Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Austin Trevor

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Years active
  
1930-1969

Name
  
Austin Trevor


Role
  
Actor

Spouse
  
Violet Clowes


Full Name
  
Claude Austin Trevor

Born
  
October 7, 1897 (
1897-10-07
)
Belfast, Northern Ireland

Died
  
January 22, 1978, Bury St Edmunds, United Kingdom

Movies
  
The Red Shoes, Konga, Goodbye - Mr Chips, Horrors of the Black Museum, Death at Broadcasting House

Similar People
  
Arthur Crabtree, Irene Browne, Robert Hamer, Henry Edwards, Esmond Knight

Claude Austin Trevor (7 October 1897 – 22 January 1978) was a Northern Irish actor who had a long career in film and television.

He played the parson in John Galsworthy's 1927 Broadway production Escape. He was the first actor to play Agatha Christie's detective Hercule Poirot on screen in three British films during the early 1930s: Alibi (1931), Black Coffee (1931) and Lord Edgware Dies (1934). He subsequently turned up in a character part in a later Poirot adaptation The Alphabet Murders in 1965. He stated that he only got the Poirot role because he could speak with a French accent.

During the 1960s he worked largely in television, appearing in series such as The First Churchills in which he played Lord Halifax. He appeared in an episode of the legal drama The Main Chance.

He died in Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk.

References

Austin Trevor Wikipedia