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ronald colman
(1891-1951)

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colman


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"A man usually falls in love with a woman who asks the kinds of questions he is able to answer."
- Ronald Colman


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ronald colman
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colman


    biography

    Ronald Colman was born Ronald Charles Colman on the 9th February 1891 in Richmond, Surrey, UK.

    Born to middle-class British parents (his father was an import merchant), actor Ronald Colman was raised to be as much a gentleman as any "high born" Englishman, and strove to maintain that standard both on and off screen all his life. Acting was merely a hobby to Colman while he attended the Hadley School at Littlehampton, Sussex, but after a few years' drudgery as a bookkeeper with the British Steamship Company, the theatre seemed a more alluring (if not more lucrative) life's goal.

    As he could not pass the military physical Colman did not join the fight during World War I in 1915. Instead he went into acting full-time, making his debut in a tiny role in the play The Maharanee of Arakan (1916). A subsequent better role in a production of Damaged Goods led to Colman's being hired to star in a two-reel film drama, The Live Wire. The film was never released, which is why Colman's "official" debut is often listed as his first feature film The Toilers (1919).

    The money wasn't good in the British film industry of the period--in fact it was a step away from starvation wages - so Colman arrived in New York City with about $37 to his name, making his American movie debut in Handcuffs or Kisses? (1920). His next film was also his big break: The White Sister (1923), directed in Italy by Henry King, in which Colman was co-starred opposite prestigious actress Lillian Gish. The association with King and Gish was Colman's entry into Hollywood, and by 1925 he'd begun his nine-year association with producer Sam Goldwyn.

    Most of Colman's silent films were lush romantic costume dramas, in which he usually co-starred with the lovely Vilma Banky. This sort of glorious nonsense was rendered anachronistic by the advent of talking pictures, but Goldwyn wisely cast Colman in a sophisticated up-to-date adventure, Bulldog Drummond (1929), for the actor's talkie debut. Colman scored an instant hit with his beautifully modulated voice and his roguishly elegant manner, and was one of the biggest and most popular screen personalities of the 1930s.

    A falling out with Goldwyn in 1934 prompted Colman to avoid long-term contracts for the rest of his career.

    As good as his pre-1935 films were, Colman was even more effective as a free-lancer in such films as Tale of Two Cities (1935), Lost Horizon (1937), The Prisoner of Zenda (1937), The Light That Failed (1939) and Talk of the Town (1942).

    The actor also began a fruitful radio career during this period, first as host of an intellectual celebrity round-robin discussion weekly The Circle in 1939; ten years later, he and his actress wife Benita Hume starred in a witty and well-written sitcom about a college professor and his spouse, The Halls of Ivy, which became a TV series in 1954.

    Perhaps the most famous of Colman's radio appearance were those he made on The Jack Benny Program as Jack's long-suffering next door neighbor.

    Colman won an Academy Award for his atypical performance in A Double Life (1947) as an emotionally disturbed actor who becomes so wrapped up in his roles that he commits murder.

    Curtailing his film activities in the 1950s, Colman planned to write his autobiography, but was prevented from doing so by ill health -- and in part by his reluctance to speak badly of anyone. Colman completed his final film role as the Spirit of Man in The Story of Mankind (1957), a laughably wretched extravaganza from which Colman managed to emerge with his dignity and reputation intact.

    He was married twice:

      - Thelma Raye (18 September 1920 - 1 August 1934) (divorced)
      - Benita Hume (30 September 1938 -- 19 May 1958) (his death)

    His daughter from his second marriage, Juliet Benita Colman, was born in 1944.

    He died of a lung infection on the 19th May 1958 in Santa Barbara, California, USA

    Ronald Colman autographs, photographs and more @ ebay.co.uk (direct link) - just checked and a great selection



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    biography | dvds | videos
    ronald colman
    charlie chaplin | alfred hitchcock | fritz lang | f.w. murnau
    erich von stroheim | wim wenders | robert wiene

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