Hull, Henry (1890–1977), actor. Like his brother Shelley Hull, this handsome leading man was born in Louisville, Kentucky. He made his name largely in weakling roles such as the degenerate Henry Potter in The Man Who Came Back (1916), the seemingly diffident suitor Paul Jones in The Cat and the Canary (1922), the barber George Randall in Lulu Belle (1926), and the black sheep Baron von Gaigern in Grand Hotel (1930). Hull also won success as the shy hero Richard Winslow in The Youngest (1924). In later years he served as the replacement to the original lead in Springtime for Henry, then created the part of the shiftless sharecropper Jeeter Lester in Tobacco Road (1933). Thereafter, he rarely enjoyed success and eventually accepted supporting roles.
Career Highlights: Objective, Burma!, Jesse James, Boys Town
First Major Screen Credit: One Exciting Night (1922)
Biography
Henry Hull, the son of a Louisville drama critic, made his Broadway acting debut in either 1909 or 1911, depending on which "official" biography one reads. After leaving the stage to try his luck as a gold prospector and mining engineer, Hull was back on the boards in 1916, the same year that he made his first film at New Jersey's World Studios. While his place of honor in the American Theater is incontestable (among his many Broadway appearances was Tobacco Road, in which he created the role of Jeeter Lester), Hull's reputation as film actor varies from observer to observer. An incredibly mannered movie performer, Hull was a bit too precious for his leading roles in One Exciting Night (1922) and The Werewolf of London (1935); he also came off as shamelessly hammy in such character parts as the crusading newspaper editor in The Return of Frank James (1940). Conversely, his calculated mannerisms and gratuitous vocal tricks served him quite well in roles like the obnoxious millionaire in Hitchcock's Lifeboat (1944) and the Ernie Pyle-like war correspondent in Objective Burma (1945). A playwright as well as an actor, Hull worked on such plays as Congratulations and Manhattan. One of Henry Hull's last film appearances was the typically irritating role of a small-town buttinsky in The Chase (1966). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Henry Hull (October 3, 1890 – March 8, 1977) was an American character actor with a unique voice, most noted for playing the lead in Universal Pictures's Werewolf of London (1935). The film flopped, but has since come to be highly regarded.
Hull's last movie was The Chase (1966) with Marlon Brando and Robert Redford. An accomplished stage actor, Hull frequently appeared on Broadway early in his career and is credited with creating the role of Jeeter Lester in the long-running play Tobacco Road (1933), based on the novel by Erskine Caldwell.
Family
Hull was married to Juliet van Wyck Fremont (1884-1971) in 1913 to her death in 1971. Juliet was a granddaughter of Civil War General John C. Fremont. Henry and Juliet had three children, Henry Jr., Shelley (1919-2005,named after Henry's late brother) and Joan. When his wife died in 1971 Hull went to England to spend his last years with his daughter. He died in Cornwall at his daughter's residence.
Hull had at least two brothers who were involved in the theater. Shelley Hull was a popular leading man, in fact more popular than Henry, and would have become a well known actor had he not died in 1919 during the Spanish Influenza epidemic. Shelley was married to Josephine Sherwood who later became a well known movie character actress under her late husband's surname Hull. Hull's other brother Howard Hull was also an actor and is the lesser known but oldest of the three brothers. He was married to stage star Margaret Anglin leaving her a widow in 1937.