Barbara Leaming's Welles bio makes repeated references to this fellow as one of OW's earliest rivals for acclaim at the Todd School. By her description, he was one of the few people around whose star shone as bright - if not, at times, brighter - than Welles' own during those impressionable years.
She describes him as going on to a career as a commercial artist and illustrator of some renown and offers a few of his memories of the Todd years, but that's about it. Like his school chum, Hascy Tarbox passed in some years ago, I believe.
It seems a bit odd, though, that for all the space Leaming devotes to this person and for all the early competition he apparently presented for Welles, there is little other trace of him anywhere, by my informal research, at least. It's odder still when you consider that a name like that alone should be enough to cement a person a definite place in history (with all due respect to his namesake grandson who, I understand, is still very much among us).
I suppose he intrigues me because, according to Leaming at least, he used to give Orson Welles a real run for his money long before Orson Welles became "Orson Welles".
Does anyone happen to know anything more about him? Ever seen examples of his work? Do all Welles bios accord him a similar stature? Did the two mens' paths ever cross again?
Don't mind me... this is just a minor, though niggling, preoccupation with some of the more obscure elements of the Welles saga...

