William S. Hart (born December 6, 1864, Newburgh, New York, U.S.—died June 23, 1946, Newhall, California) was an American stage and silent film actor who was the leading hero of the early westerns.
(Read Lillian Gish’s 1929 Britannica essay on silent film.)
Hart was brought up in the Dakotas, where he lived until he was 16. He made his first appearance on the stage in 1889 and soon made a name for himself, especially for his performances in Shakespearean plays. In 1905 his role in the play The Squaw Man made him a western hero. After acting in the stage productions of The Virginian (1907) and The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1912/14), he went to Hollywood, where his portrayals of stern, taciturn Westerners became enormously successful. He directed and starred in a number of films for Thomas H. Ince’s movie company, creating harshly realistic films of frontier life that were popular throughout the world. Among his pictures were Hell’s Hinges (1916), The Dawn Maker (1916), Truthful Tulliver (1916), and The Square Deal Man (1917). Hart also wrote and produced many of his movies.
Hart’s later films include Wild Bill Hickok (1923), Singer Jim McKee (1924), and Tumbleweeds (1925). He also penned several volumes of fiction, including A Lighter of Flames (1923) and Hoofbeats (1933), and an autobiography, My Life East and West (1929).