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Russell Mack : ウィキペディア英語版 | Russell Mack
Russell Mack was an American vaudeville performer in the 1910s and a stage actor, film director, and producer in the 1920s and 1930s. ==Vaudeville and stage career==
Born Edward Russell Mahoney in Oneonta, New York, Mack was raised in Providence, Rhode Island, where he worked first as a reporter and then as a theatre manager.〔WWI Draft Registration Card; “Russell Mack, 79, Ex-Film Director,” ''New York Times'', June 3, 1972, p. 32.〕 In 1911 he formed a vaudeville duo with pianist Blanche Vincent, and they toured as “Mack and Vincent” with some success on the Orpheum circuit, in addition to managing cabarets in New York City.〔“News of the Cabarets,” ''Variety'' 30:10 (May 9, 1913), p. 17; “New Acts This Week,” ''Variety'' 46:8 (April 20, 1917), p. 12.〕 Vincent was often identified as Mack’s wife, but there is no confirmation that they actually married. The duo disbanded in 1919 and Mack embarked on a stage career, with brief returns to vaudeville in 1921–22. After minor roles in two shows by Oscar Hammerstein II, ''Joan of Arkansaw'' (1919) and ''Always You'' (1920), he was featured in ''The Gingham Girl'' (1923–24). Thereafter he starred in almost a dozen productions on Broadway. His credits included the successful musical ''My Girl'' (1924–25); ''The Four Flusher'' (1924–25), which he also produced; ''Square Crooks'', a 1926 comedy; and another successful comedy, ''The Little Spitfire'' (1926–27). His final performance was as the lead in a 1927 farce, ''Storm Center''.
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