Viscount Bennett

 
Actor:

Richard Bennett

  • Born: May 21, 1873
  • Died: Oct 22, 1944
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: teens-'30s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Romance
  • Career Highlights: 18 Minutes, Big Executive, Madame Racketeer
  • First Major Screen Credit: Eternal City (1923)

Biography

Broadway luminary Richard Bennett made his first acting appearance in an 1891 Chicago production of The Limited Mail. Later that year, he made his New York bow appearing in the same play. With his classically chiseled features and athletic build, Bennett rapidly achieved "matinee idol" status, continuing to portray virile leading men into his fifties. He had a flair for foreign dialects, which he demonstrated to maximum effects in such plays as They Knew What They Wanted (1924) and such films as Arrowsmith (1931). While he regarded Hollywood as a "madhouse," Bennett occasionally functioned as technical advisor in silent-film adaptations of his stage plays, and was sporadically lured before the cameras in the talkie era, most memorably as the dying millionaire in If I Had a Million (1932) and the crusty Amberson paterfamilias in Orson Welles' The Magnificent Ambersons (1942). Richard Bennett was the father of actresses Constance, Joan and Barbara Bennett, and the grandfather of talk show host Morton Downey Jr. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Biography: Richard Bedford Bennett

Richard Bedford Bennett (1870-1947) was a leader of the Conservative party of Canada and prime minister during the Great Depression in the 1930s.

Richard Bedford Bennett was born at Hopewell, New Brunswick, on July 3, 1870, a descendant of pre-Loyalist settlers from Connecticut. After graduating from Dalhousie University in 1893, he practiced law in Chatham, New Brunswick, for 4 years and then moved to Calgary in the Northwest Territories. There he soon built up a successful legal business and established a connection with the E. B. Eddy Company that was to lead to his holding a controlling interest in it 25 years later. He also acted as solicitor for the Canadian Pacific Railway.

Bennett was a member of the Assembly of the Northwest Territories for 6 years and was elected to the Alberta Legislature in 1909, then resigned to contest and win the Calgary East Riding for the Conservatives in the general election of 1911. He did not run in the wartime election of 1917 but served briefly in the ministries of Arthur Meighen of 1920-1921 and 1926. He represented Calgary West from 1925 to 1938. On Meighen's retirement from public life in 1927, Bennett was chosen leader of the Conservative party. Promising to end the growing unemployment of the Depression by "blasting" his way into world markets, and fortifying Conservative coffers with $600,000 from his own fortune, Bennett defeated W. L. Mackenzie King in the general election of 1930.

In office Bennett proceeded to launch a modest public works program to provide employment, but his major response to Depression conditions was to increase the tariff to unprecedented levels, followed by an initiative which led to the establishment of preferential tariff arrangements within the British Empire. These policies probably further restricted Canadian export trade and increased the burden of the Depression on those who already felt it most. Such policies, the arbitrary treatment of protesters, and the apparent cold aloofness of the bachelor-millionaire prime minister made Bennett an increasingly unpopular leader.

After 4 years, under pressure from a small reform group within his party led by H. H. Stevens, and in the face of the coming election, Bennett began to move toward reform. Through his brother-in-law, W. D. Herridge, Canadian minister to Washington, he became greatly interested in Roosevelt's New Deal program. Early in 1935, to the shock of his Cabinet colleagues, who had not been consulted, Bennett announced in a series of radio addresses a "New Deal" of planning and social security. His government then enacted measures extending farm credit and establishing a natural-products marketing board, unemployment insurance, and minimum wages and maximum hours in industry. After Bennett's defeat in the election of 1935, most of this legislation was ruled unconstitutional by the courts. Bennett remained as leader of the opposition until 1938, when he retired to live in England. In 1941 he was created Viscount Bennett of Mickleham, Calgary, and Hopewell. He died in England on June 26, 1947.

Further Reading

Lord Beaverbrook, Friends (1959), and Ernest Watkins, R. B. Bennett: A Biography (1963), contain useful discussions of Bennett. J. R. H. Wilbur, The Bennett New Deal: Fraud or Portent? (1968), contains the major documents of Bennett's administration.

Additional Sources

Gray, James Henry, R.B. Bennett: the Calgary years, Toronto; Buffalo: University of Toronto Press, 1991.

Waite, Peter B., The loner: three sketches of the personal life and ideas of R.B. Bennett, 1870-1947, Toronto; Buffalo: University of Toronto Press, 1992.

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Richard Bedford Bennett Viscount Bennett of Mickleham and of Calgary and Hopewell

(born July 3, 1870, Hopewell, N.B., Can. — died June 27, 1947, Mickleham, Surrey, Eng.) Canadian prime minister (1930 – 35). Bennett was admitted to the bar in 1893 and practiced in New Brunswick. He then moved west and served in the legislatures of the Northwest Territories and Alberta and in the Canadian House of Commons (1911). He was named director general of national service (1916) and later minister of justice (1921). He became head of the Conservative Party in 1927 and, promising relief from the Great Depression, prime minister in 1930. But he underestimated the severity of the crisis, and his measures were ineffective. He was defeated by the Liberals under W.L. Mackenzie King. In 1939 he retired to England, where he was made a viscount in 1941.

For more information on Richard Bedford Bennett Viscount Bennett of Mickleham and of Calgary and Hopewell, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Bennett, Richard Bedford,
1870–1947, Canadian prime minister, b. Hopewell, N.B. In 1927 he succeeded Arthur Meighen as leader of the Conservative party; upon the defeat of the Liberals in 1930, he became prime minister. At the imperial conference in London in 1930, he strongly urged a preferential tariff for the empire; at the conference held in Ottawa in 1932, over which he presided, his policy was partly adopted with the signing of 12 separate trade agreements of Great Britain with the dominions and of the dominions with each other. As prime minister during the depression, Bennett proposed social legislation in 1934 to lessen the widespread dissatisfaction with his government. Nevertheless, his Conservative party was defeated in 1935 and Bennett resigned. He was leader of the opposition until 1938, when he retired from politics and went to live in England. In 1941 he was raised to the peerage as 1st Viscount Bennett of Calgary, of Mickleham, and of Hopewell.
 
Wikipedia: Viscount Bennett

Viscount Bennett, of Mickleham in the County of Surrey and of Calgary and Hopewell in the Dominion of Canada, was a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created in 1941 for the former Prime Minister of Canada Richard Bedford Bennett. He never married so the title became extinct on his death in 1947.

Viscounts Bennett (1941)


 
 

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Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2006 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Viscount Bennett" Read more

 

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