Either that, or he's the finest actor since Edwin Booth.
There was no outcry when Edwin Booth took that role.
But he was pulled to safety by Edwin Booth, the well known actor and brother of the man who would kill his father a year later.
Neither did his son Edwin Booth, who left to pursue his acting career.
I remember when the great Edwin Booth came to Centennial in 1891.
Edwin Booth calmed his audience and the show went on.
He and his elder brother Edwin Booth remain popular stage actors into the 1880s.
Edwin Booth was famous for the role in New York in the 1860s and 1870s.
He attended Edwin Booth, the actor, on his death bed.
Not for him the haunted quality Edwin Booth brought to the role.