When Wilson left New York's Casino Theatre in 1899 he formed the Francis Wilson Comic Opera Company. His company staged
The Oolah with Wilson as its star in the role of Hoolah Goolah; a work loosely adapted from
Charles Lecocq's
La Jolie Persane which was a stage success. This was followed by
The Merry Monarch (1890, as King Anso IV), which was adapted from
Emmanuel Chabrier's opera ''
L'étoile, and The Lion Tamer'' (1891, as Casimir), which was adapted from Lecocq's operetta
Le Grand Casimir. Other works starring Wilson included
The Little Corporal (1898);
The Strollers (1901);
The Little Father of the Wilderness (1905); and ''The Bachelor's Baby
(1909), which he also wrote. He also appeared in several productions of Rip Van Winkle, and starred in numerous revivals of Erminie''. He was the author of
Joseph Jefferson: Reminiscences of a Fellow Player (1906),
The Eugene Field I Knew (1898), ''Francis Wilson's Life of Himself
(1924), and John Wilkes Booth: Fact and Fiction of Lincoln's Assassination'' (1929), written with information from his close friend
Edwin Booth. Wilson wrote several plays, of which ''The Bachelor's Baby'' was the most successful. He was the founding president of the
Actors' Equity Association; serving in that role from 1913 until his retirement in 1920. ==Family==