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Frank Vosper

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Name
  
Frank Vosper

Role
  
Actor


Died
  
March 6, 1937

Siblings
  
Margery Vosper


Movies
  
The Man Who Knew Too Much, Waltzes from Vienna, Red Ensign, Spy of Napoleon, The Last Post

Similar People
  
Agatha Christie, Michael Powell, Alfred Hitchcock, Maurice Elvey

Tragic fate of mr frank vosper 1937


Frank Vosper (15 December 1899, in London – 6 March 1937) was a British actor and playwright.

Contents

| 314 SOMERVILLE ROAD | FRANK VOSPER & DI BARRY |


Stage

Vosper made his stage debut in 1919 and was best known for playing urbane villains.

His extensive stage experience included appearing in his own play Love from a Stranger (1936), adapted from the short story "Philomel Cottage" by Agatha Christie.

His screenplays included co-writing the comedy No Funny Business (1933).

He also wrote People Like Us, based on the case of Edith Thompson and Frederick Bywaters. Banned by the Lord Chamberlain after a performance at the Strand Theatre featuring Atholl Fleming, it remained unperformed until 1948, when it premiered at Wyndham's Theatre in London, with Miles Malleson, George Rose, Robert Flemyng and Kathleen Michael.

Filmography

His films as an actor included

  • The Woman Juror (1926)
  • Blinkeyes (1926)
  • The Last Post (1929)
  • Rome Express (1932)
  • Strange Evidence (1932)
  • No Funny Business (1933)
  • Dick Turpin (1933)
  • Waltzes from Vienna (1934)
  • Red Ensign (1934)
  • Open All Night (1934)
  • Blind Justice (1934)
  • Jew Suss (1934)
  • The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934) as Ramon
  • Heart's Desire (1935)
  • Royal Cavalcade (1935)
  • Koenigsmark (1935)
  • Secret of Stamboul (1936)
  • Spy of Napoleon (1936)
  • His films as a writer included

  • Murder on the Second Floor (1932)
  • No Funny Business (1933)
  • Shadows on the Stairs (1941; adapted from Murder on the Second Floor)
  • Death

    Vosper drowned on 6 March 1937, when he fell from the ocean liner SS Paris. The death was eventually ruled as accidental after considerable media speculation. Several newspapers reported that earlier in the evening Vosper had been attending a farewell party for Miss Muriel Oxford, "Miss Great Britain" of 1936, in her cabin, and that he had threatened suicide if she refused to marry him. Miss Oxford reported that her last conversation with Vosper was "quite normal" and that he never threatened suicide. At the time there was a considerable debate, because Vosper was a well-known homosexual and it was said by many that it was because he found his lover flirting with a beauty queen that he threw himself from the ocean liner.

    According to the Daily Express Fiction Library edition of Murder on the Second Floor, Vosper fell from the French ocean liner SS Normandie, while contemporary newspaper accounts stated it was the liner SS Paris.

    References

    Frank Vosper Wikipedia


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