J. Warren Kerrigan

5/5

Biography

Very popular American star of silent films who left the business at the height of his career. While barely in his teens, he worked as a warehouse clerk until a chance arrived to appear in a vaudeville production. He continued to act in traveling stock productions, though he took a brief time away from the stage to attend the University of Illinois. By the time he was thirty, he had begun to make appearances in films for Essanay and Biograph. A contract with the American Film Corporation opened the door to leading roles, often as a well-dressed and elegant man-about-town. Universal Pictures lured him with a better deal and he quickly rose to stardom there. A glib remark about his refusal to enlist in the American army after the U.S. entry into World War I cost him both sympathy with audiences and the support of the studios. He began to work less frequently and for more minor studios. When director 'James Cruze' , Kerrigan found himself back on top, appearing in dashing leads in several important pictures. However, within a year, he decided to abandon his film career while at its zenith. His stardom had given him the freedom to live freely and easily without working, which is how he lived out the rest of his life. Supposedly he made a few small appearances in supporting roles just before his death in June, 1947.

  • Primary profession
  • Actor·director·writer
  • Country
  • United States
  • Nationality
  • American
  • Gender
  • Male
  • Birth date
  • 25 July 1879
  • Place of birth
  • Louisville· Kentucky
  • Death date
  • 1947-06-09
  • Death age
  • 68
  • Place of death
  • Balboa Island· Newport Beach
  • Cause of death
  • Natural causes

Movies

Books

Trivia

Brother of actress Kathleen Kerrigan.

Most sources give Kerrigans birth name as either James Warren Kerrigan or Jack Warren Kerrigan.

According to family members, as chronicled by author/biographer William J, Mann in "Behind The Screen" , it was far more than Kerrigans stance on The Big War and who should have to be drafted that put a damper on his career, but his refusal to marry, his dedication to his mother and to his lover, James Vincent, all of whom were ensconced in one home, that also contributed to the end of his career in Hollywood. In the changing times of the early studios, without the "protection" of a business manager and publicist, Kerrigan was at the mercy of a ruthless public.

In the 1920s, he lived with his mother and his life partner at 2307 Cahuenga Boulevard in Hollywood, in an area now very close to the Hollywood Bowl and the Cahuenga entrance to the 101 Freeway.

Brother of Wallace Kerrigan.

Comments