Arthur Housman


Arthur Housman was an American actor in films during both the silent film era and the Golden Age of Hollywood.

Career

Arthur Housman was one of the first screen comedians known to the public by name, and one of the first to be part of a movie comedy team. He was a slapstick comic and light leading man for the pioneer Edison studio in New York. In 1913–14, the Edison company cast Housman opposite character actor William Wadsworth as the comedy team "Waddy and Arty."
As a member of Edison's stock company, Housman participated in Edison's experimental production of talking pictures. Edison had engineered a way to synchronize dialogue and music with the visual action on film, and produced such novelties as Musical Blacksmiths and Nursery Favorites. Housman appeared in several reels, including The Edison Minstrels and Jack's Joke.
The Edison Kinetophone system, while practical mechanically, was not successful in theaters because the volume could not be amplified sufficiently for large audiences. In 2018, the antique recordings were digitally remastered and synchronized, resulting in a DVD release of the Edison talkies, The Kinetophone! A Fact! A Reality!
In 1917, Housman was working at the Mayfair Film Corporation.
During World War One, he served briefly in the Naval Reserve Force as a Fireman, 3rd class. Housman resumed his screen career after the war; in 1925 he was starring in Fox comedy shorts.
Initially a leading man, Housman later became known as Hollywood's most familiar comic drunkard in films of the 1930s, usually playing cameo parts in features but with better opportunities in short films. He adopted a dapper moustache for his screen appearances. His best remembered roles were in several Laurel and Hardy films, notably Scram!, Our Relations, and The Live Ghost. He appeared almost exclusively as drunks but occasionally did play straight, sober character parts.
Housman was plagued with alcohol problems off screen as well as his familiar film persona; he was arrested for illegal possession of alcohol in 1929 during prohibition, and jailed in 1939 for public drunkenness.
His illnesses in the late 1930s resulted in fewer calls for his services as a featured performer. He continued appearing in pictures, but only the independent producers of inexpensive features would assign him sizable roles. The major studios used him only in bit parts. His final role was in the low-budget exploitation film Escort Girl made in 1941; the ravages of his final illness are plainly visible in Housman's now lined face.

Death

Housman died of pulmonary tuberculosis at age 52. He was survived by his wife, Florence.

Selected filmography