He appeared in many theatrical productions from the 1860s to the early 1900s in New York City,
Boston, and
London. He was best known for his long collaboration with
William H. Crane, which lasted over ten years. They appeared together in
Our Bachelors,
Sharps and Flats,
The Henrietta,
The Merry Wives of Windsor, and
She Stoops to Conquer. They were perhaps most popular as the two Dromios in
The Comedy of Errors. Robson was an eccentric comedian who had a curious voice that was often described as the "Robson Squeek". His first marriage was to Margaret Eleanor Johnson in about 1858. They had a daughter, Alicia Virginia Robson. Margaret died in 1890. Robson married Mary Dougherty, an actress who went by the stage name of
May Waldron, in 1891. They had a son, Stuart Robson, Jr., who also acted briefly on the stage in New York and subsequently ran a magic shop there for many years. ==Later years==