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Geoffrey Kerr

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Occupation
  
Actor and writer

Children
  
John Kerr

Role
  
Film actor

Name
  
Geoffrey Kerr

Years active
  
1917–1956


Full Name
  
Geoffrey Kemble Grinham Keen

Born
  
26 January 1895 (
1895-01-26
)
London, England

Died
  
July 1, 1971, Aldershot, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
June Walker (m. 1926–1943)

Movies
  
Torn Sails, The Runaround, 12.10, Women Love Once, Sweet Devil

Parents
  
Frederick Kerr, Lucy N. Dowson

Similar People
  
June Walker, John Kerr, Frederick Kerr, Yves Mirande, Herbert Brenon

Geoffrey Kerr (26 January 1895 – 1 July 1971) was a British stage and film actor and writer, during the middle of the 20th century, part of a British family with a strong stage and theatre tradition spanning several generations.

Contents

Early life

Geoffrey Kemble Grinham Keen was born on 26 January 1895, in London, the son of character actor and theatrical manager Frederick Kerr and Lucy Dowson. After college, he appeared in several of his father's theatrical productions.

At the start of World War I, he obtained a commission in the Shropshire Light Infantry, and saw duty in the trenches. A friend from his theatre days before the war arranged for him to receive training in the Royal Flying Corps. While serving in that branch of the British military, he was wounded and spent the remainder of the war as an instructor in aerial gunnery. In 1920, he travelled to the United States for the first time to appear with his father on Broadway. From that point on for the remainder of the 1920s, he travelled back and forth across the Atlantic quite often, appearing on Broadway in New York City, and making silent films back home in Britain.

Stage career

On Broadway, as Geoffrey Kerr, he performed in such plays as The Stork (1925) and London Calling, the latter which he wrote. He also directed occasionally, and co-starred with wife June Walker on Broadway in The Bachelor Father (1928). He ended his acting career in 1934, though he did appear in a play on Broadway in 1949–50, to celebrate the silver Broadway anniversary of the two stars Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne.

  • Just Suppose, playing George (1 November 1920 – January ?, 1921)
  • East of Suez, playing Harold Knox (21 September 1922 – December ?, 1922)
  • You and I, playing Roderick White (19 February 1923 – June ?, 1923)
  • The Changelings, playing Wicky Faber (17 September 1923 – January ?, 1924)
  • In His Arms, playing Ernest Fairleigh (13 October 1924 – November ?, 1924)
  • The Stork, playing Lionel Deport (26 January 1925 – February ?, 1925)
  • 'First Love", playing Jean (8 November 1926 – December ?, 1926)
  • The Bachelor Father, playing John Ashley (28 February 1928 – October ?, 1928)
  • Ada Beats the Drum, directed by Geoffrey Kerr (8 May 1930 – June ?, 1930)
  • London Calling, written by Geoffrey Kerr, playing George Craft (18 October 1930 – October  ?, 1930)
  • This is New York, playing Joseph Gresham, Jr. (28 November 1930 – January ?, 1931)
  • Collision, playing Dr. Gestzi (16 February 1932 – February ?, 1932)
  • We Are No Longer Children, playing Jean Servin (31 March 1932 – April ?, 1932)
  • Domino, playing Cremone (16 August 1932 – August ?, 1932)
  • Foolscap, staged by Geoffrey Kerr, playing Shakespeare (11 January 1933 – January ?, 1933)
  • Yellow Jack, playing Stackpoole (6 March 1934 – May 1934)
  • I Know My Love, playing Frederic Chanler (2 November 1949 – 3 June 1950)
  • Film career

    Geoffrey Kerr became known in the film industry when he co-starred with his father in the British silent film 12.10 (1919), although he did appear in several other silent films prior to that. Most of his silent films were British productions; the "talkies" in 1931 were US productions.

  • The Profligate (1917) .... Wilfred
  • 12.10 (1919) .... Geoffrey Brooke
  • The Usurper (1919) .... Bonamy Tredgold
  • Torn Sails (1920) .... Ivor Parry
  • The Great Day (1920) .... Dave Leeson
  • The Mirage (1920) .... Richard Dalziell
  • Love's Boomerang (1922) .... Saville Mender
  • The Man from Home (1922) .... Horace Granger-Simpson
  • Just Suppose (1926) .... Count Anton Teschy
  • Women Love Once (1931) .... Allen Greenough
  • The Runaround (1931) .... Fred
  • Once a Lady (1931) .... Jimmy Fenwick (final film role)
  • Writing career

    From 1935 until the late 1940s, Kerr was a screenwriter and playwright; he also wrote several British television productions in the early 1950s. His best-known film credits include Rene Clair's Break the News (1938), the wartime comedy/melodrama Cottage to Let (1941), and the period drama Jassy (1947). One of Kerr's screenplays from 1936 resurfaced in 1988 as the British TV production, The Tenth Man.

    His credits include:

  • The Ghost Goes West (1935) (scenario)
  • Weekend Millionaire (1935) (writer) ... aka Once in a Million (UK original title)
  • The Tenth Man (1936) (writer)
  • A Star Fell from Heaven (1936) (writer)
  • Living Dangerously (1936) (writer)
  • Break the News (1938) (writer)
  • Sweet Devil (1938) (writer)
  • Under Your Hat (1940) (his play adapted for film)
  • Bombsight Stolen (1941) (his play adapted for film) ... aka Cottage to Let (UK original title)
  • Jassy (1947) (writer)
  • The Calendar (1948) (writer)
  • Fools Rush In (1949) (writer)
  • The Monster of Killoon (1952) (British television play)
  • My Husband and I (1956) British TV series (writer of an unknown number of episodes)
  • In addition, Kerr wrote a fantasy novel, Under the Influence (1954), about a London bank cashier who can read people's minds, but only when drunk. Kerr attempted to co-write a screenplay with George S. Kaufman based on that novel, but the screenplay remained unfinished.

    Personal life

    He married June Walker in 1926. They had one child in 1931 (a son, John Kerr, who also became an actor in the family tradition). He separated from his wife in 1938, and they divorced in 1943.

    Death

    Geoffrey Kerr died 1 July 1971, in Aldershot, Hampshire, England, aged 76.

    Filmography

    Writer
    2016
    Kenopsia (Short) (story)
    1956
    My Husband and I (TV Series)
    1952
    The Monster of Killoon (TV Movie) (play)
    1949
    Fools Rush In (screen play)
    1948
    The Calendar (writer)
    1947
    Jassy (screenplay)
    1941
    Bombsight Stolen (adapted from the play by)
    1940
    Under Your Hat (musical play written by)
    1938
    Break the News (writer)
    1938
    Sweet Devil (scenario)
    1936
    The Tenth Man (additional dialogue)
    1936
    A Star Fell from Heaven (screenplay - uncredited)
    1936
    Once in a Million
    1936
    Living Dangerously (additional dialogue)
    1935
    The Ghost Goes West (scenario)
    Actor
    1931
    Once a Lady as
    Jimmy Fenwick
    1931
    The Runaround as
    Fred
    1931
    Women Love Once as
    Allen Greenough
    1926
    Just Suppose as
    Count Anton Teschy
    1922
    The Man from Home as
    Horace Granger-Simpson
    1922
    Love's Boomerang as
    Saville Mender
    1920
    The Mirage as
    Richard Dalziell
    1920
    The Great Day as
    Dave Leeson
    1920
    Torn Sails as
    Ivor Parry
    1919
    The Usurper as
    Bonamy Tredgold
    1919
    12.10 as
    Geoffrey Brooke
    1917
    The Profligate as
    Wilfred
    Self
    1929
    Night Club (Short) as
    Self

    References

    Geoffrey Kerr Wikipedia