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Clifton Webb
Actor, singer, dancer

Clifton Webb

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Actor, singer, dancer
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana, U.S.A.
Place of death
Beverly Hills, Los Angeles County, California, U.S.A.
Age
76 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Webb Parmelee Hollenbeck (born November 19, 1889 – October 13, 1966), known professionally as Clifton Webb, was an American actor, dancer, and singer known for his Oscar-nominated roles in such films as Laura (1944), The Razor's Edge (1946), and Sitting Pretty (1948). He was known for his stage appearances in the plays of Noël Coward, notably Blithe Spirit, as well as appearances on Broadway in a number of very successful musical revues.

Biography

Early life

Webb was born Webb Parmelee Hollenbeck in Indianapolis, Indiana. He was the only child of Jacob Grant Hollenbeck (1867 – May 2, 1939), the ticket-clerk son of a grocer from an Indiana farming family, and his wife, the former Mabel A. Parmelee (Parmalee or Parmallee; March 24, 1869 – October 17, 1960), the daughter of David Parmelee, a railroad conductor. The couple married in Kankakee, Illinois, on January 18, 1888, and separated in 1891, shortly after their son's birth. According to Marion County, Indiana, marriage records, they married in Indianapolis on January 18, 1888.

In 1892, Webb's mother, now called "Mabelle", moved to New York City with her beloved "little Webb", as she called him for the remainder of her life. She dismissed questions about her husband, Jacob, who like her father, worked for the Indianapolis-St. Louis Railroad, by saying, "We never speak of him. He didn't care for the theatre." The couple apparently divorced, since by 1900, Mabelle was married to Green B. Raum, Jr. New York City's 1900 U.S. census indicates Mabelle and her son were using the surname Raum and living on West 77th Street with Green Berry Raum, Jr., a copper-foundry worker, who gave his position in the household as Mabel's husband. Raum was the son of General Green Berry Raum, former U.S. Commissioner of Internal Revenue and former U.S. Commissioner of Pensions. Webb's father, Jacob, married, as his second wife, Ethel Brown, and died in 1939.

Broadway

By the age of 19, using the name Clifton Webb, he had become a professional ballroom dancer, often partnering "exceedingly decorative" star dancer Bonnie Glass (she eventually replaced him with Rudolph Valentino), and performed in about two dozen operettas before debuting on Broadway as Bosco in The Purple Road, which opened at the Liberty Theatre on April 7, 1913, and ran for 136 performances before closing in August. His mother (billed as Mabel Parmalee) was listed in the program as a member of the opening-night cast. His next musical was an Al Jolson vehicle, Sigmund Romberg's Dancing Around. It opened at the Winter Garden Theatre on October 10, 1914, and had 145 performances, closing in February, 1915. Later that year, Webb was in the all-star revue Ned Wayburn's Town Topics, which boasted 117 famous performers, including Will Rogers, listed in the Century Theatre opening-night program of September 23, 1915. It closed 68 performances later on November 20, 1915. In 1916, he had another short run with Cole Porter's comic opera See America First, which opened at the Maxine Elliott Theatre on March 28, 1916, and closed after 15 performances on April 8, 1916.

The year 1917 proved to be better, with a 233-performance run of Jerome Kern's Love O' Mike, which opened at the Shubert Theatre on January 15, 1917. After moving to Maxine Elliott's Theatre and Casino Theatre, it closed on September 29, 1917. Future Mama star Peggy Wood was also in the cast. Webb's final show of the 1910s, the musical Listen Lester, had the longest run, 272 performances. It opened at the Knickerbocker Theatre on December 23, 1918, and closed in August 1919. Webb appeared with other Broadway stars in National Red Cross Pageant (1917), a 50-minute film of a stage production held to benefit the American Red Cross.

Webb in 1923

The 1920s had Webb in no fewer than eight Broadway shows, numerous other stage appearances, including vaudeville, and a handful of silent films. The revue As You Were, with additional songs by Cole Porter, opened at the Central Theatre on January 29, 1920, and closed 143 performances later on May 29, 1920. Busy with films, tours, and vaudeville, (including an appearance at the London Pavilion in 1921 as Mr. St. Louis in Fun of the Fayre and the next year in Phi-Phi), he did not return to Broadway until 1923, with the musical Jack and Jill (Globe Theatre) which had 92 performances between March 22, 1923, and June 9, 1923, and Lynn Starling's comic play Meet the Wife, which opened on November 26, 1923, and ran into the summer of 1924, closing in August. One of the play's leads was 24-year-old Humphrey Bogart.

In 1925, Webb appeared on stage in a dance act with vaudeville star and silent film actress Mary Hay. Later that year, when her husband, Tol'able David star Richard Barthelmess and she decided to produce and star in New Toys, they chose Webb to be second lead. The film proved to be financially successful, but 19 more years passed before Webb appeared in another feature film.

Webb's mainstay was the Broadway theatre. Between 1913 and 1947, the tall and slender performer who sang in a clear, gentle tenor, appeared in 23 Broadway shows, starting with major supporting roles and quickly progressing to leads. He introduced Irving Berlin's "Easter Parade" and George and Ira Gershwin's "I've Got a Crush on You" in Treasure Girl (1928); Arthur Schwartz and Howard Dietz's "I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan" in The Little Show (1929) and "Louisiana Hayride" in Flying Colors (1932); and Irving Berlin's "Not for All the Rice in China" in the very successful revue As Thousands Cheer (1933). One of his stage sketches, performed with co-star Fred Allen, was filmed by Vitaphone as a short subject titled The Still Alarm (1930). Allen's experiences while working with Webb appear in Allen's memoirs.

Most of Webb's Broadway shows were musicals, but he also starred in Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, and his longtime friend Noël Coward's Blithe Spirit and Present Laughter.

Hollywood

Webb was in his mid-fifties when actor/director Otto Preminger chose him over the objections of 20th Century Fox chief Darryl F. Zanuck to play the elegant but evil radio columnist Waldo Lydecker, who is obsessed with Gene Tierney's character in the 1944 film noir Laura. (Zanuck reportedly found Webb too effeminate as a person and an actor.) His performance won him wide acclaim, and despite Zanuck's original objection, Webb was signed to a long-term contract with Fox. Two years later, he was reunited with Tierney in another highly praised role as the elitist Elliott Templeton in The Razor's Edge (1946). He received Academy Award nominations for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for both.

Webb also received an Oscar nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role in 1949 for Sitting Pretty, the first in a three-film series of comedic Mr. Belvedere features with Webb portraying a snide, know-it-all babysitter.

In the 1950 film Cheaper by the Dozen, Webb and Myrna Loy played Frank and Lillian Gilbreth, real-life efficiency experts of the 1910s and 1920s, and the parents of 12 children. The film's success led to a sequel, Belles on Their Toes, with Webb appearing only in a cameo flashback, as the movie covers the family's life after the death of the father.

Webb's subsequent film roles include that of college professor Thornton Sayre, who in his younger days was known as silent-film idol Bruce "Dreamboat" Blair. Now a distinguished academic who wants no part of his past fame, he sets out to stop the showing of his old films on television in 1952's Dreamboat, which concludes with Webb's alter ego Sayre watching himself star in Sitting Pretty. Also in 1952, he starred in the Technicolor film biography of bandmaster John Philip Sousa, Stars and Stripes Forever. In 1953, he had his most dramatic role as the doomed but brave husband of unfaithful Barbara Stanwyck in Titanic, and in 1954 played the (fictional) novelist John Frederick Shadwell in Three Coins in the Fountain. The 1956 British film The Man Who Never Was had him playing the part of Royal Navy Lt. Cmdr. Ewen Montagu in the true story of Operation Mincemeat, the elaborate plan to deceive the Axis powers about the Allied invasion of Sicily during World War II. In 1957's Boy on a Dolphin, second-billed to Alan Ladd, with third-billed Sophia Loren, he portrayed a wealthy sophisticate who enjoyed collecting illegally obtained Greek antiquities. In a nod to his own identity, the character's name was Victor Parmalee.

Webb's final film role was an initially sarcastic, but ultimately self-sacrificing Catholic priest in Leo McCarey's Satan Never Sleeps. The film, which was set in China, showed the victory of Mao Tse-tung's armies in the Chinese Civil War, which ended with his ascension to power in 1949, but was actually filmed in Britain during the summer of 1961, using sets from the 1958 film The Inn of the Sixth Happiness, which had the same setting.

Webb was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6850 Hollywood Boulevard for his contributions to the motion picture industry.

Death

Webb's crypt at Hollywood Forever

Because of health problems, Webb spent the last five years of his life as a recluse at his home in Beverly Hills, California, eventually succumbing to a heart attack at the age of 76. He is interred in crypt 2350, corridor G-6, Abbey of the Psalms in Hollywood Forever Cemetery, alongside his mother.

Personal life

Webb never married and had no children. He lived with his mother until her death at age 91 in 1960, leading Noël Coward to remark, apropos Webb's grieving, "It must be terrible to be orphaned at 71."

Actor Robert Wagner, who co-starred with Webb in the films Stars and Stripes Forever and Titanic and considered the actor one of his mentors, stated in his memoirs, Pieces of My Heart: A Life, that "Clifton Webb was gay, of course, but he never made a pass at me, not that he would have."

Complete filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1917National Red Cross PageantDancer, The Pavane – French episode
1920Polly With a PastHarry RichardsonUncredited
1924Let Not Man Put AsunderMajor BertieUncredited
1925New ToysTom Lawrence
The Heart of a SirenMaximAlternative title: The Heart of a Temptress
1930The Still Alarmshort Vitaphone film
1944LauraWaldo Lydecker
1946The Dark CornerHardy Cathcart
The Razor's EdgeElliott Templeton
1948Sitting PrettyLynn Belvedere
1949Mr. Belvedere Goes to CollegeLynn Belvedere
1950Cheaper by the DozenFrank Bunker Gilbreth
For Heaven's SakeCharles/Slim Charles
1951Mr. Belvedere Rings the BellLynn BelvedereAlternative title: Mr. Belvedere Blows His Whistle
ElopementHoward Osborne
1952Belles on Their ToesFrank Bunker GilbrethUncredited
DreamboatThornton Sayre/Dreamboat/Bruce Blair
Stars and Stripes ForeverJohn Philip SousaAlternative title: Marching Along
1953TitanicRichard Ward Sturges
Mr. ScoutmasterRobert Jordan
1954Three Coins in the FountainJohn Frederick Shadwell
Woman's WorldErnest GiffordAlternative title: A Woman's World
1956The Man Who Never WasLt. Cmdr. Ewen Montagu
1957Boy on a DolphinVictor Parmalee
1959The Remarkable Mr. PennypackerMr. Horace Pennypacker
Holiday for LoversRobert Dean
1962Satan Never SleepsFather BovardAlternative titles: The Devil Never Sleeps
Flight from Terror, (final film role)

Box office ranking

For a number of years film exhibitors voted Webb among the most popular stars in the country:

  • 1949: 14th (US)
  • 1950: 7th (US)
  • 1951: 21st (US)

    Stage work

    • The Master of Carlton Hall (Children's Theatre) (1902)
    • The Purple Road (1913)
    • Dancing Around (1914)
    • Ned Wayburn's Town Topics (1915)
    • See America First (1916)
    • Love O' Mike (1917)
    • Listen Lester (1918)
    • As You Were (1920)
    • Fun at the Faire (1921)
    • Phi-Phi (1922)
    • Jack and Jill (1923)
    • Meet the Wife (1923)
    • Parasites (1924)
    • Sunny (1925)
    • She's My Baby (1928)
    • Treasure Girl (1928)
    • The Little Show (1929)
    • Three's a Crowd (1930)
    • Flying Colors (1932)
    • As Thousands Cheer (1933)
    • And Stars Remain (1936)
    • You Never Know (1938)
    • The Importance of Being Earnest (1939)
    • Blithe Spirit (1941)
    • Present Laughter (1946)

    Awards and nominations

    YearAwardResultCategoryFilm
    1945Academy AwardNominatedBest Supporting ActorLaura
    1947The Razor's Edge
    1949Best Actor in a Leading RoleSitting Pretty
    1947Golden Globe AwardWonBest Supporting ActorThe Razor's Edge
    1953NominatedBest Motion Picture Actor – Musical/ComedyStars and Stripes Forever
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