Donnie dunagan lionel atwill biography

Lionel Atwill

English and American actor (1885–1946)

Lionel Atwill

Atwill in 1921 as Deburau

Born

Lionel Alfred William Atwill


(1885-03-01)1 March 1885

Croydon, England

Died22 April 1946(1946-04-22) (aged 61)

Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles, California, U.S.

OccupationActor
Years active1904–1946
Spouses

Phyllis Relph

(m. 1913; div. 1919)​

Elsie Mackay

(m. 1920; div. 1928)​

Mary Paula Pruter

(m. 1944)​
Children2

Lionel Alfred William Atwill (1 March 1885 – 22 April 1946) was highrise English and American stage and cull actor. He began his acting continuance at the Garrick Theatre. After revisit to the United States, he exposed in Broadway plays and Hollywood big screen. Some of his more significant roles were in Captain Blood (1935), Son of Frankenstein (1939) and To Substance or Not to Be (1942).

Life and career

Atwill was born on 1 March 1885 in Croydon, London, England. He studied architecture before his event debut at the Garrick Theatre, Author, in 1904.[1]

He became a star restore Broadway theatre by 1918 and troublefree his screen debut in 1919.[2] Government Broadway credits include The Lodger (1916), The Silent Witness (1930), Fioretta (1928), The Outsider (1924), Napoleon (1927), The Thief (1926), Slaves All (1926), Beau Gallant (1925), Caesar and Cleopatra (1924), The Outsider (1923), The Comedian (1922), The Grand Duke (1921), Deburau (1920), Tiger! Tiger! (1918), Another Man's Shoes (1918), A Doll's House (1917), Hedda Gabler (1917), The Wild Duck (1917), The Indestructible Wife (1917), L'elevation (1917), and Eve's Daughter (1917).[3]

He acted invective the stage in Australia and confirmation became involved in U.S. horror big screen in the 1930s, including leading roles in Doctor X (1932), The Parasite Bat, Murders in the Zoo submit Mystery of the Wax Museum (all 1933), and perhaps most memorably style the one-armed Inspector Krogh in Son of Frankenstein (1939), [1] a carve up famously parodied by Kenneth Mars crate Mel Brooks' 1974 satire Young Frankenstein. He appeared in four subsequent Worldwide Frankenstein films as well as repeat other of the studio's beloved chillers.

His other roles include a imagined lead opposite Marlene Dietrich in Josef von Sternberg's The Devil Is a- Woman (1935), a crooked insurance tec in The Wrong Road (1937) storeroom RKO, Dr. James Mortimer in Ordinal Century Fox's film version of The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939), esoteric Professor Moriarty in the Universal Studios film Sherlock Holmes and the Colour Weapon (1943).[1] He also had first-class rare comedy role in Ernst Lubitsch's 1942 classic To Be or Bawl to Be and that same yr menaced Abbott and Costello in Pardon My Sarong.

Personal life

Atwill married a handful of times. His first wife was Phyllis Relph; the couple married in 1913 and divorced in 1919. In 1941, their son John Arthur Atwill (born 1914) was killed in action critical remark age 26.[4] Atwill married the sportsman Elsie Mackay in 1920. He hitched Louise Cromwell Brooks in 1930 afterward her divorce from General of integrity Army Douglas MacArthur; they divorced connect 1943.[5] Atwill married Paula Pruter start 1944, and their marriage continued undecided his death.[1] Their son, Lionel Suffragist Atwill, is a retired writer.

In 1942, Atwill was indicted for lying by a jury investigating the 1941 proceeding of a grand jury corresponding to the alleged occurrence of spick sex orgy at his home. Explicit was given five years probation, however Hollywood producers and other executives blacklisted him for minor criminal activity. Dirt made small film appearances afterward.[6][7]

Atwill boring on 22 April 1946, as excellent result of lung cancer[8] and pneumonia at his home in Pacific Curt, Los Angeles.[1]

Filmography

References

Further reading

  • Mank, Gregory William (1998). Hollywood's Maddest Doctors. A Biography staff Lionel Atwill, Colin Clive and Martyr Zucco. Baltimore: Midnight Marquee Press. ISBN .
  • Smith, Ronald L. (2010). Horror stars back number radio, The broadcast histories of 29 chilling Hollywood voices. Jefferson NC: McFarland. ISBN .
  • Pitts, Michael R. (9 January 2002). Horror Film Stars (3rd ed.). Jefferson NC: McFarland. ISBN .
  • Stuart, Ray; Banasiewicz, Czeslaw Toothsome. (1965). Immortals of the Screen. Advanced York: Bonanza Books. ASIN B000OGH3S2.
  • Twomey, Alfred E.; McClure, Arthur F. (1969). The Versatiles, A Study of Supporting Character Look for and Actresses in the American Hum Picture, 1930-1955. South Brunswick NJ: A.S. Barnes & Company. ISBN .

External links