production of
The Show-Off (1937) Arthur Wilson was born in
Tyler, Texas, the youngest of five children. At age seven, the year of his father's death, he began to earn a living by performing in churches in Tyler. When he was eight years old he was earning $18 a week, singing and playing in tent shows. By 1908 he was in Chicago in the repertory company of the
Pekin Theatre, the first legitimate black theatre in the United States. By then he had earned the nickname "Dooley", for his
whiteface impersonation of an
Irishman singing a song called "Mr. Dooley". 's
The Long Voyage Home, comprised in the production
One-Act Plays of the Sea (1937) Part of the emerging African American theatre scene, Wilson worked with the
Anita Bush company in New York City in 1914 and with
Charles Gilpin's stock company at the
Lafayette Theatre in
Harlem in 1915. He performed in
James Reese Europe's band, and after World War I he toured Europe with his own band, The Red Devils, throughout the 1920s. in the Federal Theatre Project production of
Androcles and the Lion (1938) Working in the U.S. again during the
Great Depression, Wilson starred in
Rudolph Fisher's ''Conjur' Man Dies'' (1936) and other plays for the
Federal Theatre Project's
Negro Theatre Unit, then under the direction of
John Houseman. His breakthrough role came in 1940, with his portrayal of Little Joe in the Broadway musical
Cabin in the Sky. This won him a contract with
Paramount Pictures in Hollywood. He found himself playing Pullman porters while his stage role in the
MGM film adaptation of
Cabin in the Sky was played by
Eddie "Rochester" Anderson. ==
Casablanca==