Southern California. He died at his home in Playa del Rey, Calif., and was buried in the family plot in Hollywood Cemetery.

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Photo descriptions added to Geni from Wikipedia (See Media)

Head shot / De Mille circa 1904 Born William Churchill de Mille July 25, 1878 Washington, North Carolina, U.S. Died March 5, 1955 (aged 76) Playa del Rey, California, U.S. Occupation Screenwriter, film director Spouse(s) Anna Angela George (m. 1903; divorce 1927) Clara Beranger (m. 1928; his death 1955)

Group / De Mille directing a scene using a "Magna Vox" voice amplification device

Tombs of Cecil Blount DeMille (right), Constance DeMille (left), William DeMille (urn in front), Clara DeMille (stone below urn in front),

Added to Geni by Janet Milburn 2/19/18

Bio: William Churchill de Mille (July 25, 1878 – March 5, 1955) was an American screenwriter and film director from the silent movie era through the early 1930s.[1] He was also a noted playwright prior to moving into film. Once he was established in film he specialized in adapting Broadway plays into silent films.

De Mille was born in Washington, North Carolina, to Henry Churchill de Mille (1853–1893), an actor and playwright from North Carolina, and Matilda Beatrice Samuel (1853–1923) who was also a play and screenwriter. Her father was a Christian whilst his mother was born to a Sephardic Jewish family in Liverpool but converted to her husband's faith.

William was the elder brother of Cecil B. DeMille, who altered the capitalization of his last name when he went to Hollywood, claiming that it fit better on marquees. (William continued to be known as "de Mille", and his daughter Agnes also chose "de Mille".) William received a bachelor's degree from Columbia University followed by graduate studies at the Academy of Dramatic Arts, at schools in Germany, and a second stint at Columbia studying under Brander Matthews.

In 1903 he married Anna Angela George, the daughter of notable economist Henry George. Anna bore William two children, Agnes de Mille – named after a younger sister who died in childhood – who became a noted choreographer and Peggy George, who became an actress.

Professionally, their life was stable. In 1905 he became successful Broadway playwright, following its development in 1904.

William had nine plays he wrote or co-wrote – one of them with Cecil – produced on Broadway between 1905 and 1913, and another two productions mounted in 1929 and 1936, the latter of which he produced and directed as well.

His first play, Strongheart was eventually released as a movie by his brother as Braveheart (1925 film). Two of William's works, The Warrens of Virginia (1907) and The Woman (1911) were produced by the flamboyant impresario David Belasco. The former featured future film star Mary Pickford and Cecil, both struggling actors playing minor roles.

He wrote a number of vaudeville sketches including In 1999, Food, Poor Old Jim, The Squealer, The Martyrs, and The Deceivers.

Cecil eventually moved to Hollywood, and William followed. His directorial debut was The Only Son (1914).

Personal life

William C. deMille and Anna Angela George divorced in 1927. One of the writers of Miss Lulu Bett was Clara Beranger, whom deMille married in 1929.

At about this time, he met Lorna Moon, an established New York author from Scotland, who also wrote sophisticated Hollywood comedies.

In 1998, Richard de Mille, who had grown up in Cecil's household, revealed in the memoir My Secret Mother, Lorna Moon that William C. deMille was his father and screenwriter Moon his biological mother. Richard had been adopted by Cecil B. and Constance DeMille to avoid a family scandal.

In addition to his filmmaking fame, William deMille was an early member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. (His brother was a founding member.)

With Douglas Fairbanks, he co-hosted the 1st Academy Awards in 1929, and he solely hosted the 2nd Academy Awards the following year. He served as President of the Academy briefly. DeMille helped found the USC Film School in 1929, and after his East Coast theatrical career failed to revive in the early 1930s, he was active on the faculty there until his death.

Death

DeMille died on March 5, 1955 in Playa del Rey, California. He was interred in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery.

Source: Wikipedia Added to Geni by Janet Milburn 2//10/18


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William Churchill Demille's Timeline

1878
July 25, 1878
Washington, Beaufort, NC, United States
1905
September 18, 1905
New York, NY, United States
1908
1908
New York, NY, United States
1922
February 12, 1922
1955
March 5, 1955
Age 76
Playa del Rey, Los Angeles, CA, United States