Charles Coghlan began his stage career in 1859 as a minor player with the
Sadler's Wells Theatre's summer tour. During their engagement in Dublin, Ireland, Coghlan approached
John Baldwin Buckstone, then manager of the
Haymarket Theatre, with a play he had written. Buckstone passed on the play, but instead gave him the chance to play Monsieur Mafoi, a small role in
The Pilgrim of Love, a play adapted by
Lord Byron from Irving's
Tales of the Alhambra, that opened at the Haymarket on 9 April 1860. Over the following few seasons Coghlan would play a number of supporting roles that steadily increased his stature as an actor. In 1868 he played Charles Surface in Sheridan's
School for Scandal at the
St James's Theatre, and later that year played Sir Oscar opposite
Adelaide Neilson in
Marston's Life for Life at the
Prince of Wales Theatre. Coghlan would remain with Prince of Wales over the next seven or eight seasons, playing leading roles such as Geoffrey Delamayn in
Collins' Man and Wife and Harry Speadbrow in Gilbert's
Sweethearts. In 1876
Augustin Daly brought Coghlan to America where he would spend the greater balance of his career. He made his Broadway debut on 12 September 1876, at the
Fifth Avenue Theater, as Alfred Evelyn in
Lord Lytton's Money and was an instant success. Two months later, at the same venue, Coghlan played Orlando opposite
Fanny Davenport's Rosalind in Shakespeare's
As You Like It. The next season Coghlan was engaged as the leading man at the Union Square Theater, where he played Jean Remind during the successful run of Augustus R. Cazauran's
The Celebrated Case. He returned to London in 1881 to play Col. Woods, U.S.A. in the long-running
The Colonel, produced at the Prince of Wales. On 13 December 1890 Coughlan was declared bankrupt. He had liabilities of £315. The pinnacle of Coghlan's near twenty-five-year career in America came on 2 December 1898, at the Fifth Avenue Theater in his own adaptation of the
Dumas' play
Kean titled
The Royal Box, in which he played the part of the actor Clarence. This great success was tempered the following year by the failure of his play
Citizen Pierre, in which he made his last New York performance. During his career Coghlan had played opposite his sister,
Rose Coghlan, and in support of
Lillie Langtry and
Minnie Maddern Fiske. His last appearance on the stage was at
Houston, Texas, on 28 October 1899, as Clarence in
The Royal Box. ==Marriage==