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Mabel Adrienne Morrison (March 1, 1883 – November 20, 1940) was an American stage actress of the early 20th century. She married actor Richard Bennett, with whom she had three daughters who later would become actresses.

Key Information

Early years

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Adrienne Morrison was a daughter of actress Rose Wood and actor Lewis Morrison.[1][2] Her lineage through her mother made Morrison "the seventh generation of an English theatrical family."[3]

Morrison first appeared on stage at 6 months of age when her mother held her during a production of The Cricket on the Hearth. She was educated at St. Gabriel's Convent and the Convent of the Sacred Heart before returning to the stage at 14 years of age to portray Juliet.[3]

Career

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In 1905, she appeared as Nat-u-ritch, an Aboriginal American woman, in the play The Squaw Man with William Faversham. From September 1910 through May 1911 she appeared with her husband Richard Bennett in The Deep Purple.[4][5] She also performed in Damaged Goods, Hamlet, Love for Love, and The Servant in the House.[6]

Morrison retired from the theater in 1926, but made a brief return in May 1940 to appear in Grey Farm at the Hudson Theatre.[3]

From 1930 to 1932,[3] Morrison directed Children's Players, a company of adult actors who presented plays for children in the New York City area, Connecticut, and New Jersey.[7]

Personal life and death

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Morrison and actor Richard Bennett married In Jersey City on November 8, 1903,[8] but she retained her maiden name. Their daughters, Barbara Bennett, Constance Bennett, and Joan Bennett, would all become film actresses. Of the three, Joan would become the best known in acting, although both she and Constance would see wide success. Barbara never achieved the success of her sisters in acting, but married Morton Downey, and the couple had five children, with their first born being Morton Downey Jr. Despite Bennett's earnings, he became bankrupt.[9] Another grandchild, Constance's daughter Lorinda Roland, was a sculptor.[10]

In April 1925, she and Richard Bennett divorced. On January 19, 1927, she married Eric Seabrooke Pinker, a dramatic and literary agent, son to James B. Pinker, in an art gallery in New York City.[11][12] That marriage produced no children, but lasted until her death in her apartment in New York City of a heart attack in 1940. She was buried in a family plot in Pleasant Valley Cemetery in Old Lyme, Connecticut.[13]

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On June 7, 1939, Pinker was sentenced to a term of 2+12 to five years in Sing Sing prison for theft of approximately $30,000 from two clients. An investigation by the office of District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey indicated that Pinker used money owed to those clients to pay money due to other clients. The audit also indicated that Pinker had taken about $109,000 from other writers whom he represented. Morrison had been a partner in the firm, Eric S. Pinker & Adrienne Morrison, Inc., dealing with drama clients while Pinker handled literary clients. She resigned from the business on June 2, 1937. Pinker said that Morrison was not involved with the theft, but at the time of Pinker's sentencing, an assistant district attorney told the judge that a complaint had been made against Morrison and "we are considering ... whether there should be a prosecution."[14]

In October, 1939, Morrison's residence in Lyme, Connecticut, was attached as a result of a $25,000 suit by a playwright who alleged that she "failed to report all proceeds" from a play.[15]

References

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Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
Mabel Adrienne Morrison (March 1, 1883 – November 20, 1940), known professionally as Adrienne Morrison, was an American actress of the early 20th century, renowned for her stage performances in classic plays and appearances in silent films.[1][2] Born in New York City to actors Lewis Morrison and Rose Wood, she came from a seventh-generation English theatrical family and made her debut at six months old in the play The Cricket on the Hearth.[2] In 1903, she married fellow actor Richard Bennett, with whom she had three daughters—Constance, Joan, and Barbara—who all became prominent actresses in Hollywood; the couple divorced in 1925, after which Morrison wed literary agent Eric S. Pinker.[1][2] Morrison's career spanned both theater and early cinema, with notable stage roles including Nat-u-ritch in The Squaw Man (1905), Gertrude in Hamlet (1925), and Mrs. Frail in Love for Love (1925); her final Broadway appearance was as Lady Weaver in Grey Farm in 1940.[1][2] She also starred in silent films such as Damaged Goods (1914), The Valley of Decision (1916), and And the Law Says (1916).[2] Later in life, after largely retiring from the stage around 1926, she worked as a literary agent, making a brief return to Broadway in 1940.[2] Morrison died of a heart ailment at her New York home at age 57, survived by her brother, Colonel Victor Morrison.[2]

Early life

Family background

Mabel Adrienne Morrison was born on March 1, 1883, in New York City to a family immersed in the theatrical world.[3] Her mother, Rose Wood, was an English-born actress who served as a leading lady in Wallack's stock company and performed in various stage productions.[4] Her father, Lewis Morrison (born Morris W. Morris in Jamaica in 1845), was a prominent stage actor and manager renowned for his commanding presence in Shakespearean roles, including Othello, Hamlet, and Macbeth.[5] Lewis Morrison began his career after serving in the Union Army during the Civil War, making his stage debut in 1865 with Lawrence Barrett in New Orleans.[6] He gained fame for dramatic leads in plays like The Count of Monte Cristo and Les Misérables, and in 1889, he established his own theatrical company, touring the United States and abroad with elaborate productions such as Faust, in which he portrayed Mephistopheles over 2,000 times.[5] Wood and Morrison married and collaborated professionally, fostering a household centered on the performing arts.[5] Adrienne had two siblings: an older sister, Rosabel Morrison, who also pursued acting, and a brother, Victor Iago Morrison.[7] This familial legacy in theater, spanning generations through Wood's English acting roots and Morrison's international tours, positioned the Morrisons as part of an emerging American acting dynasty.[5]

Childhood and debut

Mabel Adrienne Morrison was born on March 1, 1883, in New York City, the daughter of prominent stage actor Lewis Morrison and actress Rose Wood.[8] Growing up immersed in the theatrical world, she made her stage debut at just six months old, carried onstage by her mother during a production of The Cricket on the Hearth starring Joseph Jefferson.[2] Morrison's early education took place at St. Gabriel's Convent and the Convent of the Sacred Heart in New York.[2] Beginning around age five, she received formal acting training under the renowned actress Eleanor Robson, who later became known as Eleanor Robson Belmont.[2] This structured instruction built upon the informal exposure she gained from her family's profession, fostering her innate interest in performance. The careers of her parents, both established figures in the American theater, profoundly shaped Morrison's path into acting.[2] She frequently traveled with the family troupe during tours in the 1890s, participating in early stage appearances within family productions and taking on minor roles in stock companies as a child.[9] These experiences during her formative years solidified her commitment to the stage, providing practical immersion in the demands of live performance before her professional debut as an adult.

Career

Stage career

Morrison's breakthrough on stage came in 1905 when she portrayed the Native American character Nat-u-ritch in Edwin Milton Royle's drama The Squaw Man at Wallack's Theatre on Broadway.[10] Co-starring with leading man William Faversham in the title role, the production ran for 222 performances, establishing Morrison as a promising young actress in the New York theater scene.[1] Her performance as the devoted squaw highlighted her ability to tackle complex, culturally sensitive roles during the era's melodramatic Western plays.[10] A significant milestone in her career occurred in 1911 with her leading role as Ruth Lake in Paul Armstrong and Wilson Mizner's The Deep Purple at the Lyric Theatre.[11] The play, a tense drama of crime and redemption, enjoyed a solid Broadway run of 152 performances from January to May.[11] Morrison shared the stage with her husband, actor Richard Bennett, who played a key role in the production, marking one of their notable collaborations during the early years of their marriage.[12] Throughout the 1910s and 1920s, Morrison continued to build her reputation with a series of Broadway appearances, including roles in revivals such as Everyman (1918) and The Merchant of Venice (1918), as well as original productions like The Fool (1922), where she played Pearl Hennig in a melodrama that ran for about 250 performances.[1] She also took on supporting parts in Hamlet (1925) as Gertrude and Grand Street Follies [1924], a satirical revue with nearly 200 showings.[1] These credits showcased her versatility across drama, comedy, and Shakespearean works, often in ensemble casts that reflected the bustling New York stage of the time. After more than two decades in theater, Morrison retired from the stage in 1926, concluding a career that spanned from her early Broadway debuts to prominent roles in long-running hits.[1]

Film career

Morrison made her film debut in the 1914 silent drama Damaged Goods, an adaptation of Eugène Brieux's controversial play Les avariés (translated and popularized in English by Upton Sinclair), in which she played a girl of the streets, alongside her husband Richard Bennett.[13][14][15] She continued with supporting roles in several early Hollywood silents produced by Triangle Film Corporation, often co-starring with Bennett. Notable among these was The Valley of Decision (1916), an allegorical morality drama written by Edith Ellis, where Morrison portrayed Jane Morton, a figure representing love in the story's allegorical framework.[16][17] Other credits from 1916 include And the Law Says as Cartmell's daughter, The Sable Blessing as Bess, and Philip Holden - Waster as Louise Holden; she wrapped her screen work with The Gilded Youth (1917) in an uncredited role.[3][18][19] Over her brief cinematic phase from 1914 to 1917, Morrison amassed approximately six film credits, primarily in supporting capacities within moralistic and dramatic narratives typical of the era's independent productions.[3][18] Despite this foray, enabled by her established stage presence, her film career remained limited due to a preference for the direct audience connection of live theater and conflicts arising from family commitments during the early years of raising her three daughters.[20] This prompted her swift return to the stage, where she sustained a more enduring professional footprint.[16]

Later professional activities

After retiring from acting in 1926 to devote more time to her family, Morrison transitioned into work as a literary agent and play broker in the late 1920s.[2] She partnered with her second husband, Eric S. Pinker, in the firm Eric S. Pinker & Adrienne Morrison, Inc., where she handled drama clients while Pinker managed literary ones, representing playwrights and authors in New York theatrical circles.[21] This role marked her shift from on-stage performance to behind-the-scenes support for emerging dramatic works. From 1930 to 1932, Morrison directed the Children's Players, a theater group composed of adult actors who staged juvenile dramas for young audiences.[2] The ensemble's debut production, The Forest Ring by Bella Spewack, premiered at the Roerich Museum Theatre in April 1930, followed by performances at venues like the Heckscher Theatre as part of sponsored children's series.[22] Through this initiative, she trained performers in youth-oriented plays, fostering early theatrical interests among participants. Morrison briefly returned to the stage in May 1940, taking a minor role in the melodrama Grey Farm at the Hudson Theatre alongside Oscar Homolka, though the production closed after a short run shortly before her death later that year.[2]

Personal life

Marriages and family

Adrienne Morrison married actor Richard Bennett on November 9, 1903.[23] The couple collaborated professionally in several stage productions, including the 1913 play Damaged Goods, where Bennett starred and Morrison appeared alongside him.[24] Their marriage lasted over two decades but ended in divorce on April 24, 1925, following a period of growing apart attributed to clashing personalities and the demands of their acting careers.[25][26] In 1927, Morrison married British literary agent Eric S. Pinker on June 19, becoming his business partner in the firm Eric S. Pinker & Adrienne Morrison, Inc., where she handled dramatic clients while he managed literary ones; the partnership supported her transition into agency work later in life.[21][2] This second marriage produced no children and endured until Morrison's death in 1940.[23] Morrison and Bennett had three daughters, all of whom pursued careers in entertainment: Constance Bennett, born October 22, 1904; Barbara Bennett, born August 13, 1906; and Joan Bennett, born February 27, 1910.[27][28][29] Raised in a bustling theatrical household amid their parents' frequent performances and travels, the sisters were exposed early to stage life, which profoundly shaped their entry into acting and contributed to the family's enduring legacy in Hollywood.[2][30] In 1939, Adrienne Morrison faced significant legal challenges stemming from the criminal activities of her second husband, Eric Pinker, a literary agent with whom she had partnered in the firm Pinker & Adrienne Morrison, Inc. Pinker was arrested in March 1939 on charges of grand larceny for embezzling funds from author clients, including British novelist E. Phillips Oppenheim, from whom he stole $37,000 in royalties between May 1938 and March 1939.[31] Prosecutors revealed that Pinker's total embezzlement from various authors amounted to approximately $100,000, achieved by diverting client payments to cover personal expenses and debts.[31] Pinker pleaded guilty in May 1939 to two counts of grand larceny involving $30,000 in thefts—$20,637 from Oppenheim and $10,197 from playwright Gertrude Tonkonogy—while admitting overall misappropriations exceeding $139,000.[32] On June 8, 1939, he was sentenced to 2½ to 5 years in Sing Sing prison, with the judge noting Pinker's pattern of "robbing Peter to pay Paul" but highlighting his inability to make restitution.[32] Morrison, who managed the firm's dramatic rights department until resigning on June 2, 1937, came under scrutiny during the investigation, but no charges were filed against her, effectively distancing her professional involvement from the crimes.[32] The fallout extended to civil proceedings, as affected clients pursued claims against the firm. In October 1939, Morrison's residence in Lyme, Connecticut, was attached by the sheriff in connection with a related civil lawsuit, imposing severe financial strain amid the ongoing repercussions of Pinker's actions.[33] Morrison maintained a low public profile on the matter, focusing statements on preserving her personal and professional reputation separate from her husband's offenses, though details of her direct responses remain sparse in contemporary reports.[32] Pinker served his sentence, but the events severely impacted Morrison's personal finances, contributing to her later hardships; however, they did not tarnish her established legacy in stage and film acting.[32]

Death

Adrienne Morrison died on November 20, 1940, at the age of 57 from a heart ailment in her apartment at 61 East Sixty-sixth Street in New York City.[2] Funeral arrangements were postponed pending the arrival of her daughters, Constance, Joan, and Barbara Bennett, who were flying from California upon learning of her death.[2] She was subsequently buried in the family plot at Pleasant View Cemetery in Lyme, Connecticut.[34] Given Morrison's semi-retired status from the stage—having largely withdrawn 14 years earlier and only briefly returning for a 1940 production—no large public memorial was held, with services remaining private and focused on family.[2]

References

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