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Frank Cellier (actor)

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Years active
  
1903–1946

Role
  
Actor

Name
  
Frank Cellier

Parents
  
Francois Cellier


Born
  
23 February 1884 (
1884-02-23
)
Surbiton, Surrey, England, United Kingdom

Died
  
September 27, 1948, London, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Florence Glossop Harric (m. 1910–1925)

Children
  
Peter Cellier, Antoinette Cellier

Movies
  
The 39 Steps, The Man Who Changed, The Passing of the Third, Quiet Weekend, Love on the Dole

Similar People
  
Antoinette Cellier, Peter Cellier, Berthold Viertel, Michael Balcon, Louis Levy

Frank Cellier (23 February 1884 – 27 September 1948) was an English actor. Early in his career, he toured in Britain, Germany, the West Indies, America and South Africa. In the 1920s, he became known in the West End for Shakespearean character roles, among others, and also directed some plays in which he acted. Later, during the 1930s and 1940s, he also appeared in films.

Contents

Early years

Francois Cellier, always known as Frank, was born in Surbiton, Surrey, the only son of the conductor Francois Cellier, and was educated at Cranleigh School. After leaving school, he spent three years in business.

In 1903, Cellier made his first stage appearance as Clement Hale in Arthur Wing Pinero's Sweet Lavender at the Town Hall in Reigate and thereafter made acting his career, also doing some stage manager work. In the autumn of that year he went on tour with William Poel's company in Doctor Faustus, and later toured in a number of Shakespearean roles in the company of Ian Maclaren. He then extended his repertory in a wide variety of roles which he undertook on tour with the actress Florence Nellie Glossop-Harris (d. 1932), daughter of the actor-manager Augustus Harris, whom he married in 1910. She divorced him in 1925. They had a daughter, Antoinette, who became an actress and married actor Bruce Seton, and a son, Peter, who is a TV, theatre and film actor.

Cellier toured not only in Britain, but in Germany and the West Indies, and did not make his debut in London until 1914, when under his own management he appeared in Cheer, Boys, Cheer. After this he toured in America and South Africa, and did not appear again in London until 1920. "By this time," wrote The Times, "his solid merit was appreciated after his long and arduous apprenticeship."

Shakespearean and other stage roles

Once established, Cellier pursued a career balancing new commercial plays – sometimes farce, often murder drama – and classical roles. His favourite part was Hamlet, and his other Shakespeare roles included Apemantus in Timon of Athens, the title role in Henry IV, Part 2, Cassio in Othello, Touchstone in As You Like It, Angelo in Measure for Measure, Ford in The Merry Wives of Windsor, Quince in A Midsummer Night's Dream and Kent in King Lear. Two of his most celebrated roles were in The Merchant of Venice and Twelfth Night, of which The Times said, "while he could wring the last drop of dramatic tension from the role of Shylock, he could also play Sir Toby Belch in such a way as to bring out the essence of the comedy without suggesting that the old reprobate had never known better days."

In the West End, he directed and played in numerous plays. His roles in these included the Nobleman in The Man with a Load of Mischief (1925), one of Marie Tempest's suitors in Noel Coward's The Marquise (1927), Sir Peter Teazle in The School for Scandal (1929) and the King in the Improper Duchess (1931). He starred in The Duchess of Dantzic in 1932 and directed and appeared in The Mask of Virtue (1935) with Vivien Leigh. He also appeared that year in Espionage, a play by Walter C. Hackett, at the Apollo Theatre. His final stage role was the father in Terence Rattigan's The Winslow Boy in 1946, which he played to great praise in London and was due to take to America but was prevented by ill-health from doing so.

Films and death

Beginning in the 1930s, Cellier played roles in films, including Sheriff Watson in Alfred Hitchcock's The 39 Steps (1935). He was also Monsieur Barsac in the comedy film The Guv'nor (1935).

Cellier died in London in 1948 aged 64.

Filmography

Actor
1948
The Blind Goddess as
The Judge
1948
Easy Money as
Manager (segment The Teddy Ball Story)
1946
The Magic Bow as
Antonio Paganini
1946
Quiet Weekend as
Adrian Barrasford
1944
Give Us the Moon as
Pyke
1942
The Big Blockade as
German: Schneider
1942
Black Sheep of Whitehall as
Dr. Innsbach
1941
Ships with Wings as
Gen. Scarappa
1941
Jeannie as
Man Who Has Lost His Keys
1941
Bombsight Stolen as
John Forest
1941
Quiet Wedding as
Dallas's Father
1941
Love on the Dole as
Sam Grundy
1940
The Midas Touch as
Corris Morgan
1940
The Spider as
Julian Ismay
1939
Mary Rose (TV Movie) as
Mr. Amy
1938
The Ware Case as
Skinner
1938
Queen of Destiny as
Lord Derby
1938
A Royal Divorce as
Talleyrand
1938
Queen of Crime as
Sir Ralph Sapson
1937
Non-Stop New York as
Sam Pryor
1937
Victoria the Great as
Minor Role (uncredited)
1937
Theatre Parade (TV Series) as
Hassan
- Hassan: Part 2 (1937) - Hassan
- Hassan: Part 1 (1937) - Hassan
1937
Take My Tip as
Paradine
1937
You're in the Army Now as
Regimental Sergeant-Major Briggs
1937
Action for Slander as
Sir Bernard Roper (as Frank Celier)
1936
The Man Who Lived Again as
Lord Haslewood / Clayton
1936
Nine Days a Queen as
Henry VIII
1936
Rhodes as
Barney Barnato
1935
Mister Hobo as
Barsac
1935
The Passing of the Third Floor Back as
Wright
1935
The Clairvoyant as
MacGregor (uncredited)
1935
The 39 Steps as
The Sheriff
1935
Loves of a Dictator as
Sir Murray Keith
1934
Lorna Doone as
Capt. Jeremy Stickles
1934
Power as
Nobleman Arresting Oppenheimer (uncredited)
1934
The Song You Gave Me as
Golf Club Patron (uncredited)
1934
Colonel Blood as
Col. Blood
1934
The Fire Raisers as
Brent
1933
Doss House as
Editor
1933
The Golden Cage as
Julian Sande
1933
The Woman in Command as
Col. Philip Markham
1932
Tin Gods as
Major Drake
1931
Her Reputation as
Henry Sloane
1916
Gloria as
Louis Martino
Archive Footage
2003
Living Famously (TV Series documentary) as
The Sheriff (clip from The 39 Steps (1935))
- Alfred Hitchcock (2003) - The Sheriff (clip from The 39 Steps (1935)) (uncredited)

References

Frank Cellier (actor) Wikipedia