Halliwell Hobbes(1877-1962)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Born at Shakespeare's birthplace, Stratford-on-Avon, Halliwell Hobbes
could perhaps not aspire to anything else but to be an actor. He made
his stage debut in 1898 playing Shakespearean repertory with the famous
acting company of Sir Frank Benson throughout England. Among others he
played opposite Mrs. Patrick Campbell and Ellen Terry. Hobbes came to
the American and Broadway as early as 1906, doing performing and some
directing until early 1929 when he came to Hollywood as an elderly
actor to launch a long career of memorable character roles. In those
first years he seemed to be either a lord or a butler. But by 1931 he
was much in demand, lending his distinctive and dignified nasal voice
to nearly ten films per year through most of the 1930s. Moving from one
studio to another, he was doctors, diplomats, more lords, and some very
memorable clerics-especially the staid archbishop reduced to laughter
in The Prince and the Pauper (1937). The roles were scarcer through the 1940s, but he was back
on Broadway by mid 1940 playing Capulet in "Romeo and Juliet." Still
that distinctive voice graced over 100 films by 1949. He turned to the
richly diverse American TV playhouse format by 1950 and continued with
roles through the decade along with a continued presence on Broadway
until late 1955. Although he was sometimes uncredited in films, his
roles were no less a recorded legacy of a dedicated acting
talent.