Joseph Holland(1910-1994)
- Actor
Joseph Holland was born on 30 August 1910 in Franklin, Virginia, USA. He was an actor, known for Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955), Tales of Tomorrow (1951) and Rocky King, Detective (1950). He died on 28 December 1994 in Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA.
Actor
- Born
- Died
- December 28, 1994
- Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA(heart failure)
- Other worksStage Play: Julius Caesar. Tragedy (revival). Written by William Shakespeare. Incidental music by Marc Blitzstein. Assistant Director: Hiram Sherman. Directed by Orson Welles. Mercury Theatre (moved to the National Theatre in March 1938- close): 11 Nov 1937- Mar 1938 (closing date unknown/157 performances). Cast: William Alland (as "Marullus"), Evelyn Allen, Arthur Anderson, Muriel Brassler, Grover Burgess (as "Ligarius"), Francis Carpenter, Joseph Cotten (as "Publius"), George Coulouris, George Duthie, Martin Gabel (as "Cassius"), Joseph Holland (as "Julius Caesar"), John Hoyt [credited as John Hoysradt] (as "Decius Brutus"), Norman Lloyd, William Mowry, Ted Reid, Stefan Schnabel (as "Metellus Cimber"), Hiram Sherman, Orson Welles (as "Marcus Brutus"), John A. Willard (as "Trebonius"). Replacement actor [during Mercury Theatre run]: Alice Frost (as "Portia"). Replacement actors [during National Theatre run]: Norman Lloyd (as "Cinna"), Edmond O'Brien (as "Marc Antony"), Polly Rowles (as "Calpurnia"). Produced by John Houseman and Orson Welles. Note: Considered to be one of the definitive Shakespearean revivals of the 20th century.
- TriviaWhilst he was playing the title role in the Orson Welles stage production of "Julius Caesar" in 1937, a terrible accident took place - he actually was stabbed in the chest in full view of the audience. However, he played out the remainder of the scene and his collapse was genuine. It was not until the other actors realized that there was real blood all over his costume and the stage that an ambulance was summoned and he was rushed to hospital. He recovered swiftly enough, however, and took no legal action; he remained on good terms with Orson Welles, who had stabbed him, and it is worth noting that he lived to a ripe old age - indeed, he outlived Welles, who was several years younger, by nearly ten years.
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