Alan Mowbray
Quick Facts
Biography
Alan Mowbray (born Alfred Ernest Allen; 18 August 1896 – 25 March 1969) was an English stage and film actor who found success in Hollywood.
Early life
Mowbray was born in London, England. He served with distinction in the British Army in World War I, being awarded the Military Medal and the French Croix de Guerre for bravery in action. He applied for transfer to the Royal Air Force, which was granted just six days before the war ended. This placed him in London on Armistice Day. His service came to an end when the Royal Air Force wanted another seven years from him.
Career
Mowbray began his stage career in London in 1922, as an actor and stage manager. In 1923 he arrived in the United States and was soon acting with New York stock companies. He debuted on Broadway in The Sport of Kings (1926); in 1929 he wrote, directed and starred in the unsuccessful Dinner Is Served.
Mowbray made his film debut in God's Gift to Women (1931) playing a butler, a role in which he was thereafter often cast. In a contemporary pulp magazine story, Raymond Chandler lampooned Mowbray's distinctive clipped speech in these roles: a butler is described as having "a wing collar and an accent like Alan Mowbray."
Mowbray appeared in five more pictures in 1931, notably portraying George Washington in Alexander Hamilton. In 1935, he played one of the male leads in Becky Sharp, the first feature-length film in full-colour Technicolor, as well as playing the lead in the farcical Night Life of the Gods, based on a Thorne Smith novel. It was for another Thorne Smith–derived film, Topper (1937), that Mowbray may be best remembered; he played Topper's butler Wilkins, a role he reprised the following year in Topper Takes a Trip. Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, Mowbray worked steadily, appearing in over 120 films including the Oscar-nominated My Man Godfrey (1937).
In the 1950s, Mowbray's film roles decreased, and he began to appear on television. He played the title role in the DuMont TV series Colonel Humphrey Flack, which first aired in 1953–54 and was revived in 1958–59. In the 1954–55 television season, Mowbray played Mr. Swift, the drama coach of the character Mickey Mulligan, in NBC's short-lived The Mickey Rooney Show: Hey, Mulligan. He portrayed the character Stewart Styles, a maitre d with a checkered past in the 1960-1961 adventure/drama series Dante, reprising a role he had originally played in several episodes of Four Star Theatre. Mowbray appeared in the titular role as a crooked astrologer in the 1959 episode "The Misfortune Teller" of the Maverick television series starring James Garner and Kathleen Crowley, and as Cranshaw in the episode "Quite a Woman" of the 1961 series The Investigators starring James Franciscus.
In 1956, Mowbray appeared in three major films, The King and I, The Man Who Knew Too Much and Around the World in 80 Days. His final film role was as Captain Norcross in A Majority of One in 1961. In 1963, he returned to Broadway in the successful comedy Enter Laughing, playing Marlowe, the unscrupulous mentor to David Kolowitz (played by Alan Arkin).
Mowbray was a founding member of the Screen Actors Guild in 1933, writing a personal check to fund the group's incorporation and serving as the first vice president.
Personal life
Mowbray married Lorraine Carpenter in 1927. Together they had two children, including daughter Patricia, who, at age 28 married her father's friend, 70-year-old Canadian actor Douglass Dumbrille, in 1960.
Unusually for a Hollywood star, Mowbray was less of a fan of seeing himself on the screen, but enjoyed working behind the scenes. In addition to helping found the Screen Actors Guild, he was among the founders of the Hollywood Cricket Club. He was a prominent early member of the Masquers Club, and donated to the group's long-time clubhouse at 1765 N. Sycamore Street in Hollywood. He also was a founder of the British United Services Club, a club for ex British Military members in Hollywood that met at the Masquers.
Mowbray cooperated heavily with the FBI in the investigation of Japanese Spy Frederick Rutland, keeping it secret for the rest of his life, even though he ironically played a spy in the original The_Man_from_U.N.C.L.E.
Mowbray died of a heart attack in 1969 in Hollywood, survived by his wife and children. His body is interred in the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.
Filmography
Year | Film | Role | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1931 | God's Gift to Women | Auguste, Toto's Butler | Michael Curtiz | |
1931 | The Man in Possession | Sir Charles Cartwright | Sam Wood (uncredited) | |
1931 | Guilty Hands | Gordon Rich | Lionel Barrymore | |
1931 | Alexander Hamilton | George Washington | John G. Adolfi | |
1931 | Left Over Ladies | Jerry | Erle C. Kenton | |
1931 | Honor of the Family | Tony Revere | Lloyd Bacon | |
1931 | Nice Women | Mark Chandler | Edwin H. Knopf | |
1932 | Lovers Courageous | Lamone | Robert Z. Leonard | |
1932 | The Silent Witness | Arthur Drinton | Marcel Varnel | |
1932 | Hotel Continental | Walter Underwood | Christy Cabanne | |
1932 | The World and the Flesh | Dimitri | John Cromwell | |
1932 | Man About Town | Ivan Boris | John Francis Dillon | |
1932 | The Man from Yesterday | Dr. Waite | Berthold Viertel | |
1932 | Winner Take All | the Etiquette Teacher | Roy Del Ruth | |
1932 | The Man Called Back | King's Counsel | Robert Florey | |
1932 | Jewel Robbery | Detective Fritz | William Dieterle | |
1932 | Two Against the World | George 'Georgie' Walton | Archie Mayo | |
1932 | The Phantom President | George Washington | Norman Taurog | uncredited |
1932 | Sherlock Holmes | Colonel Gore-King | William K. Howard | |
1933 | Our Betters | Lord George Grayston | George Cukor | |
1933 | A Study in Scarlet | Inspector Lastrade | Edwin L. Marin | |
1933 | Peg o' My Heart | Capt. Christopher 'Chris' Brent | Robert Z. Leonard (uncredited) | |
1933 | The Midnight Club | Arthur Bradley | ||
1933 | Voltaire | Count De Sarnac | John G. Adolfi | |
1933 | Berkeley Square | Major Clinton | Frank Lloyd | |
1933 | The World Changes | Sir Phillip Ivor | Mervyn LeRoy | |
1933 | Roman Scandals | Majordomo | Frank Tuttle | |
1933 | Her Secret | Nils Norton | Warren Millais | |
1934 | Long Lost Father | Sir Tony Gelding | Ernest B. Schoedsack | |
1934 | The House of Rothschild | Prince Metternich | Maude T. Howell (asst.) | |
1934 | Where Sinners Meet | Nicholas | J. Walter Ruben | |
1934 | Little Man, What Now? | Franz Schluter | ||
1934 | Cheaters | Paul Southern | Phil Rosen | |
1934 | The Girl from Missouri | Lord Douglas | Jack Conway | |
1934 | One More River | Forsythe | James Whale | |
1934 | Embarrassing Moments | Aheam | Edward Laemmle | |
1934 | Charlie Chan in London | Geoffrey Richmond | Eugene Forde | |
1935 | Night Life of the Gods | Hunter Hawk | Lowell Sherman | |
1935 | Becky Sharp | Rawdon Crawley | Rouben Mamoulian | |
1935 | Lady Tubbs | Elyot Wembsleigh | Alan Crosland | |
1935 | The Gay Deception | Lord Clewe | William Wyler | |
1935 | She Couldn't Take It | Alan Bartlett | Tay Garnett | |
1935 | In Person | Jay Holmes | James Anderson | |
1936 | Rose-Marie | Premier | ||
1936 | Muss 'em Up | Paul Harding | Charles Vidor | |
1936 | Give Us This Night | Forcellini | Alexander Hall | |
1936 | Desire | Dr. Maurice Pauquet | Frank Borzage | |
1936 | The Case Against Mrs. Ames | Lawrence Waterson | William A. Seiter | |
1936 | Fatal Lady | Uberto Malla | Edward Ludwig | |
1936 | Mary of Scotland | Throckmorton | John Ford | |
1936 | My Man Godfrey | Tommy Gray | Gregory La Cava | |
1936 | Ladies in Love | Paul Sandor | Edward H. Griffith | |
1936 | Four Days' Wonder | Archibald Fenton | ||
1936 | Rainbow on the River | Ralph Layton | George Sherman | |
1937 | On the Avenue | Frederick Sims | William Seiter (fill-in) | |
1937 | The King and the Chorus Girl | Donald Taylor | Mervyn LeRoy | |
1937 | As Good as Married | Wally | Edward Buzzell | |
1937 | Marry the Girl | Dr. Hayden Stryker | William C. McGann | |
1937 | Topper | Wilkins | Norman Z. McLeod | |
1937 | Walter Wanger's Vogues of 1938 | Henry Morgan | Charles Kerr | |
1937 | On Such a Night | Professor Ricardo Montrose Candle | Ewald André Dupont | |
1937 | Music for Madame | Leon Rodowsky | John G. Blystone | |
1937 | Stand-In | Koslofski | Charles Kerr (assistant) | |
1937 | Hollywood Hotel | Alexander Duprey | Busby Berkeley | |
1938 | Merrily We Live | Butler | Norman Z. McLeod | |
1938 | There Goes My Heart | Pennypepper E. Pennypepper | Norman Z. McLeod | |
1938 | Topper Takes a Trip | Wilkins | Norman Z. McLeod | |
1939 | Never Say Die | Prince Smirnov | Elliott Nugent | |
1939 | Way Down South | Jacques Bouton | Bernard Vorhaus | |
1939 | The Llano Kid | John Travers | Edward Venturini | |
1940 | Music in My Heart | Charles Gardner | Joseph Santley | |
1940 | Curtain Call | Donald Avery | Frank Woodruff | |
1940 | Scatterbrain | J.R. Russell | Gus Meins | |
1940 | The Boys from Syracuse | Angelo | A. Edward Sutherland | |
1940 | The Villain Still Pursued Her | Silas Cribbs | Edward F. Cline | |
1940 | The Quarterback | Professor Hobbs | H. Bruce Humberstone | |
1941 | Footlight Fever | Mr. Don Avery | Irving Reis | |
1941 | That Hamilton Woman | Sir William Hamilton | Alexander Korda | |
1941 | That Uncertain Feeling | Dr. Vengard | Ernst Lubitsch | |
1941 | The Cowboy and the Blonde | Phineas Johnson | Ray McCarey | |
1941 | Ice-Capades | Pete Ellis | ||
1941 | Moon Over Her Shoulder | Grover Sloan | Alfred L. Werker | |
1941 | I Wake Up Screaming | Robin Ray | H. Bruce Humberstone | |
1941 | The Perfect Snob | Freddie Browning | Ray McCarey | |
1942 | Yokel Boy | Movie Producer | Joseph Santley | |
1942 | We Were Dancing | Grand Duke Basil | Robert Z. Leonard | |
1942 | The Mad Martindales | Hugo Martindale | Alfred L. Werker | |
1942 | Panama Hattie | Jay Jerkins, Dick's Butler | Norman Z. McLeod | |
1942 | A Yank at Eton | Mr. Duncan | Norman Taurog | |
1942 | Isle of Missing Men | Dr. Henry Brown | Richard Oswald | |
1942 | The Devil with Hitler | Gesatan | Gordon Douglas | |
1943 | The Powers Girl | John Robert Powers | Norman Z. McLeod | |
1943 | Slightly Dangerous | English Gentleman | Buster Keaton | |
1943 | Stage Door Canteen | Alan Mowbray | Frank Borzage | |
1943 | So This Is Washington | Chester W. Marshall | Ray McCarey | |
1943 | Holy Matrimony | Mr. Pennington | John M. Stahl | |
1943 | His Butler's Sister | Buzz Jenkins | Frank Borzage | |
1944 | The Doughgirls | Breckenridge Drake | James V. Kern | |
1944 | Ever Since Venus | J. Webster Hackett | Arthur Dreifuss | |
1944 | My Gal Loves Music | Rodney Spoonyer | ||
1945 | Bring on the Girls | August | Sidney Lanfield | |
1945 | Earl Carroll Vanities | Grand Duke Paul | Joseph Santley | |
1945 | The Phantom of 42nd Street | Cecil Moore | Albert Herman | |
1945 | Where Do We Go from Here? | General George Washington | ||
1945 | Tell It to a Star | Colonel Ambrose Morgan | Frank McDonald | |
1945 | Men in Her Diary | Douglas Crane | ||
1945 | Sunbonnet Sue | Jonathan | ||
1946 | Terror by Night | Maj. Duncan-Bleek | Roy William Neill | |
1946 | Idea Girl | J.C. Crow | Will Jason | |
1946 | My Darling Clementine | Granville Thorndyke | John Ford | |
1947 | The Pilgrim Lady | Clifford Latimer | Lesley Selander | |
1947 | Lured | Lyle Maxwell | Douglas Sirk | |
1947 | Merton of the Movies | Frank Mulvaney | Robert Alton | |
1947 | Captain from Castile | Prof. Botello | Henry King | |
1948 | The Main Street Kid | The Great Martine | R. G. Springsteen | |
1948 | The Prince of Thieves | The Friar | Howard Bretherton | |
1948 | An Innocent Affair | Ken St. Clair | Lloyd Bacon | |
1948 | My Dear Secretary | Deveny | Charles Martin | |
1948 | Every Girl Should Be Married | Mr. Spitzer | Don Hartman | |
1949 | The Lone Wolf and His Lady | Jamison, Lanyard's Valet | John Hoffman | |
1949 | The Lovable Cheat | Justin | Richard Oswald | |
1949 | You're My Everything | Joe Blanton | Walter Lang | |
1949 | Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff | Melton | Charles Barton | |
1950 | Wagon Master | Dr. A. Locksley Hall | John Ford | |
1950 | The Jackpot | Leslie | Walter Lang | |
1951 | Dick Turpin's Ride | Lord Charles Willoughby | Ralph Murphy | |
1951 | Crosswinds | Sir Cecil Daubrey | Lewis R. Foster | |
1952 | Just Across the Street | Davis | Joseph Pevney | |
1952 | Androcles and the Lion | Editor of Gladiators | Nicholas Ray (uncredited) | |
1952 | Blackbeard the Pirate | Noll | Raoul Walsh | |
1954 | Ma and Pa Kettle at Home | Alphonsus Mannering | Charles Lamont | |
1954 | The Steel Cage | Lee Filbert | segment "The Chef" | |
1955 | The King's Thief | Sir Gilbert Talbot | Hugo Fregonese (uncredited) | |
1956 | The Man Who Knew Too Much | Val Parnell | Alfred Hitchcock | |
1956 | The King and I | Sir John Hay | Walter Lang | |
1956 | Around the World in 80 Days | the British Consul at Suez | Michael Anderson | |
1956 | Once Upon a Honeymoon | Gordon | Gower Champion | Short |
1961 | A Majority of One | Captain Norcross |
TV appearances
- The Patty Duke Show, as director of the high school play in which both Patty and Cathy appeared
- Four Star Playhouse in Dick Powell's episode "The House Always Wins" (1955)
- Whispering Smith, in "Poet and Peasant Case" episode (1960)
- Maverick with James Garner and Kathleen Crowley, in "The Misfortune Teller" episode as Luke Abigor (1960)
- The Investigators with James Franciscus and James Philbrook, in the episode "Quite a Woman" as Cranshaw
The Beverly Hillbillies Season 7,Episode 1, September 25, 1968, A Bundle for Britain Episode 199. Played Montrose, hired by Mr Drysdale to pretend to be the queen of Englands financial servant..