Also Known For : Film Actor, Theater Actor
Birth Place : Scarborough, England, United Kingdom
Died On : December 15, 1962
Zodiac Sign : Cancer
Charles Laughton Biography, Life, Interesting Facts
Charles Laughton was a British actor, director, producer, screenwriter and character actor born on July 1, 1899. Charles Laughton made a debut on stage in 1926 after a formal training at the Royal London Academy of Dramatic Art. Throughout his career, Charles Laughton had diverse roles and impacted positively in Shakespeare at the Old Vic. Some of his popular films include The Barretts of Wimpole Street, Mutiny on the Bounty, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Jamaica Inn and The Big Clock.
He has also collaborated with the like of Alexandra Korda in the film The Private Life of Henry VIII. Charles Laughton also works on films in Broadway and Hollywood. His directed stage works include The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial and Don Juan in Hell and one film The Night of the Hunter. He is one of the respected actors of his time and that was achievement came with awards.
Early Life
Charles Laughton was born to Eliza, and Robert Laughton in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. His parents were both hotel keepers. He started his education at local boysschoolScarborough College before moving to the Stonyhurst College. During the World War I, he served under, 21st Battalion Huntingdonshire Cyclist Battalion and the 7th Battalion of the Northamptonshire Regiment. Due to his interest in drama, he enrolled at RADA in 1925.
Theatre Career
Charles Laughton started a career working in his family hotel. That time he also took part in amateur theatricals in his town. Gaining some experience in theatre, he had his official debut in at the Barn Theatre with the comedy, The Government Inspector on April 26, 1926, and later at the Gaiety Theatre. His excellent role delivery further got him roles in the Cherry Orchard and The Three Sister by Chekov plays. Gaining popularity, he had a lead role in Sean O’Casey’s The Silver Tassie in 1928 in London where he played Harry Hagan.
Charles Laughton also played in MrProhock by Arnold Bennett.Charles Laughton also played Samuel Pickwick in Mr Pickwick at the Theatre, 1928 to 1929 in London. At the peak of his career, Charles Laughton ensured he never let any role go to chance. Charles Laughton continued with his spectacular acting in plays like On the Spot by Edger Wallace and William Marbles Payment Deferred. Having paid his dues in the London theatricals, made a US debut at the Lyceum Theatre on September 24, 1931.
However, after two years of his stay, Charles Laughton returned to London for the Old Vic season and got four Shakespeare roles. He also had roles in The Cherry Orchard, The Importance of Being Earnest and Tattle in Love. Charles Laughton also explored opportunities in Paris, France in 1936 and at the Comedie-Francaise, he played in Le Medecin male Lui by Moliere as Sganrelle. Charles Laughton was the first English actor to be in that theatre.
Charles Laughton was all this while combining film and stage acting. So whiles filming in Britain he was staging in London. 1928, he played roles in silent comedies like Daydreams, Blue Bottles, and Tonic. In 1929, Charles Laughton appeared briefly in Piccadilly with Anna May Wang and also Comets, 1930 where Charles Laughton starred with different British acts. That year, Charles Laughton also played in British talkies Wolves with Dorothy Gish and played a drug smuggling captain in Down River, 1931. Charles Laughton played roles in stage plays like Payment Deferred, Island of Lost Soul, If I Had A Million
Film Career
In 1931, Charles Laughton had a stage debut in New York which was the beginning of greater heights. In 1932, he made a Hollywood debut with the film The Old Dark House in which he played a Yorkshire businessman. It was followed with Devil and the Deep in which he played a manic submarine commander and also a role in The Sign of the Cross. 1933 started with a bang for Laughton and his role in The Private Life of Henry VIII which won him an Academy Award. Being now addicted to Hollywood, and continued with films like White Woman in 1933 and The Barretts of Wimpole Street in 1934.
Charles Laughton will later play role in Mutiny on the Bounty, 1935. In 1936, Charles Laughton returned to the UK to starred in the Rembrandt I, Claudius in 1937; They Knew What They Wanted, 1940, The Turtle of Tahiti, 1942, Forever and a Day, 1943 and the Man from Down Under. Others are The Paradine Case, 1948, The Big Clock 1948, The Bribe, 1949 and The Blue Veil, 1951 and his final film was Advise & Consent. His first color film was in The Man on the Eiffel Tower, 1949, in Paris
Movie Production And Directing
Charles Laughton went into production when he partnered his German friend Erich Pommer to form Mayflower Picture in the UK. The first film of the production company was Vessel of Wrath in 1938 in which Charles Laughton and his wife Elsa Lanchester co-starred. It was followed by St Martin’s Line and then Jamaica Inn. The movies were not commercially successful , and that caused the bankruptcy of the company and subsequently folded up.
In 1955 Charles Laughton directed The Night of the Hunter which had positive reviews and cited as one of the best of that time. The film was also selected by United States National Film Registry and kept at the Library of Congress. The Night of the Hunter was, however, that first and last film Laughton directed because it failed at the box-office .
Television
On September 9, 1956, Charles Laughton sat in for Ed Sullivan to host Elvis Presley on his maiden appearance CBS’s The Ed Sullivan Show. The show which had about 72 million viewers. Ed Sullivan was then recuperating from a car accident. He also twice hosted Festival of Music which was telecast on NBC Producer’s Showcase an anthology television series.
Personal Life
Charles Laughton married to Elsa Lanchester in 1929 after two years relationship. The two remained married until his death and had no children. He died on December 15, 1962, to kidney cancer at age 63. He was cremated and ashes kept at the Court of Remembrance courtyard at Forest Lawn – Hollywood Hills Cemetery.
Awards
Charles Laughton won awards like New York Film Critics Awards, 1935, three Academy Awards (1933, 1936 and 1958). He also has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame