Walter Bentley | |
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1880 newspaper image of Bentley for his appearance at the Criterion Theatre in Sydney, Australia
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Born |
William Begg 7 October 1849 Edinburgh, Scotland |
Died | 19 September 1927 Sydney, New South Wales, Australia |
(aged 77)
Occupation | Shakespearean stage actor |
Years active | 1873–1920 |
Walter Bentley (born William Begg; 7 October 1849 – 19 September 1927) was a Scottish actor who specialized in Shakespearean roles and productions. He became popular in his adopted country of Australia for performing and promoting the theatre. He helped found the Australian Actors' Association and established Walter Bentley's College of Elocution and Dramatic Art which later became the Sydney Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.
Bentley was born as William Begg in Edinburgh, Scotland, the son of Maria Faithful and the Reverend James Begg, a Presbyterian preacher and one of the founders of the Free Church of Scotland. Bentley wanted to be a stage actor but was met with disapproval from both his father and his aunt, the women's rights activist Emily Faithfull. He signed on with the White Star Line as an apprentice seaman, but jumped ship in Australia in 1867 following a quarrel on board ship. He found work as a jackeroo on a sheep station in Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia and then, in 1871, settled with his brother in Dunedin, New Zealand.
While working for the city of Dunedin, Bentley began performing in amateur theatrical productions. In 1873, he became a professional full-time actor in local theatre in New Zealand. He moved to London, England in 1874 and formally adopted the stage name of Walter Bentley. He became the protege of Henry Irving from 1876 through 1878, performing at Irving's Lyceum Theatre in London. During subsequent years, Bentley toured throughout the British provinces. He spent three years in the United States performing the lead role of Wilfred Denver in The Silver King.
In the early 1890s, Bentley was invited to tour Australia by George Coppin. His first performances for Coppin in Rob Roy, Hamlet and Othello at Melbourne's Theatre Royal were well received. After a brief tour in New Zealand, Bentley returned to Sydney, Australia where he successfully performed and produced plays under his own production company. For the next two decades, Bentley toured throughout the Australian territories and he established himself as the premier Shakespearean actor in the country. Bentley also performed during tours in England, New Zealand and South Africa. Bentley based himself in Brisbane, Queensland where he created the Waiter Bentley Dramatic Art Classes to teach Shakespeare's plays.