The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater

EVANS, CHARLES EVAN

(1856-1945)
Born in Rochester, New York, and on stage from age 13, the "dean of American comedians" and sometime manager racked up 75 years in theatre. He made his child debut inlegitimatetheatre, but launched his adult career in variety, as part of a trio, Bryant, Evans, & Hoey, then in the two-act, Evans & Hoey. In 1885, they began performingCharles H. Hoyt'sA Parlor Match, which "gave Messrs. Evans & Hoey an opportunity to display their peculiar and entertaining antics" (New York Times, 28 April 1885). Evans set a record of 3,600 performances in that play, capped by Bill Hoey's return to the show for an 1896 revival, with the same "energy and effectiveness" animating "all the old absurdities" (New York Times, 22 September 1896).
Evans had already ventured into management with his lease of the Herald Square Theatre, which he opened in 1894 with the first American production of George Bernard Shaw'sArms and the Man, starringRichard Mansfieldas Bluntschli andBeatrice Cameronas Raina. In association withFlorenz Ziegfeld Jr., Evans brought Anna Held to America in 1896. After managerial vicissitudes, he returned to acting, enjoying star appearances under B. C. Whitney's management in 1909, touring with the Henry Duffy Players, playing the Orpheumvaudevillecircuit with his wife Helena Phillips, moving intocharacterroles, and finally, motion picture acting.