Richard Smart (actor)

{{Infobox person

|name = Richard Smart

|image = Richard Smart (actor).jpg

|image_size =

|caption =

|birth_name=Richard Palmer Kaleioku Smart

|birth_date = {{birth date|1913|5|21}}

|birth_place = Honolulu, Hawaii

|death_date = {{death date and age|1992|11|13|1913|5|21}}

|death_place = Oahu

|spouse = Patricia Havens-Monteagle

|children = Gilliard
Antony

|parents = Henry Gaillard Smart
Annie Thelma Parker

|occupation = Actor, Rancher

|nationality = American

}}

Richard Palmer Kaleioku Smart (1913–1992) was an American musical theatre actor and singer who became owner of the largest private ranch in the United States.

Early life

Richard Palmer Kaleioku Smart was born May 21, 1913, in Honolulu. In 1914 the family traveled to Europe, where his mother gave birth to a sister Elizabeth Ella Smart in Paris. By this time World War I was starting, so they hurriedly traveled back to New York City, where the sister died.

His mother (born Annie Thelma Kahiluonapuaapiilani Parker) died shortly after this in San Francisco on November 14, 1914, from tuberculosis. A year later, his father Henry Gaillard Smart (son of a Virginia clergyman) died in November 1915, just after contesting the will.{{cite news |title= H.G. Smart Worth $3,000,000 |date= November 4, 1915 |newspaper= New York Times |url= https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1915/11/04/104656055.pdf |accessdate= 2010-04-01 }}

He was raised by his part-Hawaiian maternal grandmother, born Elizabeth Jane Lanakila Dowsett, by then remarried to Frederick Knight in San Francisco, usually called "Aunt Tootsie".

Although he had many cousins, he became the sole owner of the Parker Ranch on Hawai{{okina}}i Island, founded by his 5th generation ancestor John Palmer Parker (1790–1868). The ranch was managed by Alfred Wellington Carter from 1899 to 1937, then A.W.'s son Hartwell Carter. Already one of the largest owned by a single person (the King Ranch was owned by a corporation), the Carters expanded the operation further through the 20th century. The ranch had over {{convert|500000|acre}} of land and 30,000 head of Hereford cattle.

Smart was sent to Los Gatos High School and become interested in theater.{{Cite news |title= Main Street |work= Los Gatos Weekly-Times |date= February 8, 2006 |author= Mary Ann Cook |url= http://mytown.mercurynews.com/archives/lgwt/20060208/lgmain-street.shtml |accessdate= November 5, 2011 }}

Show business

Smart became a nightclub singer and performed in plays and musicals from 1933 to 1939. Director Joshua Logan hired him for the Broadway theatre production of Two for the Show in 1940.{{cite web |title= Richard Smart |work= Internet Broadway Database |url= http://www.ibdb.com/person.php?id=110958}} and he performed in The Merry Widow.

Smart married actress Patricia Havens-Monteagle from Burlingame, California July 3, 1936, who lived in Beverly Hills, California. Known as Pat Monteagle,{{cite news |title= Starlight Draws Another Socialite To Screen—And She Looks Promising: Few Debs Succeed, But Pat Monteagle May Make the Steep Grade |author= Paul Harrison |date= March 16, 1936 |newspaper= Pittsburgh Press |url= https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=0FIbAAAAIBAJ&pg=3896%2C6470237 |accessdate= 2010-04-01 }} she appeared un-credited in the 1936 movie The Great Ziegfeld, but was more well known as a socialite.{{IMDb name|3488558|Patricia Havens-Monteagle }}

The family moved to Honolulu later in 1940, but then lived in California after the Attack on Pearl Harbor. About {{convert|40000|acre}} of the ranch were leased to the United States Marines for use as Camp Tarawa. The second and fifth divisions trained there.{{cite web |title= History of Pacific War Memorial Project |url= http://www.pacificwarmemorial.org/Pages/AboutUs.htm |accessdate= 2010-04-01}}

He was divorced in 1944.

After the war he appeared under the name Dick Smart. In 1946 and 1947, he starred in the Broadway production of Bloomer Girl with Nanette Fabray and All for Love in 1949.{{cite web |title= Dick Smart |work= Internet Broadway Database|url= http://www.ibdb.com/person.php?id=95662 |accessdate= 2010-04-01}}

Over nearly 30 years, Smart performed on Broadway and in cabarets in the U.S. and abroad. He headlined such clubs as the Coconut Grove in Los Angeles, the Monte Carlo in New York and Le Lido in Paris. After A.W. Carter died in 1949, Smart took a more active role in the ranch.

Back to the ranch

As traditional cattle ranching began to lose money, Smart modernized and diversified the ranch's operation. In 1965 he leased land to Laurance Rockefeller for building the Mauna Kea Beach Hotel on Kauna{{okina}}oa Bay of the Kohala Coast. It was land too dry for cattle, but popular with tourists. He opened a visitors center and museum, and developed entire new towns such as Waikoloa Village on his landholdings. His wealth was an estimated $400 million in 1990.{{cite book |title= All the money in the world: how the Forbes 400 make—and spend—their fortunes |author1= Peter W. Bernstein|author2= Annalyn Swan |date= 2 December 2008 |page=355 |publisher= Knopf Doubleday Publishing |isbn= 9780307267702 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=MQ4KnsyVQh8C&pg=PA355 }}

Starting in 1979 he built the 490-seat Kahilu theater (named after his mother's Hawaiian name) in the town of Waimea, on ranch land, where he performed in occasional productions.{{cite web |title= About Kahilu Theater |work= official web site |publisher= Kahilu Theatre Foundation |url= http://www.kahilutheatre.org/about-kahilu-theatre |accessdate= 2010-04-01 }}

In 1987, Smart sponsored a production of the Jerry Herman musical revue Showtune (then titled Tune the Grand Up) at the Kahilu Theatre. This was the first production of Showtune away from the United States mainland.

His most recent performance was in a one-man musical entitled "Richard Smart Remembers". Smart died July 4, 1992, in Oahu of cancer after a short illness.{{cite news |title=Richard Smart, 79, Hawaiian Rancher With Broadway Ties |author= Mary B. W. Tabor |date= November 15, 1992 |url= https://www.nytimes.com/1992/11/15/nyregion/richard-smart-79-hawaiian-rancher-with-broadway-ties.html | work=The New York Times}}

His estate was left in a trust to benefit North Hawaii Community Hospital, Hawaii Preparatory Academy, Hawaii Community Foundation, and Parker School.{{cite web |title= Richard Palmer Smart: Founder |publisher= Parker Ranch Foundation Trust |url= http://prft.org/index.php/prft/RICHARD_PALMER_SMART |accessdate= November 5, 2011 |url-status= dead |archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20110727184759/http://prft.org/index.php/prft/RICHARD_PALMER_SMART |archivedate= July 27, 2011 }}

James Michener said:

Richard Smart is clearly a talented man. But what really impresses me is how much he is respected by the local people–particularly the native Hawaiians who work for him.{{cite news |title= When His Broadway Star Faded, Hawaii's Richard Smart Found Happiness Back at the Ranch |author= Christopher P. Andersen |work= People Magazine |date= November 21, 1983 |url= http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20198417,00.html |accessdate= 2010-03-30 }}

Son Gilliard "Gil" Smart died in 1999, leaving daughter Willow Parker Smart.

Antony Parker Smart was born August 8, 1937. Antony died June 26, 2007, in Honolulu, leaving daughter Stefanie Lee Havens Smart and son Parker Damon Smart. Stefanie Smart died on August 17, 2011.{{cite news |title= Former ranch owner's son dies |date= June 28, 2007 |newspaper= Honolulu Advertiser |url= http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2007/Jun/28/ln/FP706280329.html |accessdate= 2010-04-01 }}{{cite news |title= Antony Parker Smart 1937-2007: Heir worked on family's famed Big Island ranch |date= June 28, 2007 |newspaper= Honolulu Star-Bulletin |url= http://archives.starbulletin.com/2007/06/28/news/story11.html }}

Family tree

{{Parker Ranch family tree}}

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book|title=Loyal to the Land: The Legendary Parker Ranch 1950-1970|author=Billy Bergin|volume=2|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|year=2006|isbn=978-0-8248-3086-1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hz9yycANu4kC}}
  • {{cite book |title= Parker Ranch of Hawaii: The Saga of a Ranch and a Dynasty |publisher= Mutual Publishing Company |date= September 2004 |author= Joseph Brennan |isbn= 978-1-56647-682-9 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Richard Smart of the Legendary Parker Ranch: Before cowboys became actors |date=October 2011 |publisher= Island Heritage Press |author= William C. Bergin and Dexter Keaweehu Vredenburg}}