Frederick Hart Pollock

Frederick Hart Pollock (22 June 1842 – 10 November 1908) was an actor and publican, remembered as the lessee-manager of the Theatre Royal, Adelaide, South Australia.

[2] In 1879 they took the P&O steamer Siam in company with Titheradge to Melbourne, where both men appeared in the Australian debut of the Kotzebue play False Shame at the Academy of Music[3] (later the "Bijou Theatre").

[6] He then joined James Allison and George Rignold in managing the Adelaide company of Joseph Derrick's play Confusion which toured through Victoria and New South Wales.

[10] When Reeve retired from stage management in 1900, Pollock purchased the lease from him, and ran the Theatre Royal with considerable tact and ability until forced by illness to step down.

Pollock's chief interests outside the theatre were the turf, his pony "Dandy", his little dogs "Topsy" and "Queenie", and his membership of the Commissionaire Corps of the Volunteer Militia, into which he had been introduced by Reeve.

F. H. Pollock 1890