American director and erstwhile actor. Originally a performer on the stock and vaudeville circuits, especially the Mittenthal Bros. circuit, he appeared with his wife Josephine Foy in a vaudeville show entitled "The Inspector." Noticed in this show by producer Thomas H. Ince, Sidney entered films in approximately 1913 as a performer and quickly was promoted to directing pictures. He involved himself in production as a minority owner of the Christie Film Company. He attempted retirement, but was coaxed back into directing by Syd Chaplin, whom he directed in Charley's Aunt (1925). While visiting London in 1928, he died at 56 of a heart attack.
Directing
47
Male
1874-04-27
London, England, UK
Harry Wilbur Siggins
Matrimony
The Toast of Death
Mr. Fatima
Getting Gertie's Goat
Tarzan of the Apes
Charley's Aunt
The Adventures of Tarzan
Stay Single
'Twas Henry's Fault
Kidding Katie
The Nervous Wreck
Her Rustic Romeo
813
Seven Days
The Scrub
A Case of Poison
A Lucky Blowout
College Days
The Gangsters and the Girl
Madame Behave
Hold Your Breath
Alf's Carpet
Call the Wagon
Done in Oil
Stop Flirting
A Two Cylinder Courtship
The Million Dollar Handicap
No Parking
Reckless Romance
The Wrong Mr. Wright
Let Me Explain
The Road to Love
Saving Sister Susie
Bullets and Brown Eyes
Hard Luck
Somebody's Widow
Never Again
A Flower in the Desert
A Crook's Sweetheart
The Spark Eternal
Parson Larkin's Wife
From Out of the Dregs
The Wharf Rats
The Play's the Thing
No Control
The Green Swamp