Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Jack Buchanan

 
American Theater Guide: Jack Buchanan
 

Buchanan, Jack (1891–1957), actor, singer, and dancer. The reedy‐voiced song‐and‐dance man, who to many Americans personified the suave, dapper Englishman, made his American debut in Charlot's Revue (1924). Subsequently he appeared in only three other musicals: The Charlot Revue of 1926, in which he introduced “A Cup of Coffee, a Sandwich and You”; Wake Up and Dream (1929); and Between the Devil (1937), in which he sang “By Myself.” For what proved his final Broadway assignment he deserted the musical theatre to play Daniel Bachelet, the suspicious husband, in Sacha Guitry's comedy Don't Listen, Ladies (1948). Biography: Top Hat and Tails, M. Marshall. 1978.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Actor: Jack Buchanan
Top
  • Born: Apr 02, 1890 in Glasgow, Scotland
  • Died: Oct 20, 1957 in London, England, UK
  • Occupation: Actor, Director, Writer
  • Active: '20s-'30s, '50s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Musical
  • Career Highlights: The Band Wagon, Brewster's Millions, Break the News
  • First Major Screen Credit: Confetti (1927)

Biography

Scottish-born entertainer Jack Buchanan became caught up in amateur theatricals while he was a London office worker. He made his stage bow in 1911, and his London theatre debut in 1912, but full stardom would have to wait until his long run (beginning in 1915) in the play Tonight's the Night. He entered films with 1917's Auld Lang Syne, playing the sort of sticklike hero that any lesser actor could have portrayed. Buchanan's true celebrity rested on his stage work, notably 1921's Charlot A-Z Revue. The early-talkie hunger for cultured British voices brought Buchanan to Hollywood in 1929, where he appeared opposite Irene Bordoni in Paris (1929), Jeanette MacDonald in Monte Carlo (1930), and just about the entire Warner Bros. contract roster in The Show of Shows (1929). These early films reveal Buchanan to be a dry, debonair tie-and-tail type not far removed from the stage persona of Clifton Webb or Fred Astaire - except that Buchanan's charm did not transfer as well to the screen. Back in England, Buchanan tackled his first directing job with Yes Mr. Brown (1931) and in 1933 he built the Leicester Square Theatre. Relaxing sufficiently before the cameras to become an agreeable screen personality, Buchanan starred in the 1934 British production of Brewster's Millions, and costarred with Maurice Chevalier, whose style was similar to Buchanan's, in Break the News (1937). American film audiences did not see Buchanan again until 1953, when he was cast as the impresario Cordova in the Fred Astaire vehicle The Band Wagon (1953). Among the treasured musical moments in this delightful film was Triplets, wherein the Astaire, Buchanan and Nanette Fabray were decked out in baby bonnets. It would be nice to record Band Wagon as Buchanan's final appearance before his death in 1957; alas, Buchanan was subsequently and unhappily cast in the misfire farce Le Carnets Du Major Thompson, a.k.a. The French They Are a Funny Race (1957) - also the swan song of once-great director Preston Sturges. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
 
Wikipedia: Jack Buchanan
Top
Jack Buchanan
Born Walter John Buchanan
2 April 1891(1891-04-02)
Helensburgh, Scotland
Died 20 October 1957 (aged 66)
London, England

Jack Buchanan (2 April 1891 – 20 October 1957), was a British theatre and film actor, singer, producer and director. He was known for three decades as the embodiment of the debonair man-about-town in the tradition of George Grossmith Jr. and was described by The Times as "the last of the knuts".

Contents

Biography

Walter John Buchanan was born in Helensburgh, Scotland, the son of Walter John Buchanan Sr (d. 1902), auctioneer, and his wife, Patricia, née McWatt (d. 1936).[1] He was educated at the Glasgow Academy.

Early career

After a brief attempt to follow his late father's profession, he became a music-hall comedian under the name of Chump Buchanan and first appeared on the West End in September 1912 in the comic opera The Grass Widow at the Apollo Theatre.[1]

Buchanan's health was not robust, and he was declared unfit for military service in World War I. He appeared with some success in West End shows during the war, attracting favourable notices as a "knut"[2] in the mould of George Grossmith Jr, and achieved front rank stardom in André Charlot's 1921 revue A to Z, appearing with Gertrude Lawrence.[1] Among his numbers in the show was Ivor Novello's "And her mother came too", which became Buchanan's signature song. The show transferred successfully to Broadway in 1924.[1] For the rest of the 1920s and 1930s he was famous for "the seemingly lazy but most accomplished grace with which he sang, danced, flirted and joked his way through musical shows.... The tall figure, the elegant gestures, the friendly drawling voice, the general air of having a good time."[3]

Film career and later years

He made his film debut in the silent cinema, in 1917 and appeared in about three dozen films in his career. In 1938, Buchanan achieved the unusual feat of starring in the London stage musical This'll Make You Whistle while concurrently filming a movie version. The movie was released while the stage version was still running; thus the two productions competed with each other. Other roles included Monte Carlo (1930), Smash and Grab (1937) and The Gang's All Here (1939). He also produced several films including Happidrome (1943) and The Sky's the Limit (1938), which he also directed. He continued to work on Broadway and the West End and took roles in several Hollywood musicals, including The Band Wagon (1953), his best-known film, in which he plays camp theatre director, Jeffrey Cordova, opposite Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse. He suffered from spinal arthritis, though this didn't stop him from performing several dance numbers with Astaire in Band Wagon.

Like David Niven, Buchanan was renowned for his portrayal of the quintessential Englishman on stage and screen. Buchanan also provided financial backing for that other son of Helensburgh, Scotland, John Logie Baird, in Logie's work to develop mechanical television. Buchanan was legendary among his colleagues for his financial generosity to less prosperous actors and chorus performers. Sandy Wilson recalled that, each year during the running of the annual Grand National horse race, Buchanan would cancel that day's performance of his current musical and would charter an excursion train to the racetrack and back, supplying meals for the entire cast and crew of his show ... and even giving them £5 each for a "flutter" on the horse of their choice!

Buchanan died in London in 1957 from spinal cancer, when he was 66 years old.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Spicer, Andrew H: "Buchanan, Walter John (1890–1957)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, January 2008, accessed 3 Nov 2008
  2. ^ defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as "a fashionable or showy young man"
  3. ^ The Times: "Last of the knuts", 21 October 1957, p. 12

External links



 
 

 

Copyrights:

American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Jack Buchanan" Read more

 

Mentioned in