Irene Delroy

[2] During a visit of that company to New York City in 1920, she left the group to join a fledgling production, A Night Off, in Plainfield, New Jersey.

Delroy returned to Chicago and joined a production of Angel Face, which soon ended during a strike by the Actors' Equity Association.

[5] A review of Greenwich Village Follies published in The New York Times on December 25, 1925, noted that Delroy was "radiantly beautiful and sweetly graceful and tuneful" in the production.

[6] Hans J. Wollstein, writing on the AllMovie website, described Delroy as being "completely wasted by the new audible motion picture industry in 1930.

[9] He was president of Island Park Associates, Inc., the company that operated Atlantic Beach and part of Rockaway Point.