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Norman McKinnel

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Other names
  
Norman McKinnell

Role
  
Film actor

Name
  
Norman McKinnel


Years active
  
1894 – 1932

Occupation
  
Actor

Books
  
The Bishop's Candlesticks

Norman McKinnel httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenaa2Nor

Born
  
10 February 1870 (
1870-02-10
)
Maxwelltown, Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotland, UK

Notable work
  
The Bishop's Candlesticks

Died
  
March 29, 1932, London, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Gertrude Scott (m. 1907–1932)

Movies
  
Downhill, Hindle Wakes, The Sleeping Cardinal, Everybody's Business, The Frightened Lady

Similar People
  
Maurice Elvey, Alfred Hitchcock, Harry Lachman, T Hayes Hunter

Bishop s candlesticks by norman mckinnell


Norman McKinnel (10 February 1870 – 29 March 1932) was a Scottish stage and film actor and playwright, active from the 1890s until his death. He appeared in many stage roles in the UK and overseas as well as featuring in a number of films, the best known of which is Alfred Hitchcock's 1927 production Downhill. His surname was sometimes mistranscribed as McKinnell.

Contents

Norman McKinnel NORMAN McKINNEL Scottish Stage Film Actor Playwright DEATH 1932

The bishop s candlesticks by norman mckinnel


Early years

McKinnel was born in 1870 at Maxwelltown, Kirkcudbrightshire (since incorporated into Dumfries) and originally intended to follow his father into the engineering business before deciding to enter the acting profession. As a playwright he is known for the play, The Bishop's Candlesticks, an adaptation of a section of Victor Hugo's Les Miserables.

Career

McKinnel's first stage appearance was in Clacton-on-Sea, Essex in 1894 and he soon based himself in London to further his career. He became known over the course of his career for playing many Shakespearian roles, and his stage work took him the U.S., Australia and South Africa. He was known for writing several easily stageable one-act plays, the most successful of which was The Bishop's Candlesticks (1901).

McKinnel's film career began in 1899 in King John, the earliest known example of Shakespeare on film. The work consisted of four brief scenes from the play, and a two-minute fragment survives at the EYE Film Institute in Amsterdam. McKinnel did not act on screen again until the mid-1910s, when he began to make further film appearances fitted in around his stage work. He played the title character in the original London production of Hobson's Choice in 1916. Notably, he appeared as the same character (Nathaniel Jeffcote) in three separate film versions of the same play Hindle Wakes, in 1918 and 1927 silent adaptations and again in 1931 in sound. In 1919 he played Paul Dombey in the first screen version of the Charles Dickens novel Dombey and Son. McKinnel's most widely known film to contemporary audiences is Hitchcock's Downhill, as the harsh but ultimately repentant patriarch opposite Ivor Novello.

Death

McKinnel died of a heart attack in London on 29 March 1933, aged 62.<re"Noted stage star in England dead" The Montreal Gazette, 30 March 1932; retrieved 25 August 2010.</ref>

Filmography

Actor
1932
Edgar Wallace's White Face the Fiend as
Insp. Mason
1932
Criminal at Large as
Chief Inspector Tanner
1931
Hindle Wakes as
Nat Jeffcote
1931
The Outsider as
Jasper Sturdee
1931
Potiphar's Wife as
Lord Bromford
1931
Sherlock Holmes' Fatal Hour as
Colonel Henslowe (as Norman McKinnell)
1927
The Fake as
Ernest Stanton
1927
Downhill as
Sir Thomas Berwick
1927
Fanny Hawthorne as
Nathaniel Jeffcote
1922
Don't Blame Your Children as
James Danvers
1920
A Gamble in Lives as
James Danvers (as Norman McKinnell)
1920
Pillars of Society as
John Halligan (as Norman McKinnell)
1919
Dombey and Son as
Paul Dombey
1918
Hindle Wakes as
Nat Jeffcote
1917
Mary Girl as
Ezra
1917
Everybody's Business (Short) as
John Briton (as Norman McKinnell)
1915
The Folly of Desire as
Simeon Knollett (as Norman McKinnell)
1899
King John (Short) as
Lymoges
Writer
1949
The Bishop's Candlesticks (TV Movie) (play)
1929
The Bishop's Candlesticks (Short) (play)

References

Norman McKinnel Wikipedia