Queer Places:
Princess St, Llanelli SA15 2TB, Regno Unito
Motion Picture & Television Fund, 23388 Mulholland Dr, Woodland Hills, CA 91364, Stati Uniti
Masonic Memorial Gardens, 437 Stoker Ave, Reno, NV 89503, Stati Uniti
Gareth Hughes (23 August 1894 – 1 October 1965) was a Welsh stage and silent screen actor. Usually cast as a callow, sensitive hero in Hollywood silent films, Hughes got his start on stage during childhood and continued to play youthful leads on Broadway.
Born William John Hughes into a working-class family in Dafen, Carmarthenshire, after working with a number of UK touring companies he joined a group of Welsh players. He played Desdemona. The group took a tour to the United States in 1913, and although not successful Hughes was spotted in Chicago, and stayed in America to pursue his acting career. After a series of small roles on Broadway, broke into the big time with August Stridberg's "Easter". James Barrie's "The New Word" and then Oscar Wilde's "Salome" established Hughes as a bona fide Broadway sensation. Barely twenty, he danced the nights away with Isadora Duncan.
Hughes was a private in the US Army during WWI, stationed at Camp Wadsworth, Spartanburg, SC. Though he never saw action, he came to Hollywood fully credentialed as having the "right stuff." Producer Ryszard Ordynski brought Hughes out to Los Angeles in 1917 to play in a revival of "Everyman," and Hughes set about conquering Hollywood as well. He moved with the gay crowd of Ordynski and his lover, Famous Players set designer George James Hopkins, and was pals with Alla Nazimova.
Hughes starred in "Every Mother's Son" for Fox in 1918, playing a pacifist.
Hughes's earlier screen work was with Clara Kimball Young in Eyes of Youth (1919) and with Marguerite Clark in Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch (1920). He was teamed with Viola Dana in The Chorus Girl's Romance (1920) He signed with Metro Pictures and was loaned to Famous Players Lasky for Sentimental Tommy (1921), probably his best film role.
Even though he had already appeared in many films before this, he regarded Sentimental Tommy as his favourite and most successful. His star blazed bright and fast and by the mid-1920s had burned itself out. Hughes would later write of problems with alcohol and a growing sense of discontentment in his life. He made a popular return to the stage in "The Dunce Boy" in 1925, but had no follow-up. He made forty-five films from 1918 to 1931. He was also the Welsh dialect coach on The Corn Is Green (1945) starring Bette Davis. Cecil B. DeMille called him "a young idealist", and Fulton Oursler described him as "the charm boy to end all charm boys".
In 1929 like many others he lost his fortune in the Wall Street crash and was left penniless, but he carried on making films until 1931 when he appeared in Scareheads. He then decided to leave the world of film and return to theatre, which had always been his first love. His last performance ran for 18 weeks at the Hollywood Playhouse in 1938, where he starred as Shylock in the Merchant of Venice.
In the early 1940s Hughes experienced a calling to God. Adopting the name of Brother David, in 1944 he became an Episcopal missionary to the Paiute Indians on the Pyramid Lake Reservation of Nevada. Hughes spent almost 14 years with his "children" as he liked to call them.
In 1958 Hughes decided to return to Llanelli to spend his final years. But he longed for the sunshine of the West Coast, and after five months he returned to California. Later Hughes moved into the Motion Picture Country Home in Woodland Hills where he had his own cottage. He baptised silent film actress Clara Kimball Young prior to her death. He died in 1965 of complications from byssinosis, a lint-born respiratory disease he contracted from years of sorting donated clothing at Pyramid Lake, and his cremated remains were buried at the Masonic Memorial Gardens cemetery in Reno, Nevada.[2]
In 2000 the first TV documentary on Hughes's life was produced by Nant Films in collaboration with Stephen Lyons, Hughes's biographer. The programme, in Welsh, was broadcast on S4C. In 2008, his relative Kelvin Guy made a film In Search of Gareth Hughes, which has received only limited release. It has not been broadcast and the film has not been made available for public viewing.[3]
In 2000, a bronze plaque to Gareth's memory was mounted in Parc Howard Museum (Llanelli) by Stephen Lyons and Gareth's niece; later the same year, a blue plaque at Hughes' boyhood dwelling on Princess Street in Llanelli was unveiled by members of his family. Stephen Lyons, Llanelli Community Heritage and relative Kelvin Guy are responsible for these tributes to this star of the silent film.[4]
The National Library of Wales has designated biographer Stephen Lyons's web site as part of Wales's documentary heritage.[5]
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