Charles Frohman
On May 7, 1915, the RMS Lusitania sank in the Atlantic Ocean, and among those who perished that day was Charles Frohman, an American theatrical producer and theatre manager who had spent his career working in the English-language stage world.
Frohman was born in Sandusky in 1860, a United States citizen who worked across several professional roles over the course of his life. The available record identifies him as an impresario, a theatre manager, and a theatrical producer, as well as a manufacturer. His professional language was English, situating his work within the English-speaking theatre.
As an impresario and theatrical producer, Frohman's work involved organizing and overseeing stage productions. His role as a theatre manager further indicates that his responsibilities extended to the administration of theatrical venues and the productions staged within them. These occupational identities — impresario, theatrical producer, theatre manager, and manufacturer — defined the professional dimensions of his career, though the precise chronology and scope of those activities are not detailed in the available record.
Frohman died on May 7, 1915, when the RMS Lusitania went down in the Atlantic Ocean. His death in 1915 marks the fixed endpoint of a career carried out under the occupational identities of impresario, theatrical producer, and theatre manager.
Quotes by Charles Frohman


This little ship you sent is more wonderful than the big one that takes me away from you.


