At his suggestion, both he and Sybil (who once aspired to be a
concert pianist) tried acting as a career in 1903. Russell was severely wounded at
Gallipoli and discharged. He rejoined Ben Greet's theatre company and his sister at the
Old Vic in 1916, where he played in
Shakespeare's
King John,
Richard II, and
King Lear. Thorndike also acted with Sybil and her husband,
Lewis Casson, in their touring repertory performing melodramas. In 1922 he was applauded for his performance in the first professional production of
Henrik Ibsen's
Peer Gynt at the Old Vic. In film, Thorndike's appearances were infrequent. He played
Macbeth (1922) in a silent version of the play opposite Sybil's Lady and also played leads in silent versions of other classic plays, including
Scrooge (1923) as Old Ebenezer, and
The School for Scandal (1923) as Sir Peter Teazle. He ended his film career in minor priest roles for Laurence Olivier in
Hamlet (1948) and
Richard III (1955). Although Thorndike appeared on the stage over four decades (including playing his own Dr. Syn character and entertaining audiences as Smee in ten revivals of
Peter Pan, including the famous
Scala Theatre version where
Donald Sinden doubled the roles of Mr Darling and Captain Hook), he felt a deeper fulfilment in writing, which would include the later work
The House of Jeffreys. ==Writing==