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George Sanders

 
Actor: George Sanders
  • Born: Jul 03, 1906 in St. Petersburg, Russia
  • Died: Apr 25, 1972
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s-'60s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Crime
  • Career Highlights: All About Eve, Rebecca, The Jungle Book
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Lady Escapes (1937)

Biography

Throughout much of his screen career, actor George Sanders was the very personification of cynicism, an elegantly dissolute figure whose distinct brand of anomie distinguished dozens of films during a career spanning nearly four decades. Born in St. Petersburg on July 3, 1906, Sanders and his family fled to the U.K. during the Revolution, and he was later educated at Brighton College. After first pursuing a career in the textile industry, Sanders briefly flirted with a South American tobacco venture; when it failed, he returned to Britain with seemingly no other options outside of a stage career. After a series of small theatrical roles, in 1934 he appeared in Noel Coward's Conversation Piece; the performance led to his film debut in 1936's Find the Lady, followed by a starring role in Strange Cargo.

After a series of other undistinguished projects, Sanders appeared briefly in William Cameron Menzies' influential science fiction epic Things to Come. In 1937, he traveled to Hollywood, where a small but effective role in Lloyd's of London resulted in a long-term contract with 20th Century Fox. A number of lead roles in projects followed, including Love Is News and The Lady Escapes, before Fox and RKO cut a deal to allow him to star as the Leslie Charteris adventurer the Saint in a pair of back-to-back 1939 features, The Saint Strikes Back and The Saint in London. The series remained Sanders' primary focus for the next two years, and in total he starred in five Saint pictures, culminating in 1941's The Saint at Palm Springs. Sandwiched in between were a variety of other projects, including performances in a pair of 1940 Alfred Hitchcock thrillers, Foreign Correspondent and the Best Picture Oscar-winner Rebecca.

After co-starring with Ingrid Bergman in 1941's Rage in Heaven, Sanders began work on another adventure series, playing a suave investigator dubbed the Falcon; after debuting the character in The Gay Falcon, he starred in three more entries -- A Date With the Falcon, The Falcon Takes Over, and The Falcon's Brother -- before turning over the role to his real-life brother, Tom Conway. Through his work in Julien Duvivier's Tales of Manhattan, Sanders began to earn notice as a more serious actor, and his lead performance in a 1943 adaptation of the W. Somerset Maugham novel The Moon and Sixpence established him among the Hollywood elite. He then appeared as an evil privateer in the Tyrone Power swashbuckler The Black Swan, followed by Jean Renoir's This Land Is Mine. A pair of excellent John Brahm thrillers, 1944's The Lodger and 1945's Hangover Square, helped bring Sanders' contract with Fox to its close.

With his portrayal of the world-weary Lord Henry Wooten in 1945's The Portrait of Dorian Gray, Sanders essayed the first of the rakish, cynical performances which would typify the balance of his career; while occasionally playing more sympathetic roles in pictures like The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry and The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, he was primarily cast as a malcontent, winning a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his venomous turn in 1951's All About Eve. The award brought Sanders such high-profile projects as 1951's I Can Get It for You Wholesale, 1952's Ivanhoe, and Roberto Rossellini's 1953 effort Viaggio in Italia. However, his star waned, and the musical Call Me Madam, opposite Ethel Merman, was his last major performance. A series of historical pieces followed, and late in the decade he hosted a television series, The George Sanders Mystery Theater. In 1960, he also published an autobiography, Memoirs of a Professional Cad.

Sanders spent virtually all of the 1960s appearing in little-seen, low-budget foreign productions. Exceptions to the rule included the 1962 Disney adventure In Search of the Castaways, the 1964 Blake Edwards Pink Panther comedy A Shot in the Dark, and 1967's animated Disney fable The Jungle Book, in which he voiced the character of Shere Khan the Tiger. After appearing on Broadway in the title role of The Man Who Came to Dinner, Sanders appeared in John Huston's 1970 thriller The Kremlin Letter, an indication of a career upswing; however, the only offers which came his way were low-rent horror pictures like 1972's Doomwatch and 1973's Psychomania. Prior to the release of the latter, Sanders killed himself on August 25, 1972, by overdosing on sleeping pills while staying in a Costa Brava hotel; his suicide note read, "Dear World, I am leaving you because I am bored." He was 66 years old. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
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Filmography: George Sanders
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Endless Night

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Psychomania

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The Candy Man

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Thin Air

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The Jungle Book

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Good Times

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The Quiller Memorandum

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The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders

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Wikipedia: George Sanders (actor)
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George Sanders

in The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947)
Born George Henry Sanders
3 July 1906(1906-07-03)
Saint Petersburg, Russia
Died 25 April 1972 (aged 65)
Castelldefels, Barcelona, Spain
Occupation Actor
Years active 1929–1972
Spouse(s) Susan Larson
(1940–1946)
Zsa Zsa Gabor
(1949–1954)
Benita Hume
(1959–1967)
Magda Gabor
(1970–1971)
Domestic partner(s) Lorraine Chanel
(1968-1972)

George Henry Sanders (3 July 1906 – 25 April 1972) was an Academy Award-winning English film and television actor. He was known for his height of six-feet, four inches and his deep voice.

Contents

Early life

Sanders was born in Saint Petersburg, Russia at number 6 Petrovski Ostrov. His English parents were Henry Sanders (1873-1961) and Margaret Sanders (1875-1967). His older brother was actor Tom Conway (1904-1967). His younger sister Margaret Sanders was born in 1912. Sanders was 11 when, in 1917 at the outbreak of the Russian Revolution, the family went back to England. Like his brother he attended Brighton College, a boys' independent school in Brighton, then went on to Manchester Technical College. After graduation he worked at an advertising agency where the company secretary, aspiring actress Greer Garson, suggested he take up a career in acting.

Career

Sanders made his British film debut in 1929. Seven years later, after a series of British films his first role in an American production was Lloyd's of London (1936) as Lord Everett Stacy. His smooth, upper-crust English accent and sleek British manner along with a suave, snobbish and somewhat threatening air put him in demand for American films throughout the next decade. He played supporting roles in high end productions such as Rebecca (in which he and Judith Anderson played cruel foils to Joan Fontaine's character). He had leading roles in somewhat lower budget pictures such as Rage in Heaven. He was also the lead in both The Falcon and The Saint film series. In 1942 Sanders handed off the Falcon role to his brother Tom, in the The Falcon's Brother. The only other film in which the two brothers appeared together was Death of a Scoundrel (1956), in which they also played brothers.

Sanders played Lord Henry Wotton in the 1945 film version of The Picture of Dorian Gray. In 1947 he co-starred with Gene Tierney and Rex Harrison in The Ghost and Mrs. Muir. That same year he gave one of his most critically noted performances starring with Angela Lansbury in director Albert Lewin's little-known film taken from an 1885 novel by Guy de Maupassant, The Private Affairs of Bel Ami.

as Addison DeWitt in the trailer for
All About Eve (1950)

In 1950 Sanders drew his greatest popular and commercial success as the acerbic, cold-blooded theatre critic Addison DeWitt in All About Eve, for which he won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.

Sanders went into television with the successful series The George Sanders Mystery Theater. He played an upper crust English villain, G. Emory Partridge, in the 1965 The Man From U.N.C.L.E. episode "The Gazebo in the Maze Affair" and reprised the role later in that same year in "The Yukon Affair." He also portrayed Mr. Freeze in two episodes of the widely seen 1960s live-action Batman TV series.

In 1967 Sanders voiced the malevolent Shere Khan in the Walt Disney production of The Jungle Book. In 1969 Sanders had a supporting role in John Huston's The Kremlin Letter, in which his rather notorious first scene showed him dressed in drag and playing piano in a snooty San Francisco gay bar. One of Sanders' final screen roles was in a 1972 feature film version of the popular television series Doomwatch.

Sanders' smooth voice, urbane manner and upper-class British accent inspired Peter Sellers' character "Hercules Grytpype-Thynne" in the famous 1950s BBC radio comedy series The Goon Show. In 1964 Sellers and Sanders appeared together in the Pink Panther sequel A Shot in the Dark.

Sanders garnered two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, for motion pictures at 1636 Vine Street and for television at 7007 Hollywood Boulevard. He is mentioned in The Kinks' song "Celluloid Heroes" and his ghost makes an appearance in Clive Barker's 2001 novel Coldheart Canyon as well as the animated feature from 2007 Dante's Inferno.

Novels

Two crime novels were published under his name. The first was Crime on My Hands (1944), written in the first person and mentioning his "Saint" and "Falcon" movies, followed by Stranger at Home in 1946. Both were ghostwritten by women, the former by Craig Rice and the latter by Leigh Brackett, meant only to draw more income from his screen success.

Singing

In 1958 Sanders recorded an album called The George Sanders Touch: Songs for the Lovely Lady. The album was released by ABC-Paramount Records and carried lush string arrangements of romantic ballads, crooned by Sanders in a fit baritone. After going to great lengths he got himself signed to sing in South Pacific but was overwhelmed with anxiety over the role and quickly dropped out. Sanders' singing voice can be heard in Call Me Madam. He also signed on for the role of Sheridan Whiteside in the stage musical Sherry! (1967) based on the Kaufman - Hart play The Man Who Came to Dinner but found the ongoing stage production highly demanding and resigned when his wife Benita Hume found she had terminal bone cancer.

Personal life

as Lord Henry Wotton in the trailer for The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945)

On 27 October 1940 Sanders married Susan Larson. They divorced in 1949. From later that year until 1954 Sanders was married to Hungarian actress Zsa Zsa Gabor (with whom he starred in the 1956 film Death of a Scoundrel after their divorce). On 10 February 1959 Sanders married actress Benita Hume, widow of actor Ronald Colman. She died in 1967.

His autobiography Memoirs of a Professional Cad was published in 1960 and gathered critical praise for its wit. Sanders suggested the title A Dreadful Man for his biography, which was later written by Sanders' friend Brian Aherne and published in 1979.

Sanders last marriage was on 4 December 1970 to Magda Gabor, the older sister of his second wife. This marriage lasted only six weeks, after which he began drinking heavily.

In his later years Sanders suffered from bewilderment and bouts of anger, worsened by waning health. He can be seen teetering in his last films, owing to a loss of balance. According to the biography written by Aherne he also had a minor stroke, which is likely why Sanders' speech sounds impaired in the low-budget horror film Psychomania, his last film performance. Sanders couldn't bear the notion of losing his health or needing help from someone else and he became deeply saddened. At about this time Sanders found he could no longer play his grand piano, which he dragged outside and smashed with an axe. His last girlfriend, who was Mexican and much younger than him, asked Sanders to sell his beloved house in Majorca, Spain and he felt bitter regrets after having done so. From then on he drifted.

Death

David Niven wrote in his autobiography Bring On the Empty Horses that his friend Sanders, in 1937 at the age of 31, had predicted he would commit suicide when he was 65. On 23 April, 1972 he checked into a hotel in Castelldefels, a coastal town near Barcelona. He was found dead two days later, having taken five bottles of Nembutal.[1] Sanders was 65 years old. He left behind a suicide note which read:

Dear World, I am leaving because I am bored. I feel I have lived long enough. I am leaving you with your worries in this sweet cesspool. Good luck.

Sanders' body was cremated and the ashes were scattered in the English Channel.

Filmography

Television

Broadway

References

Notes

  1. ^ Ascher-Walsh, Rebecca (May 8, 1992). "Bored to Death". Entertainment Weekly. http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,310396,00.html. Retrieved 30 April 2009 and http://www.freewebs.com/georgesanders/. 

Bibliography

  • Aherne, Brian (1979), A Dreadful Man, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0671247972 
  • Sanders, George (1960), Memoirs of a Professional Cad, G.P. Putnam's Sons, ISBN 0810825791 
  • Vanderbeets, Richard (1990), George Sanders: An Exhausted Life, Madison Books, ISBN 0819178063 

External links


 
 
Learn More
Doomwatch (1972 Science Fiction Film)
Kentucky Jubilee (1951 Mystery Film)
The Saint Takes Over (1940 Mystery Film)

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