Rudolph Carpos, the Clown of Vaudeville Days

The N.V.A. burial ground location for clown Rudolph Carpos.

The N.V.A. burial ground location for clown Rudolph Carpos.

Kensico Vaudeville Project #: 10
Name: Rudolph Carpos
Act: Clown
Born: 9 Sept 1875, Vienna, Austria
Died: 4 Nov 1935, New York City

There are two different gravestones for Rudolph Carpos, a professional clown who was beloved by vaudeville audiences.

He was born Rudolph Karp on 9 September 1875 in Vienna, Austria. In 1914 he toured Sydney and Newcastle, Australia, before sailing to Hawaii aboard the Ventura. During World War I he registered for the draft and was swept up in anti-German sentiment; his name appearing in the New York Herald with hundreds of men under the headline, “On File in the State Census as Austrian Aliens” with his name and street address.

In 1918 Carpos lived at 104 East 14th Street and was working the Western circuit out of the Majestic Theatre building. In 1921 he applied to become a citizen in New York. In 1927 when Marceline Orbes, a famous vaudeville clown, committed suicide, Carpos was among the vaudeville community to pay his respects when the performer was taken from Frank E. Campbell’s funeral church to Kensico by the N.V.A.

Rudolph Carpos second gravestone.

Rudolph Carpos second gravestone.


Carpos married a French immigrant, Anita. In 1930 the couple was living at 353 W. 49th Street in Hell’s Kitchen. They parted soon after. On 3 Sept. 1935 in Manhattan he married Annette Brose. Two months later Rudolph Carpos died on 4 November. An ad in Billboard was placed by Anita Carpos. Unlike others in the N.V.A. section, the deceased actor has two gravestones. The one likely purchased by his family has space for a spouse’s name that was never put on it.

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Sources:

  • United States, Selective Service System. World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. New York; Registration County: New York; Roll: 1786813; Draft Board: 153
  • The National Archives and Records Administration; Washington, D.C.; Petitions for Naturalization from the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, 1897-1944; Series: M1972; Roll: 209
    New York Times, 9 Nov. 1927, p. 25
  • United States. Census Bureau. Washington: GPO. 1930; Census Place: Manhattan, New York, New York; Roll: 1551; Page: 18B; Enumeration District:0353; Image: 230.0; FHL microfilm: 2341286
  • Billboard, 7 Nov. 1935, p. 27
  • Travalanche, accessed 25 April 2015