Jerome Sykes


Jerome Sykes was an American stage actor, singer and comedian. His parents were Henry Seitz and Mary E Schmidt. He was perhaps best known for his performances as Foxy Quiller in two theatrical productions. His brother Albert S Sykes was also an actor.
Sykes was born in Washington, D.C., under the name of Henry Karl August Seitz and grew up in a house where part of the Library of Congress now stands. He "was a member of a famous family of actors..."
Sykes' professional debut came in the 1884-1885 season in a performance of The Mikado with the Ford Opera Company in Baltimore. His biggest Broadway success was The Billionaires which had in its cast May Robson and Sallie Fisher and was the New York debut of Marie Doro. His other Broadway credits included Foxy Quiller , Chris and the Wonderful Lamp, and The Three Dragoons.
Sykes portrayed Constable Foxy Quiller in The Highwayman, which became popular enough that it resulted in a sequel, Foxy Quiller.
During a party feted for Sykes and The Billionaires in Chicago, Sykes caught pneumonia, while wearing too few clothes in the dead of winter, and died at 37. He was buried in Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn New York. After his body was temporarily stored in a receiving tomb at Greenwood Cemetery, he was buried at St. James Episcopal Cemetery in St. James, New York, where his family had a summer residence for many years.
Sykes was married twice, to Agnes Sherwood, who died in 1896 and to actress Jessie Wood.