Louis Macloon
Louis Owen Macloon (20 May 1893 – 13 August 1979, age 86) was a prominent theatrical producer of the 1920s and 1930s.
Family
[edit]Macloon was the son of Chicago Tribune reporter Charles Macloon and his wife, Josephine, née Owen.
Louis Macloon married three times:
- Lois Florence Hoover in 1916, divorced by 1922
- Lillian Albertson, in 1922, divorced in 1933
- Lucille Ryman, 1936 (also ended in divorce)
He had one child, a daughter, Ruth, by his first wife.
Theatrical producer career
[edit]Macloon is credited with having given Clark Gable his first professional acting role, carrying a spear as a soldier. Later, Gable served as understudy to the role of Sergeant Quirk in What Price Glory by Laurence Stallings and Maxwell Anderson, another Macloon production. Macloon told Gable, "You'll do, my boy."[1]
Macloon's career with producing partner and wife Lillian Albertson was prolific, marking over a decade of successful plays and musicals from New York to Chicago and Los Angeles, including It Pays to Sin, which they translated from Hungarian.
Entrepreneur
[edit]Macloon was also an entrepreneur, and was a major investor in Almac Yacht Corporation, of Mystic, Connecticut, which built fifty foot Seven Seas Cruisers with interiors designed by Joseph Urban, the noted architect of the Ziegfeld Theatre.
Death
[edit]Macloon died 13 August 1979 at age 86 in Baker City, Oregon.
References
[edit]External links
[edit]Louis Macloon at the Internet Broadway Database