Massey, Raymond [Hart] (1896–1983), actor. The tall, gaunt, Canadian, who brought a singular brooding intensity to many of his best interpretations, made his professional debut in London in 1922. His first New York appearance was in 1931 as Hamlet, followed by the quick failure, The Shining Hour (1934). But Massey later enjoyed a major success in the title role of Ethan Frome (1936). His most famous role was unquestionably in Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1938). Brooks Atkinson observed that he played the president “with an artless honesty that is completely overwhelming in the end.” Opposite Katharine Cornell he was Sir Colenso Ridgeon in The Doctor's Dilemma (1941), James Morell in Candida (1942), and Rodney Boswell in Lovers and Friends (1943). After touring the war zones playing the Stage Manager in a USO production of Our Town, he returned to Broadway as Higgins to Gertrude Lawrence's Liza Doolittle in Pygmalion (1946). Massey's later performances included the Captain in Strindberg's The Father (1949), a reading of John Brown's Body on tour, Brutus and Prospero at the American Shakespeare Festival, and the God‐figure Mr. Zuss in J. B.. (1958). His son Daniel MASSEY (1933–98) was also a celebrated actor, but he spent much of his career in England where he was born. His New York appearances of note included the Budapest clerkGeorg in the musical She Loves Me (1963) and the German conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler in Taking Sides (1996). His sister is the British actress Anna Massey.




