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Marcel Proust was a French intellectual, author and critic, best known for his seven-volume fiction 'In search of Lost Time'. He coined the term "involuntary memory", which became also known as "Proust effect" in modern psychology.
He was born Valentin Louis Georges Eugéne Marcel Proust, on July 10, 1871, in Paris, France. His father, Achille Proust, was a famous doctor. His mother, Jeanne Weil, was from a rich and cultured Jewish family. Proust's interests in art and literature were encouraged by his mother, who read and spoke English. He was fond of Carlyle, Emerson and John Ruskin, whose two works he also translated into French. From age 9 Proust suffered from severe allergy and asthma attacks, and eventually developed a chronic lung disease which caused his disability and affected his career and mobility. He was lucky to survive such a life threatening condition due to professional help from his doctor father. Proust's physical disability imposed serious restrictions on his lifestyle, and he expressed himself in writing. He was blessed with talent and imagination and also with a very large inheritance, that allowed him to write without any pressure. During the most years of his adult life Proust was confined to his cork-wood paneled bedroom, where he was attended mostly by his close friend, pianist and composer Reynaldo Hahn.
Proust's main work, 'A la recherche du temps perdu' was begun in 1909 and finished in 1922, just before the author's death. It also became known in English as 'In Search of Lost Time' (aka.. Remembrance of Things Past). The novel's life-like complexity and delicate fabric of language is influenced by his reading of Lev Tolstoy, especially by 'War and Peace' and 'Anna Karenina', and it bears some structural and contentual resemblance of Tolstoy's major novels. It is spanning over 3000 pages in seven volumes and teeming with more than 2000 names. Proust's novel is set in the fictional town of Combray, near Paris, and covers all aspects of life of the upper class; nobility, sexuality, women, men, art and culture. It was praised from Graham Greene, W. Somerset Maugham and Ernest Hemingway, as being the greatest fiction of their time.
Marcel Proust died at age 51, of complications related to pneumonia and his chronic health condition, on November 18, 1922, and was laid to rest in Cimetiére du Pére-Lachaise, Paris, France. The town of Illiers, which became the model for imaginary town of Combray in the novel, was renamed Illiers-Combray in commemoration of the Proust's masterpiece.- Actor
- Producer
- Director
One of the first black superstars of popular entertainment, Egbert Austin Williams, although born in the Bahamas, was raised largely in California. Nursing show business aspirations early on, he teamed with boyhood friend George Walker to form a highly successful vaudeville act, which continued until the ravages of syphilis brought about Walker's retirement and premature death in 1909. Two years later, Williams joined the Ziegfeld Follies and experienced perhaps his greatest fame as one of its' star comedians until his death. Although he played the (then) typical stereotype of the slow-witted, dialect-spouting black, and had to wear burnt cork to disguise his true ethnicity, he still managed to project an elan and style that was all his own, gently mocking the various stereotypes even as he was playing them. His recordings on American Columbia records were best-sellers in their time. An intelligent, articulate man privately, he was bitterly disappointed in a society that could applaud him onstage, yet still treat him like a second-class citizen off stage. Although he lived at one of the city's top hotels during his years in New York, he always had to ride the service elevator to his suite rather than come in by the main entrance. Ill health in his last years, primarily hypertension and lung trouble, brought about his early death at the age of only 47, while he was still a headliner. Long and happily married, he and his wife had no children but raised a niece and nephew.- Director
- Actor
- Producer
Born in Carlow, Ireland. Came to USA c. 1890. Worked as stage actor, engineer, antique dealer, gold miner. Entered silent film industry as actor in 1912; most noted film as actor was Captain Alvarez (1914) for Vitagraph. Directed first film for Balboa Films in 1914. Subsequently directed for American Film, Favorite Players, Pallas, Morosco, Fox, Famous Players-Lasky, Select, Realart and Paramount. Served in the British Army 1918-1919 then resumed his Hollywood career. Served as president of the Motion Picture Directors' Association for three terms. Stars he directed included Mary Pickford Dustin Farnum Wallace Reid and Mary Miles Minter . Directed Davy Crockett (1915) , Tom Sawyer (1917) , Anne of Green Gables (1919) and Huckleberry Finn (1920) among others. His unsolved murder in 1922 remains one of Hollywood's greatest mysteries.- Child star Bobby Connelly, the son of vaudeville actors, was born April 4, 1909 in Brooklyn, New York. He made his first screen appearance in 1912. In 1913, he joined the Vitagraph Company, whose studio was just a short distance from his home. While at Vitagraph, he starred in a series of shorts as the character "Sonny Jim." Bobby studied violin, which came in handy when he was cast as the young violinist Leon Kantor in the 1920 film version of "Humoresque." Reportedly he was one of the highest paid child actors in the world. At one point, he headed a vaudeville company. In 1922, Bobby became ill for three months, suffering from bronchitis, aggravated by an enlarged heart. Sadly, he passed away on July 6, 1922, at his home in Lynbrook, Long Island.
- Lillian Russell was born on 4 December 1860 in Clinton, Iowa, USA. She was an actress, known for Wildfire (1915), La Tosca (1911) and Potted Pantomimes (1914). She was married to Alexander Pollock Moore, Giovanni Perugini, Edward Solomon and Harry Braham. She died on 6 June 1922 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
- Henry Leone was born on 30 March 1858 in Constantinople, Ottoman Empire [now Istanbul, Turkey]. He was an actor, known for The Heart of the Hills (1916), Tangled Lives (1917) and Fair Lady (1922). He was married to Elizabeth and Anne Dale. He died on 9 June 1922 in Mount Vernon, New York, USA.
- Michael Collins was born on 16 October 1890 in Clonakilty, County Cork, Ireland. He died on 22 August 1922 in Beal-na-Blath, County Cork, Ireland.
- W. Chrystie Miller was born on 10 August 1843 in Dayton, Ohio, USA. He was an actor, known for Ramona (1910), Faithful (1910) and The Last Deal (1910). He was married to Jennie Towell. He died on 23 September 1922 in Staten Island, New York, USA.
- Roy Redgrave was born on 26 April 1873 in England, UK. He was an actor, known for Our Friends the Hayseeds (1917), Robbery Under Arms (1920) and The Christian (1911). He was married to Margaret Scudamore, Ellen Maud Pratt (aka Judith Kyrle) and Esther Mary Cooke (aka Ettie Carlyle). He died on 25 May 1922 in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
- Sidney Ainsworth was born in Manchester, England, on December 21, 1873, according to contemporaneous sources. As an infant, he was brought to America, where his family settled in Madison, Wisconsin. As a boy, he sang in the choir at Grace Church in Madison. After graduating from Madison High School, he studied drama at the University of Notre Dame for several years. He then earned his undergraduate degree from the Chicago Musical College. Shortly after graduation, he was invited by Maud Adams to co-star in "The Little Minister." His stage career was briefly interrupted when he served in the Spanish American War, as a member of the First Wisconsin Infantry. Later, Ainsworth toured the United States and England, appearing in various productions. After appearing in a large number of short films, Ainsworth signed with the Goldwyn Company in 1919. In early 1922, he returned to Madison, suffering from an illness, and was under the care of a nurse. He died on May 21, 1922. Some newspapers attributed his death in part to yellow fever, which he had never overcome since contracting it during his military service.
- While watching a movie one snowy night in Washington, DC, journalist and author Chauncey Corey Brainerd and his wife Edith were killed when the flat roof of Crandall's Knickerbocker Theatre collapsed under the weight of over two feet of heavy snow. More than 200 other moviegoers and theater employees were killed or injured on that night during what became known as The Great Knickerbocker Storm of 1922. A former congressman, an aide to President Woodrow Wilson and a number of house musicians, including the conductor, perished in the disaster.
Brainerd and his wife, the former Edith Rathbone Jocobs, were married at her parents' home in Mt. Vernon, New York, on June 4, 1903. She was born in Washington, DC, around 1885 and later lived, at least for a while, in Westchester, NY, where her father worked as a postal inspector. Chauncey Brainerd was born in New York City, the son of Alanson and Adelia Corey Brainard. His father was a merchant who died before Brainerd's second birthday. His mother later worked as a housekeeper in order to support him and his older sister Adelia.
Chauncey and Edith, who were both writers, went on to collaborate on a number of stories together under the pen name E.J. Rath. Chauncey was a veteran of the Spanish-American War. At the time of his death he had been the Washington bureau chief for the Brooklyn Eagle for over ten years. - Florence Deshon born to Samuel and Florence C. Danks of Austrian and English descent. She began as a stage actress and appeared opposite Mary Boland in 'My Lady's Dress and in the comedy 'Seven Chances' prior to making her screen debut in 1915's 'The Beloved Vagabond' directed by Edward Jose for Pathe, Florence starred in 24 silent melodrama and crime movies but perhaps her best known was 'The Desired Woman' directed by Paul Scardon and co-starring Harry T. Morey for the Vitagraph Film Company in 1918 and her final film as Sally McTurk in John Francis Dillon's 'The Roof Tree' with William Russell for the Fox Film Co in 1921. She moved to Greenwich Village, New York in hope to resume her film career but on the 4th February she was found unconscious on the third floor of her apartment building, a window was open in her bedroom but illuminating gas flowed from a opened jet, a newspaperwoman, Minnie Morris, found Deshon, an Ambulance took her to Hospital, but attempts to revive her were unsuccessful, she died the following afternoon, adding that the only mystery was why 'with the apartment especially wired for electricity, Miss Deshon should have used the single gas jet in the room and forgotten to turn it off, some say she had no reason to kill herself and that her death was accidental, the New York Medical Examiner concluded her death was accidental but rumors persisted that she might have committed suicide because of grief.
- Charles Arling was born on 22 August 1880 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He was an actor, known for Back to God's Country (1919), Number 99 (1920) and Droppington's Devilish Deed (1915). He died on 21 April 1922 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
- Howard Crampton was born on 12 January 1865 in New York City, New York, USA. He was an actor and writer, known for 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1916), Someone in the House (1920) and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1913). He died on 15 June 1922 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
- Soundtrack
Luigi Denza was born on 24 February 1846 in Castellammare di Stabia, Campania, Italy. He died on 26 January 1922 in London, England, UK.- Actor
- Writer
Frank Bacon was born on 16 January 1864 in Marysville, California, USA. He was an actor and writer, known for Lightnin' (1925), Lightnin' (1930) and The Magnavox Theater (1950). He was married to Jane Jennie Weidman (actress). He died on 19 November 1922 in Chicago, Illinois, USA.- Robert Symes Entwistle, who was born in London on 1 January, 1872, worked on Broadway as a character comedy actor and as producer Charles Frohman's stage manager. He also appeared in the film The Beautiful Adventure (1917), that was based on a Frohman theatrical adaption of a popular French play by Robert de Flers and Gaston Arman de Caillavet. Not long after Charles Frohman was lost at sea during the sinking of the Lusitania, Entwistle retired from the stage and opened a small shop in New York on Madison Avenue and Fifty-Fourth Street that sold designer gift boxes to upscale clientele.
In 1904 Entwistle married Emily Stevenson in Birmingham, England. Their daughter, Lillian Millicent (Peg Entwistle), became known as one of the more tragic Hollywood figures, when, in 1931, she leaped to her death from atop one of the letters in the landmark Hollywoodland sign. Emily died in 1912 around the time Entwistle was brought to America by Charles Frohman. In 1914 he married, probably in New York, his sister-in-law, Lauretta Amanda Ross. Their union produced two sons, Milton and Robert, before her untimely death in 1921 at the age of 37 from spinal meningitis.
On the evening of 2 November, 1922, Entwistle was run down by a limousine at the intersection of Park Avenue and Seventy- Second Street, as he was walking home from his place of business. Witnesses to the accident told police that the limousine's chauffeur stopped, got out of the vehicle for a moment and looked down on Entwistle's broken body before speeding off. Neither the driver nor the limousine was ever found.
Robert Entwistle lingered for forty-eight days in a body caste with a broken spine before dying on 19 December at Prospects Hospital in Brooklyn, New York. He was survived by his three children, who were then raised by his brother, actor Harold Entwistle and his wife, former actress Jane Ross.
Robert Symes Entwistle was interned at the Oak Hill cemetery, Glendale, Ohio in a grave that he now shares with his daughter Millicent. - The second in a family of ten, his father Henry farmed at Kilkea. His mother Henrietta was descended from the Fitzmaurices, a family which had been in Kerry since the Norman times in the 13th century. In 1880 when Ernest was six his father gave up farming and went to Trinity College Dublin, and qualified to be a doctor. The family lived at 35 Marlborough Road in Dublin and in 1884 they moved to Sydenham in South London where Henry practiced for 30 years.
After attending school at Dulwich College as a day boy Ernest, aged 16, joined the Merchant Navy. After 10 years he gave that up and joined a British Expedition led by Captain Robert Falcon Scott to try and be the first to reach the South Pole. In the summer of 1901 the ship , The Discovery departed for the Antarctic. On 30th December 1902 Scott, Shackleton and Edward Wilson FZS ("Uncle Bill") reached within 400 miles of the South Pole, the furthest South yet achieved by anybody. Shackleton was invalided on the return journey and was sent home early. His experience on this expedition then spurred Shackleton on, to have a go at reaching the South Pole himself. In 1904 after his return he married Emily Dorman, they had three children Raymond, Cecily and Edward.
Next came the Nimrod expedition. In March 1907 Shackleton outlined his own trip, which he organized himself with the minimum of official support. The Expedition was to leave New Zealand in 1908. The ship chosen was a sealing ship which generally worked from Newfoundland. It was brought down and arrived in London in mid-June 1907. The Queen presented Shackleton with a Union Jack to carry on the sledge journey. They ship left for New Zealand on the 7th of August. The Commonwealth Government gave Shackleton £5000 and the New Zealand Government gave him £1000 and agreed to pay for half of the cost of towing the ship down to the Antarctic Circle to save coal for the journey that lay ahead. They entered the Ross Sea on January 16th. On the 28th of January the ship froze in the ice. The next day they lowered the motorcar onto the ice pack, the first automobile on the Antarctic Continent. The team set up the hut they had brought with them and the men crammed in. The weather began to close in and the sun to set. On the 29th of October 1908 Shackleton, Adams, Marshall and Frank Wild headed for the South Pole, a 1700 mile round trip. The other men had set up many depots for the journey using the motorcar for several of them. The team began to run low on rations shot the ponies for food. On the 9th of January 1909 they reached a new furthest south - just 97 miles from the South Pole. They had to turn around due to lack of food.
After the Norwegian Roald Amundsen (December 1911) and Scott (January 1912) had reached the South Pole, Shackleton thought up and attempted to carry out another great plan - to cross the 2000 mile Antarctic continent. This trip was a very successful failure. The team of 28 men and 68 dogs never set foot on the continent. Shackleton's ship the "Endurance" was trapped in the ice in the Weddell Sea for 11 months, from January 1915 until it was squashed and sank in November 1915, leaving 28 men on the ice with 3 small ship's boats. They then spent 5 ( admittedly summer) months on an iceberg floating away from the continent. With great good fortune they landed on Elephant Island on the 15th of April 1916. It is a small godforsaken island of rock and ice with a few penguins and seals for food. So there they were in April 1916, lost to the civilized world, and heading into an Antarctic winter. Losing no time Shackleton's next move was to be one of the greatest small boat journeys ever made. Shackleton and 5 others set off in the 22 foot boat the "James Caird" on an 800 mile journey across one of the roughest seas in the world to island of South Georgia to get help. Tim McCarthy first spotted South Georgia, 15 days after they had left Elephant Island. Their extraordinary journey was not yet over - to reach help, Shackleton, Tom Crean and Frank Worsley then had to cross the mountains, glaciers and snowfields of South Georgia to get to the whaling station at Stromness. Three and a half months later, at the fourth attempt, Shackleton, in a Chilean tug the "Yelcho' rescued the remaining 22 crew on Elephant Island on the 30th August 1916. It was amazing that all the crew had survived. In December Shackleton left New Zealand on the Aurora to rescue the Ross Sea Party from Cape Royds - on the other side of the Antarctic , this party had successfully laid food depots along the Ross Ice Shelf towards the South Pole. Shackleton had intended to use these as he crossed the Continent from the Weddell Sea side.
The 1921 trip on the Quest was his final journey. He died of a heart attack in the early hours of the 5th January 1922 shortly after the start of the expedition, at Grytviken in South Georgia where he was buried. A few months later on their journey home the crew of the Quest erected a cross at King Edward Point, across the bay from the cemetery where their "Boss" lies buried. - Actor
Cardiff Giant was born on 27 December 1881 in Cardiff, Wales, UK. He was an actor. He was married to Elizabeth . He died on 30 November 1922.- Actor
- Writer
Frederik Jacobsen was born on 12 September 1876. He was an actor and writer, known for Hjælpen (1913), Hans gode Genius (1922) and Den kære Afdøde (1912). He died on 4 September 1922.- He grew up in upper middle-class circumstances in Berlin, where he passed his high school diploma in 1884. In 1886 he began studying philosophy, physics and chemistry there, which he continued at the University of Strasbourg in the then annexed Alsace and completed his doctorate in electrical engineering in 1889. All Walther Rathenau's attempts to refuse to succeed his father in the "Allgemeine Electricity Company" (AEG), which had since been formed, initially failed. After Walther Rathenau had overseen the development of the electrochemical works in Bitterfeld and Rheinfelden, a branch of AEG, from 1893 to 1898, he joined the executive committees of AEG at the turn of the century. In 1912 he became a member of its supervisory board and in 1915 chairman of the supervisory board. At the same time, Walther Rathenau never gave up his political and philosophical inclinations. In addition to his entrepreneurial activity in the AEG, he distinguished himself through his first publications as a supporter of the bourgeois-liberal opposition to Wilhelminism.
In 1915, when his father Felix Deutsch died, he took over the management of AEG, while Walther Rathenau made do with special powers and the formal title of president. In the course of the First World War, Walther Rathenau's political ambitions became more concrete, as he organized the distribution and provision of raw materials for armaments production in the Prussian War Ministry. After the war defeat and the November Revolution of 1918, Rathenau tried to form a bourgeois collective party. As a member of the German Democratic Party (DDP), he initially took an active role as an economic expert in shaping the first German democracy. In May 1921 he joined the government as Reconstruction Minister. In the same year he became involved for the first time as a foreign policy representative of the Weimar Republic towards France and Great Britain. In January 1922 he was able to achieve a reduction in German reparations payments at the Allied Conference in Cannes. On January 31, 1922, Walther Rathenau was appointed Foreign Minister.
While he was unable to achieve success on the reparations issue at the subsequent World Economic Conference in Genoa, in April he succeeded in concluding the German-Soviet Treaty of Rapallo, which strengthened Germany's freedom of action in foreign policy. As his reputation grew abroad, he represented the interests of the young German republic against the victorious powers of 1918. The right-wing radical opponents of the Weimar Republic saw themselves provoked into an assassination attempt by the Foreign Minister's foreign policy policy and his Jewish origins.
Walther Rathenau fell victim to this on June 24, 1922 on the street in Berlin-Grunewald. The perpetrators were 2 officers from the right-wing extremist organization Consul. In his writings, Rathenau warned against mechanization and materialistic thinking. He represented the idea of a society beyond capitalism and socialism that would liberate the working class from "hereditary servitude". - Géza Gárdonyi was born on 3 August 1863 in Agárd, Hungary. He was a writer, known for Göre Gábor bíró úr pesti kalandozásai (1914), Aggyisten Biri! (1927) and Göre Gábor bíró uram legújabb eresztése (1922). He was married to Mária Molnár Csányi. He died on 30 October 1922 in Eger, Hungary.
- J.H. Gilmour was born in 1857 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. He was an actor, known for The Unfortunate Marriage (1917), Over the Hill (1917) and The Streets of Illusion (1917). He was married to Caroline Vinton. He died on 24 November 1922 in Yonkers, New York, USA.
- Victor Fabian was born on 8 March 1869 in Copenhagen, Denmark. He was an actor, known for Fabian Hunting Rats (1910), Fabian Out for a Picnic (1910) and Fabian paa Kærlighedsstien (1910). He died on 25 April 1922.
- Actor
- Director
- Writer
René Cresté was born on 5 December 1881 in Paris, France. He was an actor and director, known for L'Aventure de René (1922), Judex (1916) and Judex: Prologue + L'ombre mystérieuse (1917). He died on 30 November 1922 in Paris, France.- Director
- Actor
- Writer
Henri Pouctal was born on 21 October 1860 in La Ferté-sous-Jouarre, Seine-et-Marne, France. He was a director and actor, known for La dame aux camélias (1912), L'instinct (1916) and Volonté (1917). He died on 2 February 1922 in Paris, France.- Brilliant stage and screen actor Charles Eldridge was born in New York in 1854. Starred on the drama and comedy theatre from the 1870's. Occasionally known as Mr. Eldridge became a white haired gentleman who starred and supported in more than 160 melodrama, comedy and crime movies, with the Vitagraph Film Company from 1910, making his film debut as the old farmer in 'The Legacy' co-starring Mary Maurice. His most notable role was as Jabee Smith in many of the 'Mr. Jarr' comedies starring Harry Davenport in 1915. Mr. Eldridge left Vitagraph in 1916 to worked for several other film companies including IMP, Victor, Rolfe, Columbia, Stubert and last with Goldwyn and Fox until his death from cancer in 1922 age 68.
- Giovanni Verga was born on 2 September 1840 in Catania, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies [now Catania, Sicily, Italy]. He was a writer, known for Fatal Desire (1953), Tigre reale (1916) and Cavalleria rusticana (1916). He died on 27 January 1922 in Catania, Sicily, Italy.
- Henry Weaver was born on 21 June 1858 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. He was an actor, known for Gloria's Romance (1916), Manon Lescaut (1914) and Clover's Rebellion (1917). He was married to Mary Stella Boniface (actress). He died on 9 May 1922 in Sea Bright, New Jersey, USA.
- Frank Opperman was born in 1861 in Houston, Texas, USA. He was an actor, known for During the Round-Up (1913), An Indian's Loyalty (1913) and Neighbors (1912). He died on 26 April 1922 in San Diego, California, USA.
- Nellie Bly was born on 5 May 1864 in Cochran's Mills, Pennsylvania, USA. Nellie was a writer, known for The Nellie Bly Story (2020). Nellie died on 27 January 1922 in New York, New York, USA.
- Richard Croker was born on 23 November 1841 in Clonakilty, County Cork, Ireland. He died on 29 April 1922.
- Charles Herman was born in 1838 in Germany. He was an actor, known for When the Heart Calls (1912), The Cuckoo Clock (1912) and A Question of Evidence (1912). He died on 8 February 1922 in Rockaway Beach, New York, USA.
- Robert Forsyth was born in 1846 in Belfast, Ireland, UK. He was an actor, known for Betsy Ross (1917), The Supreme Sacrifice (1916) and The Rich Slave (1921). He was married to Lina Dalrymple. He died on 9 February 1922 in New York City, New York, USA.
- Alexander Graham Bell was born on 3 March 1847 in Edinburgh, Scotland, UK. He was married to Mabel Hubbard. He died on 2 August 1922 in Baddeck, Nova Scotia, Canada.
- Actor
- Director
- Writer
Andrey Gromov was born on 3 January 1887 in Moscow, Russian Empire [now Russia]. He was an actor and director, known for Sumerki (1917), Defense of Sevastopol (1911) and Rusalka (1910). He died on 14 February 1922 in Riga, Latvia.- Actress
- Soundtrack
Marie Lloyd was born on 12 February 1870 in Hoxton, London, England, UK. She was an actress, known for Marie Lloyd's Little Joke (1909), Marie Lloyd at Home and Bunkered (1913) and Timeshift (2002). She was married to Bernard Dillon, Alexander Hurley and Percy Courteney. She died on 7 October 1922 in Golders Green, London, England, UK.- Producer
- Director
- Music Department
Georg Bluen was born on 24 July 1878. He was a producer and director, known for Saferndri, die Tänzerin von Dschiapur (1920), Auf des Lebens rauher Bahn (1918) and For Crown and Whip (1919). He died on 5 July 1922.- Yevgeni Vakhtangov was born on 2 February 1883 in Moscow, Russia. He was an actor, known for Kogda zvuchat struny serdtsa (1914), Velikiy Magaraz (1915) and Khleb (1918). He died on 28 February 1922 in Vladikavkaz, North Ossetia-Alania, Russia.
- Additional Crew
- Producer
- Director
Karger was married to Ann Conley of the "Ann & Effie Conley Sisters" Vaudeville Act. He was one of the original founders and the general manager of Metro Pictures in New York before they moved to Hollywood and merged with Samuel Goldwyn and Louis B. Mayer to form MGM Pictures. His son Fred Karger was a composer and a vocal coach at Columbia Pictures. Romantically involved with a young Marilyn Monroe from 1948-1949, Fred broke with Monroe, and eventually married Jane Wyman in 1952.- Prince Albert Ier de Monaco was born on 13 November 1848 in Paris, France. He was married to Princess of Monaco and Mary Victoria Douglas-Hamilton. He died on 26 June 1922 in Paris, France.
- Rowland Buckstone was born on 29 March 1860 in London, England, UK. He was an actor, known for An Enemy to the King (1916). He was married to Cecily J. Wilson. He died on 13 September 1922 in London, England, UK.
- Phyllis Grey was born in 1887. She was an actress, known for The Strange Story of Sylvia Gray (1914), The Tangle (1914) and Her Atonement (1915). She died on 21 January 1922 in Los Angeles, California, USA.
- John Stevenson is known for Plunder (1923). He died on 10 August 1922 in New York City, New York, USA.
- Erskine Childers was born on 25 June 1870 in London, England, UK. He was a writer, known for The Riddle of the Sands (1979) and Das Rätsel der Sandbank (1987). He was married to Mary Alden Osgood. He died on 24 November 1922 in Dublin, Irish Free State [now Dublin, Ireland].
- Writer
- Actor
H.V. Esmond was born on 30 November 1869 in London, England, UK. He was a writer and actor, known for The Truth About Youth (1930), One Summer's Day (1917) and Tense Moments with Great Authors (1922). He was married to Eva Moore. He died on 17 April 1922 in Paris, France.- Director
- Writer
- Actor
Harry Williams was born on 23 August 1879 in Faribault, Minnesota, USA. He was a director and writer, known for Wonder Woman (2017), P.S. I Love You (2007) and The Legend of 1900 (1998). He was married to Carolyn ?. He died on 15 May 1922 in Oakland, California, USA.- Writer
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
- Director
John W. Kellette was born in June 1873 in Lowell, Massachusetts, USA. He was a writer and assistant director, known for Sweet and Lowdown (1999), J. Edgar (2011) and Green Street Hooligans (2005). He died on 7 August 1922 in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA.- J.H. Ryley was born on 11 September 1841 in Camden Town, London, England, UK. He was an actor, known for Hamlet (1913) and Who Killed Simon Baird? (1916). He was married to Maria Elizabeth Crome and Madeleine Lucette Ryley. He died on 28 July 1922 in Edgeware, Middlesex, England, UK.
- Emperor Karl was born on 17 August 1887 in Castle of Persenbeug, Lower Austria, Austria-Hungary. He was married to Empress Zita. He died on 1 April 1922 in Funchal, Madeira, Portugal.