Walter Hampden

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UNDER CONSTRUCTION
UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Walter Hampden in 1951

Walter Hampden was the stage name of Walter Hampden Dougherty (June 30, 1879 – June 11, 1955), an American actor and theater manager. He was a major star on Broadway stages, on television, and in films. He was a member of the American Theosophical Society and acted in a theatrical production of The Light of Asia at Krotona in Hollywood.

Personal life

Walter Hampden Dougherty was born on June 30, 1879 in ... He married Mabel Moore in 1905. He died in Los Angeles, California, on June 11, 1955.


Theatrical career

Theosophical Society involvement

Hampden was admitted to the American Theosophical Society on June 6, 1911 in New York City. He was sponsored by architect Claude Bragdon and ATS president Weller Van Hook.[1] His membership lapsed in 1915. The Genesee Lodge of Rochester, New York reported in 1911 on a meeting held jointly with the Rochester Lodge:

In the spring Mr. Walter Hampden of"The Servant in the House" fame gave a delightful informal talk to both branches at the residence of Mr. Bragdon. He related many interesting mystical experiences that had occurred in connection with his portraal of "Manson". During his stay in Rochester he became sufficiently interested in Theosophy to join the emovment and we now number him among our members.[2]

LIght in Asia

In 1918 Hampden gave up lucrative engagements in New York to play the title role of Siddhartha in a theatrical version of Edwin Arnold's poem The Light of Asia at Krotona, the Theosophical colony in Hollywoood, California. The production ran for 35 performances in the Krotona Stadium that could seat 800 people, and also in Beachwood Canyon.[3] Music was provided by Charles Wakefield Cadman and Camille Zekwer; dancers included Ruth St. Denis and her Denishawn company; with Louis Horst as musical director. The production was sponsored by a Philadelphia Theosophist, Christine Wetherill Stevenson.[4]

The play attracted great attention in Los Angeles and surrounding communities; among the distinguished spectators were the Mayor of Los Angeles, John Masefield of England, the Japanese consul, and a number of prominent motion picture producers and stars."[5]

Helen Keller attended a performance. Walter Hampden must have been pleased with the Krotona production, because in October 1928 he produced, staged, and starred as Siddhartha in another production at his own Hampden's Theatre in New York City. Ruth St. Denis was again the choreographer. It was described as an original play by Theosophist Georgina Jones Walton (who was married to Robert Kelsey Walton), and ran for 23 performances.[6]

Additional resources

SEE ALSO The Light of Asia.

Articles

Archival collections

Notes

  1. Membership Ledger Cards roll 3, number 03547. Theosophical Society in America Archives.
  2. "In the Field" The Theosophic Messenger 13 no.1 (October, 1911): 60.
  3. Catherine Parsons Smith, Making Music in Los Angeles: Transforming the Popular, (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007), 135.
  4. Smith, 135.
  5. Joy Mills, 100 Years of Theosophy in America, (Wheaton, Ill.: Theosophical Publishing House, 1987), 58.
  6. "The Light of Asia" in Internet Broadway Database.