Tripti Joshi (Editor)

George Sanders

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Cause of death
  
Suicide

Years active
  
1929–1972


Name
  
George Sanders

Role
  
Film actor

George Sanders classicmoviechatcomwpcontentuploads201304tu

Full Name
  
George Henry Sanders

Born
  
3 July 1906 (
1906-07-03
)

Occupation
  
Actor, author, singer-songwriter, music composer

Partner(s)
  
Lorraine Chanel(1968–72; his death)

Died
  
April 25, 1972, Castelldefels, Spain

Siblings
  
Tom Conway, Margaret Sanders

Spouse
  
Benita Hume (m. 1959–1967), Zsa Zsa Gabor (m. 1949–1954), Susan Larson (m. 1940–1949)

Parents
  
Henry Sanders, Margaret Sanders

Movies and TV shows
  
All About Eve, Rebecca, The Jungle Book, Village of the Damned, The Ghost and Mrs Muir

Similar People
  
Tom Conway, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Anne Baxter, Joseph L Mankiewicz, Phil Harris

George sanders biography sd


George Henry Sanders (3 July 1906 – 25 April 1972) was a Russian-born English film and television actor, singer-songwriter, music composer, and author. His career as an actor spanned more than 40 years. His upper-class English accent and bass voice often led him to be cast as sophisticated but villainous characters. He is perhaps best known as Jack Favell in Rebecca (1940), Scott Folliott in Foreign Correspondent (1940) (a rare heroic part), Addison DeWitt in All About Eve (1950), for which he won an Academy Award, King Richard the Lionheart in King Richard and the Crusaders (1954), Mr. Freeze in a two-parter episode of Batman (1966), the voice of the malevolent man-hating tiger Shere Khan in Disney's The Jungle Book (1967), and as Simon Templar, "The Saint", in five films made in the 1930s and 1940s.

Contents

George Sanders En images George Sanders Challengesfr

george sanders sings as time goes by from casablanca wmv


Early life

George Sanders En images George Sanders Challengesfr

Sanders was born in Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire, at number 6 Petrovski Ostrov. His parents were Henry Peter Ernest Sanders (1868–1960), and Margarethe Jenny Bertha Sanders (née Kolbe; 1883–1967), who was born in Saint Petersburg, of mostly German, but also Estonian and Scottish, ancestry. A biography published in 1990 claimed that Sanders's father was the illegitimate son of a prince of the House of Oldenburg and a Russian noblewoman of the Czar’s court, married to a sister of the Czar. The actor Tom Conway (1904–1967) was George Sanders's elder brother. Their younger sister, Margaret Sanders, was born in 1912.

George Sanders George Sanders Actor

George Sanders was 11 when, in 1917, at the outbreak of the Russian Revolution, the family moved to England. Like his brother, he attended Bedales School and Brighton College, a boys' independent school in Brighton, then went on to Manchester Technical College after which he worked in textile research.

George Sanders georgesanderslodger19441jpg

Sanders travelled to South America where he managed a tobacco plantation. The Depression sent him back to England. He worked at an advertising agency, where the company secretary, the aspiring actress Greer Garson, suggested that he take up a career in acting.

Early British Work

Sanders learned how to sing and got a role on stage in Ballhoo. He began to work regularly on stage, appearing several times with Edna Best. He was with Dennis King in The Command Performance. He had small parts in films like Love, Life and Laughter (1934), Things to Come (1936), Strange Cargo (1936), Find the Lady (1936), The Man Who Could Work Miracles (1936), and Dishonour Bright (1936).

Hollywood and 20th Century Fox

Some of these British films were distributed by 20th Century Fox who were looking for someone to play a villain in their Hollywood film Lloyd's of London (1936). Sanders was cast as Lord Everett Stacy with Tyrone Power the hero; Sanders' smooth upper-class English accent, his sleek manner and his suave, superior and somewhat threatening air made him in demand for American films for years to come.

Lloyds of London was a big hit and Fox put Sanders under a seven year contract (though he would be frequently loaned to other studios, notably RKO). He was opposite Power again in Love Is News (1937), then Fox put him in support of Wallace Beery in Slave Ship (1937) and of Gloria Stuart in The Lady Escapes (1937). Fox then gave Sanders his first lead role, in a B picture Lancer Spy (1937) with Dolores del Rio. He and del Rio were promptly reteamed in International Settlement (1938). He was second billed (to Richard Greene) in John Ford's Four Men and a Prayer (1938). Fox then had him play a villain in Mr. Moto's Last Warning (1939).

Sanders returned to Britain to make The Outsider (1939) for Associated British Picture Corporation and So This Is London (1939) for Fox.

The Saint

Sanders returned to Hollywood where RKO wanted him to play the hero in a series of B-movies, The Saint. The Saint in New York had already been made starring Louis Hayward in the title role but he decided not to return to the role. So Sanders stepped in for The Saint Strikes Back (1939), which was a solid hit.

After playing an American Nazi in Confessions of a Nazi Spy (1939) for Warners, Sanders was The Saint in London (1939). Also for RKO he was a villain in Nurse Edith Cavell (1939), as German, with Anna Neagle and Allegheny Uprising (1939), with John Wayne.

He played a double role in The Saint's Double Trouble (1940) then went to Universal for Green Hell (1940) and The House of the Seven Gables (1940).

Alfred Hitchcock wanted him for a support role in Rebecca (1940), a huge success. After The Saint Takes Over (1940) Hitchcock used him again in Foreign Correspondent (1940).

MGM used him as a villain in Bitter Sweet (1940) and he performed a similar function for Edward Small in The Son of Monte Cristo (1940). Sanders made his last appearance as Simon Templar in The Saint in Palm Springs (1941) then MGM called him back for Rage in Heaven (1941), an early film noir, playing the trustworthy good guy whose best friend, Robert Montgomery, goes murderously insane and sets him up for the rap.

He was a villain in Man Hunt (1941) but heroic in Sundown (1941).

The Falcon

RKO had been fighting with Leslie Chateris, creator of The Saint, so they stopped the series and put Sanders in a new B picture series about a suave crime fighter, The Falcon. The first entry was The Gay Falcon (1941). It was popular and quickly followed by A Date with the Falcon (1942).

At Fox he was in Son of Fury: The Story of Benjamin Blake (1942) with Tyrone Power, then it was back to The Falcon Takes Over (1942), based on Farewell, My Lovely.

MGM used him in Her Cardboard Lover (1942) and he was one of several stars in Tales of Manhattan (1942). Sanders was tiring of The Falcon so in he handed the role to his brother Tom, in The Falcon's Brother (1942), in which both appeared (and Sanders was killed off.) The only other film in which the two acting siblings appeared together was Death of a Scoundrel (1956), in which they also played brothers.

A-Picture Leading Man

Sanders played the lead in an A film, The Moon and Sixpence (1942), based on the novel by W. Somerset Maugham. He was a pirate villain in The Black Swan (1943), again fighting Tyrone Power, at Fox; the same studio used him in Quiet Please, Murder (1943) and They Came to Blow Up America (1943).

RKO called him back for This Land Is Mine (1943). He was in Appointment in Berlin (1943) at Columbia then for Fox finished his long term contract with them in Paris After Dark (1943) and The Lodger (1944), playing the romantic lead to Laird Cregar's title villain.

Sanders signed a new three-film contract with RKO, starting with Action in Arabia (1944). After Summer Storm (1944), Fox called him back to a Lodger follow up with Cregar, Hangover Square (1945).

Sanders played Lord Henry Wotton in the film version of The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945) and had the lead in The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry (1946) at Universal, and three for United Artists: A Scandal in Paris (1946), The Strange Woman (1946), and The Private Affairs of Bel Ami (1947).

Sanders the third lead in the elegiac The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947) with Gene Tierney and Rex Harrison in the leads. After playing the lead in Lured (1947) Fox cast him as Charles II in their expensive blockbuster Forever Amber (1949). The same studio used him in The Fan (1949). He was a villain in Cecil B. deMille's biblical epic Samson and Delilah (1949), the most popular movie of the year.

All About Eve

For his role as the acerbic, cold-blooded theatre critic Addison DeWitt in All About Eve (1950), Sanders won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.

He was a leading man in Black Jack (1950) but back to support/villain roles in I Can Get It for You Wholesale (1951) and The Light Touch (1951). He starred as Sir Brian de Bois-Guilbert in Ivanhoe (1952), dying in a duel with Robert Taylor after professing his love for the Jewish maiden Rebecca, played by Elizabeth Taylor. It was a huge success.

He followed it with Assignment – Paris! (1952), a thriller; Call Me Madam (1953), a rare musical role for Sanders; Witness to Murder (1954). He starred as King Richard the Lionheart in King Richard and the Crusaders (1954).

Sanders went to Italy to appear opposite Ingrid Bergman in Journey to Italy (1954). Back in Hollywood he made several for MGM: Jupiter's Darling (1955), Moonfleet (1955), The Scarlet Coat (1955), and The King's Thief (1955) (again as Charles II.)

He was now basically a supporting actor: Never Say Goodbye (1956), While the City Sleeps (1956), That Certain Feeling (1956). He did have the lead in Death of a Scoundrel (1956) and the TV series The George Sanders Mystery Theater (1957).

After this he was in The Seventh Sin (1957), The Whole Truth (1958), From the Earth to the Moon (1958), and That Kind of Woman (1959). He worked one last time with Power on Solomon and Sheba (1959); Power died during filming and was replaced by Yul Brynner.

Sanders was in A Touch of Larceny (1960) and The Last Voyage (1960). He had a rare lead in Bluebeard's Ten Honeymoons (1960) then after Cone of Silence (1960) had the star part in Village of the Damned (1960), a surprise hit.

Then it was back to support parts: Five Golden Hours (1961), Erik the Conqueror (1961), The Rebel (1961), Operation Snatch (1962), In Search of the Castaways (1962).

He was top billed in Cairo (1963) then was in The Cracksman (1963), Dark Purpose (1964), and The Golden Head (1964). Peter Sellers and Sanders appeared together in the Pink Panther sequel A Shot in the Dark (1964). Sanders had earlier inspired Sellers's character Hercules Grytpype-Thynne in the BBC radio comedy series The Goon Show (1951–60).

He played an upper-crust English villain, G. Emory Partridge, in two episodes of The Man From U.N.C.L.E. in 1965, "The Gazebo in the Maze Affair" and "The Yukon Affair". He also portrayed Mr. Freeze in two episodes of the live-action TV series Batman, both shown in February 1966.

In films he was in Last Plane to Baalbek (1965), Trunk to Cairo (1965), The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders (1965), The Quiller Memorandum (1966), Warning Shot (1967), and Good Times (1967) with Sonny and Cher. Sanders last significant performance was voicing the malevolent Shere Khan in the Walt Disney production of The Jungle Book (1967).

Final Films

After being top billed in The Body Stealers (1967), Sanders was in The Girl from Rio (1968) and The Best House in London (1969). He had a supporting role in John Huston's The Kremlin Letter (1969), in which his first scene showed him dressed in drag and playing piano in a gay bar in San Francisco.

His final roles were Rendezvous with Dishonour (1971); Doomwatch (1972), a feature film version of a contemporary BBC television series; Endless Night (1972) and Psychomania (1973).

Novels

Two ghostwritten crime novels were published under his name to cash in on his fame at the height of his wartime film series. The first was Crime on My Hands (1944), written in the first person, and mentioning his Saint and Falcon films. This was followed by Stranger at Home in 1946. Both were actually written by female authors: the former was by Craig Rice, and the latter by Leigh Brackett.

Singing

In 1958 Sanders recorded an album called The George Sanders Touch: Songs for the Lovely Lady. The album, released by ABC-Paramount Records, featured lush string arrangements of romantic ballads, crooned by Sanders in a fit baritone/bass (spanning from low to middle C), including "Such is My Love", a song he had himself composed. After going to great lengths to get the role he appeared in the Broadway cast of South Pacific, but was overwhelmed with anxiety over the singing and quickly dropped out. His singing voice can be heard in Call Me Madam (1953). He also signed on for the role of Sheridan Whiteside in the stage musical Sherry! (1967), based on Kaufman and Hart's play The Man Who Came to Dinner, but he found the stage production demanding and quit after his wife Benita Hume discovered that she had terminal bone cancer.

During the production of The Jungle Book Sanders refused to provide the singing voice for his character Shere Khan during the final recording of the song, "That's What Friends Are For". According to Richard Sherman, Bill Lee, a member of The Mellomen, was called in to substitute for Sanders.

Personal life

On 27 October 1940 Sanders married Susan Larson (real name Elsie Poole). The couple divorced in 1949. From later that year until 1954 Sanders was married to Zsa Zsa Gabor, with whom he starred in the film Death of a Scoundrel (1956) after their divorce. On 10 February 1959 Sanders married Benita Hume, widow of Ronald Colman. She died in 1967, the same year Sanders's brother Tom Conway died of liver failure; Sanders had become distant from his brother because of his drinking problem. Sanders endured a further blow in the same year with the death of their mother, Margarethe.

Sanders's autobiography, Memoirs of a Professional Cad, was published in 1960 and gathered critical praise for its wit. Sanders suggested the title A Dreadful Man for his biography, which was later written by his friend Brian Aherne and published in 1979. Sanders's last marriage, on 4 December 1970, was to Magda Gabor, the elder sister of his second wife. This marriage lasted only 32 days, after which he began drinking heavily.

Later years and suicide

Sanders suffered from dementia, worsened by waning health, and visibly teetered in his last films, owing to a loss of balance. According to Aherne's biography, he also had a minor stroke. Sanders could not bear the prospect of losing his health or needing help to carry out everyday tasks, and became deeply depressed. At about this time he found that he could no longer play his grand piano, so he dragged it outside and smashed it with an axe. His last girlfriend persuaded him to sell his beloved house in Majorca, Spain, which he later bitterly regretted. From then on he drifted.

On 23 April 1972, Sanders checked into a hotel in Castelldefels, a coastal town near Barcelona. He was found dead two days later, having gone into cardiac arrest after swallowing the contents of five bottles of the barbiturate Nembutal. He left behind three suicide notes, one of which read:

Dear World, I am leaving because I am bored. I feel I have lived long enough. I am leaving you with your worries in this sweet cesspool. Good luck.

His signature appeared under the message.

Sanders's body was returned to Britain for funeral services, after which it was cremated and the ashes were scattered in the English Channel.

David Niven wrote in Bring on the Empty Horses (1975), the second volume of his memoirs, that in 1937 his friend George Sanders had predicted that he would commit suicide when he was 65, and that in his 50s he had appeared to be depressed since his marriages had failed and several tragedies had befallen him.

Broadway

  • Conversation Piece, at the 44th Street Theatre, 1934
  • Notes

    ^ a: Nicholas II's sister Olga Alexandrovna married Duke Peter Alexandrovich of Oldenburg, but he was born in 1868, and therefore could not have been the father of Henry Sanders.

    Filmography

    Actor
    1973
    The Death Wheelers as
    Shadwell
    1972
    Endless Night as
    Andrew Lippincott
    1972
    Doomwatch as
    The Admiral - Sir Geoffrey
    1971
    The BOO Show (TV Movie)
    1971
    Mission: Impossible (TV Series) as
    Armand Anderssarian
    - The Merchant (1971) - Armand Anderssarian
    1970
    The Night of the Assassin as
    Gen. Downes
    1970
    ITV Saturday Night Theatre (TV Series) as
    James Fortune
    - Fade Out (1970) - James Fortune
    1970
    The Kremlin Letter as
    Warlock
    1969
    The Best House in London as
    Sir Francis Leybourne
    1969
    The Body Stealers as
    Gen. Armstrong
    1969
    Mothers of America as
    Masius
    1969
    The Candy Man as
    Sidney Carter
    1968
    King of Africa as
    Capt. Walter Phillips
    1968
    Laura (TV Movie) as
    Waldo Lydecker
    1967
    The Jungle Book as
    Shere Khan the Tiger (voice)
    1967
    Good Times as
    Mordicus / Knife McBlade / White hunter / ...
    1966
    Warning Shot as
    Calvin York
    1966
    The Quiller Memorandum as
    Gibbs
    1966
    Batman (TV Series) as
    Mister Freeze
    - Rats Like Cheese (1966) - Mister Freeze
    - Instant Freeze (1966) - Mister Freeze
    - Batman Is Riled (1966) - Mister Freeze (uncredited)
    1966
    Daniel Boone (TV Series) as
    Col. Roger Barr
    - Crisis by Fire (1966) - Col. Roger Barr
    1965
    Trunk to Cairo as
    Prof. Schlieben
    1965
    The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (TV Series) as
    G. Emory Partridge
    - The Yukon Affair (1965) - G. Emory Partridge
    - The Gazebo in the Maze Affair (1965) - G. Emory Partridge
    1965
    Riso e Ritmo (TV Series)
    - Episode dated 10 December 1965 (1965)
    1965
    The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders as
    The Banker
    1965
    Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (TV Series) as
    Fenton
    - The Traitor (1965) - Fenton
    1965
    The Rogues (TV Series) as
    Leonard Carvel
    - A Daring Step Backward (1965) - Leonard Carvel
    1964
    The Golden Head as
    Basil Palmer
    1964
    Last Plane to Baalbeck as
    Prince Makowski
    1964
    A Shot in the Dark as
    Benjamin Ballon
    1964
    Dark Purpose as
    Raymond Fontaine
    1963
    The Cracksman as
    The Guv'nor
    1963
    Cairo as
    The Major
    1962
    In Search of the Castaways as
    Thomas Ayerton
    1962
    Operation Snatch as
    Maj. Hobson
    1962
    Checkmate (TV Series) as
    Richard Gilmore
    - The Sound of Nervous Laughter (1962) - Richard Gilmore
    1961
    Le rendez-vous as
    J.K. / Kellermann
    1956
    General Electric Theater (TV Series) as
    Major Watkins / William Clark / Dr. Grissom
    - The Small Elephants (1961) - Major Watkins
    - The Man Who Inherited Everything (1957) - William Clark
    - The Charlatan (1956) - Dr. Grissom
    1961
    Call Me Genius as
    Sir Charles Brewer
    1961
    Five Golden Hours as
    Mr. Bing
    1960
    Village of the Damned as
    Gordon Zellaby
    1960
    Trouble in the Sky as
    Sir Arnold Hobbes
    1960
    Bluebeard's Ten Honeymoons as
    Henri Landru
    1960
    The Last Voyage as
    Captain Robert Adams
    1960
    Alcoa Theatre (TV Series)
    - Morning Boat to Africa (1960)
    1960
    Goodyear Theatre (TV Series)
    - Morning Boat to Africa (1960)
    1960
    A Touch of Larceny as
    Sir Charles Holland
    1959
    Solomon and Sheba as
    Adonijah
    1959
    That Kind of Woman as
    A.L.
    1958
    From the Earth to the Moon as
    Stuyvesant Nicholl
    1958
    Decision (TV Series)
    - Night of the Stranger (1958)
    1958
    The Whole Truth as
    Carliss
    1958
    Rock-a-Bye Baby as
    Danny Poole (scenes deleted)
    1956
    Studio 57 (TV Series) as
    Oliver Chantry / Dr. Grissom
    - The Fabulous Oliver Chantry (1958) - Oliver Chantry
    - The Charlatan (1956) - Dr. Grissom
    1958
    Schlitz Playhouse (TV Series) as
    John York
    - Night of the Stranger (1958) - John York
    1957
    The George Sanders Mystery Theater (TV Series)
    - Morning Boat to Africa (1957)
    1957
    The Seventh Sin as
    Tim Waddington
    1956
    Death of a Scoundrel as
    Clementi Sabourin
    1956
    Screen Directors Playhouse (TV Series) as
    Charles Ferris / Baron
    - The Bitter Waters (1956) - Charles Ferris
    - The Dream (1956) - Baron
    1956
    That Certain Feeling as
    Larry Larkin
    1956
    While the City Sleeps as
    Mark Loving
    1956
    The Ford Television Theatre (TV Series) as
    Jay Rossiter
    - Autumn Fever (1956) - Jay Rossiter
    1956
    Never Say Goodbye as
    Victor
    1955
    The 20th Century-Fox Hour (TV Series) as
    Waldo Lydecker
    - A Portrait of Murder (1955) - Waldo Lydecker
    1955
    The King's Thief as
    Charles II
    1955
    The Scarlet Coat as
    Dr. Jonathan Odell
    1955
    Moonfleet as
    Lord Ashwood
    1955
    Jupiter's Darling as
    Fabius Maximus
    1954
    Journey to Italy as
    Alex Joyce (as Georges Sanders)
    1954
    King Richard and the Crusaders as
    King Richard I
    1954
    Witness to Murder as
    Albert Richter
    1953
    Call Me Madam as
    General Cosmo Constantine
    1952
    Assignment: Paris as
    Nicholas Strang
    1952
    Ivanhoe as
    De Bois-Guilbert
    1951
    The Light Touch as
    Felix Guignol
    1951
    I Can Get It for You Wholesale as
    J.F. Noble
    1950
    Captain Blackjack as
    Mike Alexander
    1950
    All About Eve as
    Addison DeWitt
    1949
    Samson and Delilah as
    The Saran of Gaza
    1949
    The Fan as
    Lord Robert Darlington
    1947
    Forever Amber as
    King Charles II
    1947
    Lured as
    Robert Fleming
    1947
    The Ghost and Mrs. Muir as
    Miles Fairley
    1947
    The Private Affairs of Bel Ami as
    Georges Duroy
    1946
    The Strange Woman as
    John Evered
    1946
    A Scandal in Paris as
    Eugéne François Vidocq
    1945
    The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry as
    Harry Quincey
    1945
    The Picture of Dorian Gray as
    Lord Henry Wotton
    1945
    Hangover Square as
    Dr. Allan Middleton
    1944
    Summer Storm as
    Fedor Mikhailovich Petroff
    1944
    Action in Arabia as
    Michael Gordon
    1944
    The Lodger as
    Inspector John Warwick
    1943
    Paris After Dark as
    Dr. Andre Marbel
    1943
    Appointment in Berlin as
    Wing Cmdr. Keith Wilson
    1943
    They Came to Blow Up America as
    Carl Steelman / Ernst Reiter
    1943
    This Land Is Mine as
    George Lambert
    1942
    Quiet Please: Murder as
    Jim Fleg
    1942
    The Black Swan as
    Capt. Billy Leech
    1942
    The Falcon's Brother as
    Gay Lawrence
    1942
    The Moon and Sixpence as
    Charles Strickland
    1942
    Tales of Manhattan as
    Williams
    1942
    Her Cardboard Lover as
    Tony Barling
    1942
    The Falcon Takes Over as
    Gay Lawrence
    1942
    Son of Fury: The Story of Benjamin Blake as
    Sir Arthur Blake
    1942
    A Date with the Falcon as
    Gay Lawrence / The Falcon
    1941
    The Gay Falcon as
    Gay Laurence aka The Falcon
    1941
    Sundown as
    Maj. A. L. 'Herbie' Coombes
    1941
    Man Hunt as
    Major Quive-Smith
    1941
    Rage in Heaven as
    Ward Andrews
    1940
    The Saint in Palm Springs as
    Simon Templar / The Saint
    1940
    The Son of Monte Cristo as
    Gen. Gurko Lanen
    1940
    Bitter Sweet as
    Baron von Tranisch
    1940
    Foreign Correspondent as
    Scott ffolliott
    1940
    The Saint Takes Over as
    Simon Templar / The Saint
    1940
    Rebecca as
    Jack Favell
    1940
    The House of the Seven Gables as
    Jaffrey Pyncheon
    1940
    Green Hell as
    Forrester
    1940
    The Saint's Double Trouble as
    Simon Templar aka The Saint / 'Boss' Duke Bates
    1939
    Allegheny Uprising as
    Captain Swanson
    1939
    Nurse Edith Cavell as
    Capt. Heinrichs
    1939
    The Saint in London as
    Simon Templar / The Saint
    1939
    Confessions of a Nazi Spy as
    Franz Schlager
    1939
    So This Is London as
    Dr. de Reseke
    1939
    The Saint Strikes Back as
    Simon Templar aka The Saint
    1939
    The Outsider as
    Anton Ragatzy
    1938
    Mr. Moto's Last Warning as
    Eric Norvel
    1938
    Four Men and a Prayer as
    Wyatt Leigh
    1938
    International Settlement as
    Del Forbes
    1937
    Lancer Spy as
    Baron Kurt von Rohback / Lt. Michael Bruce
    1937
    The Lady Escapes as
    Rene Blanchard
    1937
    Slave Ship as
    Lefty
    1937
    Love Is News as
    Count Andre de Guyon
    1936
    Lloyd's of London as
    Lord Everett Stacy
    1936
    Dishonour Bright as
    Lisle
    1936
    The Man Who Could Work Miracles as
    Indifference
    1936
    Find the Lady as
    Curly Randall
    1936
    Strange Cargo as
    Roddy Burch
    1936
    Things to Come as
    Pilot (uncredited)
    1934
    Love, Life & Laughter as
    Singer in Public Bar (uncredited)
    Writer
    1954
    The Unholy Four (novel)
    Soundtrack
    1953
    Call Me Madam (performer: "Marrying For Love", "The Best Thing For You", "Finale")
    1945
    The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry (performer: "Little Brown Jug," Verse 7)
    1945
    The Picture of Dorian Gray (performer: "La Ci Darem La Mano" (excerpt) - uncredited)
    1942
    The Falcon Takes Over (performer: "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow" - uncredited)
    Thanks
    2004
    The Case of the Grinning Cat (TV Movie documentary) (homage)
    Self
    1970
    The Virginia Graham Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #2.44 (1970) - Self
    1970
    The Hollywood Squares (Daytime) (TV Series) as
    Self - Panelist
    - Episode dated 19 October 1970 (1970) - Self - Panelist
    1970
    The Merv Griffin Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - George Sanders, Steve Martin, Bettina Brenna, The Electric Door, Chetti Colato (1970) - Self
    1970
    The David Frost Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #2.276 (1970) - Self
    1970
    The Dick Cavett Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #5.8 (1970) - Self
    1967
    The Hollywood Palace (TV Series) as
    Self - Sketch Actor
    - Episode #5.7 (1967) - Self - Sketch Actor
    1966
    Witchdoctor in Tails (Documentary) as
    Narrator
    1966
    Today (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode dated 16 December 1966 (1966) - Self
    1963
    Ecco (Documentary) as
    Narrator (voice)
    1957
    Perry Como's Kraft Music Hall (TV Series) as
    Self / Self - Guest
    - George Sanders, Damita Jo, Kaye Ballard, Don Adams, Sandy Stewart, Jack Duffy, Pierre Olaf (1962) - Self
    - George Sanders, Kaye Ballard, Paul Lynde, Don Adams, Sandy Stewart, Jack Duffy (1961) - Self - Guest
    - George Sanders, Judy Holliday (1961) - Self
    - Shirley Booth, George Sanders, Marge and Gower Champion (1958) - Self
    - Kay Starr, Eddie Fisher, Pearl Bailey, George Sanders,The Mary Kaye Trio (1958) - Self
    - George Sanders, Janis Paige, Johnny Mathis, Lou Carter (1957) - Self - Guest
    - Ginger Rogers, George Sanders and Lou Carter (1957) - Self
    1960
    The Steve Allen Plymouth Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Rhonda Fleming, George Sanders (1960) - Self
    1960
    World by Night (Documentary) as
    Self - Narrator (English version, voice)
    1959
    Frances Langford Presents (TV Series) as
    Self
    1958
    Women in Love (TV Movie) as
    Self - Host
    1957
    What's My Line? (TV Series) as
    Self - Guest Panelist / Self - Mystery Guest
    - Althea Gibson (1958) - Self - Guest Panelist
    - Erle Stanley Gardner & George Sanders (1957) - Self - Mystery Guest
    1958
    The Dinah Shore Chevy Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #2.26 (1958) - Self
    1958
    The Patrice Munsel Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - George Sanders, Arnold Stang (1958) - Self
    1957
    The George Sanders Mystery Theater (TV Series) as
    Self - Host / Narrator
    - The People vs. Anne Tobin (1957) - Self - Host
    - Try It My Way (1957) - Self - Host
    - The Night I Died (1957) - Self - Host
    - Love Has No Alibi (1957) - Self - Host
    - Round Trip (1957) - Self - Host
    - Broker's Special (1957) - Self - Host
    - The Liar (1957) - Self - Host
    - Last Will and Testament (1957) - Self - Host
    - You Don't Live Here (1957) - Self - Host
    - The Call (1957) - Self - Host
    - And the Birds Still Sing (1957) - Self - Host / Narrator
    - Man in the Elevator (1957) - Self - Host
    1957
    Val Parnell's Sunday Night at the London Palladium (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #3.9 (1957) - Self
    1957
    The Ed Sullivan Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #11.2 (1957) - Self
    1956
    Ford Star Jubilee (TV Series) as
    Self
    - You're the Top (1956) - Self
    1956
    The Bob Hope Show (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Steve Allen, Betty Grable, George Sanders, Jane Russell, Dorothy Lamour, Marilyn Maxwell, Jerry Mathers (1956) - Self
    - Kathryn Grayson, Pearl Bailey, George Gobel, George Sanders (1956) - Self
    1956
    The Jimmy Durante Show (TV Series) as
    Self - Actor
    - Episode #2.28 (1956) - Self - Actor
    1953
    Kort möte med familjen Rossellini (Short) as
    Self
    1953
    The 25th Annual Academy Awards (TV Special) as
    Self - Audience Member (New York)
    1952
    24th Annual Academy Awards (TV Movie) as
    Self - Presenter
    Archive Footage
    2022
    Becoming Marilyn (TV Special documentary) as
    Addison DeWitt
    2022
    Invitation au voyage (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - James Ensor: Die Phantasmagorien von Ostende - Hawaii: Zum Klang der Ukulele - Dänemark: Astas Kabeljau mit Butter - Österreich: Sigmund Freuds Geheimbund (2022) - Self
    2022
    Reframed: Marilyn Monroe (TV Mini Series documentary) as
    Self
    - Siren (2022) - Self (uncredited)
    2020
    The Top Ten Revealed (TV Series) as
    Addison DeWitt
    - More Songs Named After Women (2020) - Addison DeWitt
    2019
    Cineficción Radio (Podcast Series)
    - Oscar Wilde (2019)
    2018
    The Academic Agent (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Economics and Politics: Basic Definitions (2018) - Self
    2017
    The Ben Shapiro Show (Podcast Series) as
    Self - Addison DeWitt
    - The Great Hollywood Collapse (2017) - Self - Addison DeWitt
    2015
    Compression (TV Series documentary)
    - Compression All about Eve de Joseph L. Mankiewics (2016)
    - Compression the Ghost and Mrs Muir de Joseph L. Mankiewicz (2015)
    - Compression Sundown de Henry Hathaway (2015)
    - Compression Solomon and Sheba de King Vidor (2015)
    2012
    Final Cut: Ladies and Gentlemen
    2011
    Stars of the Silver Screen (TV Series) as
    Addison DeWitt
    - Bette Davis (2011) - Addison DeWitt (uncredited)
    2008
    Diálogos de cine (TV Special) as
    Addison DeWitt
    2004
    Edgar G. Ulmer: The Man Off-Screen (Documentary)
    2003
    Living Famously (TV Series documentary) as
    Benjamin Ballon
    - Peter Sellers (2003) - Benjamin Ballon
    2001
    Roberto Rossellini: Frammenti e battute (Documentary) as
    Alexander Joyce
    2000
    Ex-S (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - Aleister Crowley: The Other Loch Ness Monster (2000) - Self
    1999
    Film Breaks (TV Series documentary) as
    Eric Norvel
    - Detectives from the Orient (1999) - Eric Norvel
    1997
    Twentieth Century Fox: The First 50 Years (TV Movie documentary) as
    Actor 'All About Eve' (uncredited)
    1995
    Sprockets (TV Series)
    - Masters of Menace (1995)
    1995
    Arena (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - The Peter Sellers Story Part 3: "I Am Not a Funny Man" (1995) - Self
    1990
    Hollywood Heaven: Tragic Lives, Tragic Deaths (Video documentary)
    1990
    Death in Hollywood (Video documentary) as
    Self
    1989
    Batmania from Comics to Screen (Video documentary) as
    Mister Freeze
    1988
    Disney Sing-Along Songs: You Can Fly! (Video short) as
    Shere Khan
    1986
    Marilyn Monroe: Beyond the Legend (TV Movie documentary) as
    Addison DeWitt
    1977
    The Magical World of Disney (TV Series) as
    Thomas Ayerton / Shere Khan
    - In Search of the Castaways: Part 2 (1978) - Thomas Ayerton
    - In Search of the Castaways: Part 1 (1978) - Thomas Ayerton
    - Disney's Greatest Villains (1977) - Shere Khan
    1977
    Oedipus orca as
    Alex Joyce
    1976
    Bob Hope's World of Comedy (TV Special) as
    Self
    1971
    The Dick Cavett Show (TV Series) as
    Benjamin Ballon from film A SHOT IN THE DARK
    - Julie Andrews/Blake Edwards (1971) - Benjamin Ballon from film A SHOT IN THE DARK

    References

    George Sanders Wikipedia