Smooth as Silk (actress) Deep Yellow (actress) Trick for Trick (writer)
Children
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Shirley Warde (January 23, 1901 - October 1991) was an American
actress and
playwright who starred in theater productions throughout the 1910s through the 1930s, movie productions from the 1930s through the 1940s, and produced theater and
radio play scripts for most of her life from the 1920s onwards. Born and raised in
New York City, she attended the
Ethical Culture School for theater from a young age and began starring in shows even while still a teenager. She received multiple
female lead character roles and was well known for her ambition to produce and direct theater as well.
While publishing short stories in popular magazines, Warde also began focusing more on script writing, officially abandoning theater in 1934 to move into radio production. This also led her to join the
Writers' War Board during
World War II. Throughout her adult life, she also heavily participated in the
Baháʼí Faith, eventually traveling to Belize in the 1960s as a missionary and deciding to remain there as a local playwright.
Career
Born in
Washington Heights, Manhattan,[1] Warde first began acting at the age of six when she put together a self-written play for her Ethical Culture School.[2] At the drama school, she was taught by
Ada Currier and worked on writing several plays in addition to acting.[3] Her official debut was at fourteen in the cast of The Merry Wives of Windsor production at the
Criterion Theatre.[2] The theatre roles she had available expanded afterwards, leading to her having a major position in The Music Master and a series of
stock company performances in the years following at the theater she personally opened and organized.[4] Her follow-up major casting was as the female lead in Smooth as Silk. The play's massive success facilitated her lead positions in most productions afterwards, such as playing the "wicked woman" in the 1926 production of Yellow.[2]
At the same time, she also had her own thoughts about plays and began writing pieces of plots and scripts in her free time, constantly carrying a notepad and pencil whenever she left home.[2] She stated in a 1922 interview with The Boston Globe that she strongly desired to become a
theater producer and be involved in every part of production, including choosing the cast and the sets, even directing.[3] In 1924, she submitted her play script for What's the Use to a best American screenwriter competition.[5]Rupert Hughes suggested to her in 1927 that she take her notes and put together full stories that could be submitted to magazines,[2] which she started doing with her short stories in publications such as Nash's Magazine[6] and Cosmopolitan.[7]
By that time, she had also finished writing two full plays, which had already seen use by the stock company she had created in years prior. The manuscripts were being considered for full theatre production by separate theater managers in 1927.[8] One of her stories was later in 1929 chosen for production in
Samuel Goldwyn's
talkies and Warde began working on a novel about theatrical life with
Vivien Crosby as her co-author.[7] During the same time period when she published her short story The Economist in the New York Daily News in 1934, Warde had officially quit acting and moved into radio broadcasting.[9]
Warde joined the commercial production department of the
Columbia Broadcasting Company in 1934[10] and was noted by Peter Dixon in The World-News as having made "a reputation as one of the most skillful producers and directors in radio."[11] She ended up being writer and assistant producer for the
Charlie McCarthy radio show.[12] After the United States entered into
World War II, she joined the
Writers' War Board and began producing radio plays for the war effort.[13]
During her theatre years, Warde lived in an apartment next to
Central Park so she could engage in her hobby of
horse riding.[2] She married Reginald Warde and they had a daughter together. But she filed for divorce in September 1925, citing his abandonment of the family on July 26, 1925.[41] In March 1927, Warde inherited her late uncle's horse farm in
Mansfield, Wyoming and its 500 horses. She planned to not only breed more Blue Ribbon winning
saddle horses, but also organized with New York City mayor
Jimmy Walker to have some of the horses be used in Central Park and in summer camps so children could enjoy them.[42]
Warde was a member of the
Baháʼí Faith and frequently attended the annual public conference.[4][43] She later became an
expatriate to Belize as a missionary for the Baháʼí Faith in the 1960s and stayed longer than expected to produce local plays.[18]