His father was John Hackett, and his grandfather was noted Kentucky frontiersman and militiaman of the American Revolution, Peter Hackett.
Steve Hackett | Mims Hackett | Buddy Hackett | Bobby Hackett | Hackett | John Hackett | Grant Hackett | Michael Hackett | John Winthrop Hackett | John Hackett (musician) | Hackett, Australian Capital Territory | Castle Hackett | Walter C. Hackett | Steve Hackett's | Robert A. Hackett | Peter Hackett | Michael Hackett (athlete) | Leah Hackett | John Hackett (British Army officer) | James K. Hackett | Harold Hackett | Hackett (township) | Hackett London | Edward M. Hackett | Daniel Hackett | Bobby Hackett (swimmer) | A. J. Hackett |
The film was based on a 1921 play, of the same name, written by Walter C. Hackett.
For the American architect see Edward M. Hackett
The following season she played opposite Skinner in Charles Frohman’s production of Sire at the Criterion Theatre and in 1912 with James K. Hackett in The Grain of Dust also staged at the Criterion.
He was responsible for the construction of a number of significant Revolutionary War-era warship for the fledgling country, including the USS Raleigh (1776), USS Ranger (1777), USS America (1782), USS Congress (1799), USS Portsmouth (1798), two cutters for the United States Revenue Cutter Service, as well as the Crescent, built for Algiers as tribute.
In an address to the Rochester Community Players on September 25, 1941, at the Sagamore Hotel, Hackett expounded on his theory of acting.
He was unsuccessful in a run for the U.S. Congress in 1896, but won a seat ten years later representing North Carolina's 8th congressional district in the 60th United States Congress (defeating incumbent Republican E. Spencer Blackburn).
Robert A. Hackett, professor and researcher at the School of Communication, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver
In various projects he has analyzed California’s wetfish industry complex, California’s Dungeness crab fishery and associated processing sector, and the California and Oregon salmon fisheries.
The original bridge was in 1986 used by A. J. Hackett for the first jumps testing the equipment for what was to eventually become the world's first commercial bungee jumping company.
Several of his stage works (such as Captain Applejack, Freedom of the Seas, Regeneration, Hyde Park Corner, The Gay Adventure, 77 Rue Chalgrin, The Barton Mystery, It Pays to Advertise, 77 Park Lane, It Pays to Advertise and Other Men's Wives) were adapted for film.