Leslie T. Peacocke
Captain Leslie Tufnell Peacocke (1872 - March 5, 1941) was an actor, screenwriter, and director in the United States.
He ws born in Bangalore, British Raj and served in the Connaught Rangers before emigrating to the United States.
In 1919 he wrote on behalf of Democracy Film Corporation about producing a film adaptation of The Souls of Black Folk.[1] His film Injustice was a response to Thomas Dixon Jr.'s The Clansman.[2]
His book Hints on Photoplay Writing from his articles in Photoplay Magazine was published in 1916. A photo of the author appears at the beginning of the book.[3]
His films include adaptations of stories by .[4]
He was an actor in the 1929 show A Comedy of Women at the Ambassador Theatre.[5]
Filmography[]
Actor[]
- His Neighbor's Wife (1913) as Captain Roberts
- (1916) as Minister of Foreign Affairs[6]
- Bab the Fixer (1917) as John Porter
- (1917) as Jonathan Brownlee[6]
- (1918) as Glory's father[6]
- Shadows of Suspicion (1919) as Chief of Scotland Yard
- The Vanishing Dagger (1920)
- Black Beauty (1921) as Lord Wynwaring. Film is partially extant.
Writer[]
- Neptune's Daughter (1914)[6]
- Salvation Nell (1915)[6]
- Help! (1916) [6]
- (1916)[6]
- (1916)[6]
- The Clean Gun (1917)
- Mentioned in Confidence (1917)[6]
- (1917)[6]
- (1917)[6]
- (1917)[6]
- (1917)
- Whatever the Cost (1918)
- (1919)
- Injustice (1919)
- Reformation (1919)[6]
Director[]
- (1917)[7]
- (1917)
- (1917)[8]
- (1918) with Stan Laurel
- Reformation (1919), a Sidney P. Dones film[9]
- (1919)
- (1920)
- (1923)
- (1923)[6]
References[]
- ^ "Letter from Democracy Film Corporation to W. E. B. Du Bois, August 1, 1919". credo.library.umass.edu.
- ^ Lucia, Cynthia; Simon, Art; Grundmann, Roy (25 June 2015). American Film History: Selected Readings, Origins to 1960. ISBN 9781118475164.
- ^ Peacocke, Leslie T. (1916). "Hints on Photoplay Writing: Compiled from the Series of Articles Written for Photoplay Magazine and which Were Published 1915-1916".
- ^ "Author and Composer: A Digest for Songwriters, Dramatists, Scenario Writers, Fictionists". 1922.
- ^ "Leslie T. Peacocke – Broadway Cast & Staff | IBDB".
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Capt. Leslie T. Peacocke". www.tcm.com.
- ^ "The Moving Picture World". 1917.
- ^ "Leslie T. Peacocke". BFI.
- ^ Richards, Larry (September 17, 2015). African American Films Through 1959: A Comprehensive, Illustrated Filmography. McFarland. ISBN 9781476610528 – via Google Books.
Categories:
- Film directors from Bangalore
- 1872 births
- 1941 deaths
- 19th-century British Army personnel
- British emigrants to the United States
- American male screenwriters
- American film directors
- 20th-century American male actors
- Male actors from Bangalore
- Connaught Rangers officers
- American male film actors
- Screenwriters from Bangalore