From the UK to the US
He was born in London in 1890. The son and grand-son of comedians, he appears on stage at the age of 6 in the play The Royal Family, opposite Gertrude Elliott, in the part of the young Prince Charles Ferdinand. At 16, while still taking acting courses, he decides to become a professional boxer. Championed by Lord Lonsdale, he wins a tournament in 1908.He then spends a year in the USA to play in a musical, Quaker Girl, opposite Miss Ina Claire. On his return, he sings at the Opera of Manchester and leaves again for a tour in Australia and India.
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In Rebecca with Joan Fontaine |
In 1913, he gets married in Calcutta to Irene Haisman, an actress who plays with him in several plays and films, and then goes back to New York where he appears in Twin Beds, James Barrie's Rosalind with Marie Tempest, The Professor's Love Story with George Arliss, and The Great Catherine.
He spends Word War I in the Royal Flying Corps, afterwhich he is hired for the New York revue The Passing Show of 1919 at the Winter Garden. He also appears with John Barrymore in Richard III.
Screen debut
It is then that he starts appearing regularly in films: Bringing up Betty, Paying The Piper (directed by George Fitzmaurice), Disraeli (with George Arliss again!), Footlights (with Elsie Ferguson), Sherlock Homes (also with John Barrymore, a film recently restored and available on Blu-ray).
A star boxer
Reginald even plays the son of Kid Roberts, Elliott Beresford, in the now lost film On your Toes.
One of these films is called Fast and Furious, not unlike the 2001 Rob L. Cohen film The Fast and the Furious.

He also stars in many comedies, eight of which with Otis Harlan, Happy in Snow White, like Where Was I? where the disapproving father (played by Tyrone Power Sr.) of his bride-to-be hires a girl to pretend he is already married; or What Happened to Jones? where, pursued by the police for gambling, he ends up in rags in a Turkish bath on ladies night.
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Reginald in a 1925 Xmas publicity picture with wife Irene Haisman and daughter Barbara |
In Skinner's Dress Suit, another comedy, he steps in the shoes of former star Bryant Washburn who starred in a previous version of the film.
His influence is such then that he even takes the role of director on his film That's My Daddy, when the original director Fred C. Newmeyer and he have "creative differences".
The talkies
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Mary Pickford and Reginald Denny |
He then keeps starring parts opposite Norma Shearer, Robert Montgomery, Boris Karloff, Bette Davis, etc. But as he gets older, he gradually becomes a supporting character actor, his recurring part of Algy Longworth in the Bulldog Drummond films being an example.
By the 1940s, his most notable parts are in Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca, in Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror and in H.C. Potter's Mr. Blanding Builds His Dream House (starring Cary Grant).
Marilyn Monroe
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Reginald's employee: Marilyn Monroe |
He then focuses his career on television and ends it by a role in the acclaimed TV series Batman as King Boris and his very last role is in the Batman feature (available on Blu-ray) as Commodore Schmidlapp. Incidentally, that series is to be released this year on DVD.
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That's all for today, folks!
I enjoyed your Reginald Denny post very much, particularly because I have always found Denny to be a true delight as the frustrated architect in "Mr Blandings..." He really has the best line in the movie, dismissing Cary Grant and Myrna Loy's fantasy home saying, "It appears to me what you want is not a house but a series of small bungalows!" I stumbled upon your blog because I had just watched one of Denny's early TV appearances on a public domain movie and TV website. I thought somebody might have written a little something about him, and lo and behold! Anyway, should you or any of your readers wish to take a look at Denny's guest appearance on terrible American situation comedy from the early years of TV, have a look at Robert Cummings' "My Hero" from November 22, 1952 here: http://free-classic-tv-shows.com/Sit-Com/My-Hero/1952-11-22-s1-ep03-Movie-Star/index.php
ReplyDeleteThank you for the comment and the link. I was surprised to find so little about the man on the web considering how popular he was in his day.
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