Wayland Trask Jr. (July 16, 1887 - November 18, 1918) was a
silent film comedian who was a member of
Mack Sennett's stock company of actors. Trask also had a theatrical background appearing in at least two Broadway plays before turning to screen comedy. He died at the end of 1918 in the
Spanish Influenza pandemic eleven months after the disease had taken his mother. Trask's father was a stockbroker who died in 1905. Trask also had two sisters. In looks he was tall like Chaplin's co-star
Eric Campbell and resembled the later Sennett comedian Kewpie Morgan. Some of his performances in Sennett comedies survive such as ''Bombs'' (aka ''Bombs and Brides'').
[''Who Was Who on Screen'', 3rd Edition; c.1983, by Evelyn Mack Truitt]
Partial filmography
*''A Game Old Knight'' (1915)
*''The Great Vacuum Robbery'' (1915)
*''
Fatty and the Broadway Stars'' (1915)
*''The Feathered Nest'' (1916)
*''The Great Pearl Tangle'' (1916)
*''
Fatty and Mabel Adrift'' (1916)
*''A Movie Star'' (1916)
*''Fido's Fate'' (1916)
*''His Hereafter'' (1916)
*''His Auto Fruination'' (1916)
*''The Judge'' (1916)
*''A Love Riot'' (1916)
*''By Stork Delivery'' (1916)
*''His Bread and Butter'' (1916)
*''
The Pullman Bride'' (1917)
*''
Watch Your Neighbor'' (1918)
References
External links
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Trask Jr, Wayland
1887 births
1918 deaths
Deaths from Spanish flu
Male actors from New York City