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Russell Thorndike

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Name
  
Russell Thorndike


Role
  
Actor

Russell Thorndike wwwdrsyncomlegendsimages1920thorndikesmlgif

Born
  
6 February 1885 (
1885-02-06
)
Rochester, Kent, England, UK

Died
  
November 7, 1972, London, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Rosemary Dowson (m. 1918–1972)

Movies
  
Hamlet, The Fair Maid of Perth, Whispering Tongues

Parents
  
Arthur Thorndike, Agnes Macdonald

Books
  
Doctor Syn: A Tale of the Romn, Doctor Syn Returns, Doctor Syn on the High Seas, Courageous Exploits of Doctor Syn, The slype

Similar People
  
Sybil Thorndike, Lewis Casson, Ann Casson, Harry Watt, Christopher Casson

Russell thorndike 2017 spring highlights


Arthur Russell Thorndike (6 February 1885, Rochester, Kent – 7 November 1972) was a British actor and novelist, best known for the Doctor Syn of Romney Marsh novels. Less well-known than his sister Sybil but equally versatile, Russell Thorndike's first love was writing and, after serving in World War I, he devoted himself to it.

Contents

Russell Thorndike Russell Thorndike Wikipedia

Background

He was born in Rochester, Kent, where his father had recently become a canon at the cathedral. He was a student at the King's School, Rochester and at St George's School, Windsor Castle and a chorister of St George's Chapel, an experience he later recounted in his book Children of the Garter (1937). Thorndike married Rosemary Dowson, a daughter of the well-known actress Rosina Filippi, in 1918.

Acting

At his suggestion, both he and Sybil (who once aspired to be a concert pianist) tried acting as a career in 1903. They became students at Ben Greet's Academy and two years later accompanied fellow members of the company on a North American tour, which included New York City. He remained three-and-a-half years with the company, once giving three performances as Hamlet in three different versions of the text on the same day. He also toured in South Africa and Asia.

In 1914 he enlisted. His brother Frank, who once performed on stage, was killed in action. Russell was severely wounded at Gallipoli and discharged. He rejoined Ben Greet's theatre company and his sister at the Old Vic in 1916, where he played in Shakespeare's King John, Richard II, and King Lear. Thorndike also acted with Sybil and her husband, Lewis Casson, in their touring repertory performing melodramas. In 1922 he was applauded for his performance in the first professional production of Henrik Ibsen's Peer Gynt at the Old Vic.

In film, Thorndike's appearances were infrequent. He played Macbeth (1922) in a silent version of the play opposite Sybil's Lady and also played leads in silent versions of other classic plays, including Scrooge (1923) as Old Ebenezer, and The School for Scandal (1923) as Sir Peter Teazle. He ended his film career in minor priest roles for Laurence Olivier in Hamlet (1948) and Richard III (1955). Although Thorndike appeared on the stage over four decades (including playing his own Dr. Syn character and entertaining audiences as Smee in ten revivals of Peter Pan, including the famous Scala Theatre version where Donald Sinden doubled the roles of Mr Darling and Captain Hook), he felt a deeper fulfilment in writing, which would include the later work The House of Jeffreys.

Writing

Published in the Dymchurch Day of Syn programme from 1985 is an apocryphal biography of Thorndike that indicates it was during the period of touring with Ben Greet's theatre company, that Russell and his sister Sybil came up with the idea of Dr Syn. The story goes, both were with the company in Spartanburg when a man was murdered on the street outside their hotel. The article suggests the corpse laid there for some time while "... his glazed eyes seemed to stare right up into Sybil's bedroom". Sybil was unable to sleep, so she asked Russell to sit up with her. She made a pot of tea while they talked, and the character of Dr Syn was born. As the night went on, "They piled horror on horror's head and after each new horror was invented they took another squint at the corpse to encourage them." Around this time he completed his first novel of romantic adventure on Romney Marsh entitled Doctor Syn: A Tale of the Romney Marsh.

Selected Writings

  • Doctor Syn: A Tale of the Romney Marsh (1915)
  • The Slype (1927)
  • Doctor Syn on the High Seas (1935)
  • Doctor Syn Returns (1936)
  • Further Adventures of Doctor Syn (1936)
  • Courageous Exploits of Doctor Syn (1938)
  • Amazing Quest of Doctor Syn (1939)
  • Shadow of Doctor Syn (1944)
  • Children Of The Garter
  • The House Of Jeffreys
  • Jet And Ivory
  • Herod's Peal
  • The Vandekkers
  • Sybil Thorndike
  • The Master Of The Macabre (1946)
  • Filmography

    Actor
    1960
    Fredric March Presents Tales from Dickens (TV Series) as
    Mr. Dick
    - David and Betsy Trotwood (1960) - Mr. Dick
    1956
    BBC Sunday-Night Theatre (TV Series) as
    Stephano
    - The Tempest (1956) - Stephano
    1955
    Richard III as
    First Priest
    1953
    The Brown Man's Servant (TV Movie) as
    Solomon Hyams
    1948
    Ten-Shilling Doll (TV Movie) as
    Simeon Barr
    1948
    Hamlet as
    Priest
    1946
    A Midsummer Night's Dream (TV Movie) as
    Quince
    1945
    Caesar and Cleopatra as
    Harpist's Master (uncredited)
    1944
    Henry V as
    Duke of Bourbon
    1944
    While Nero Fiddled as
    High Priest
    1936
    Fame as
    Judge
    1934
    Whispering Tongues as
    Fenwick
    1933
    Wolves of the Underworld as
    Dr. Orton Munroe
    1933
    Shot in the Dark as
    Dr. Stuart
    1933
    The Roof as
    Clive Bristow
    1924
    Human Desires as
    Paul Perot
    1924
    Miriam Rozella as
    Crewe Stevens
    1923
    The Fair Maid of Perth as
    Dwining
    1923
    Heartstrings as
    Tom Openshaw
    1923
    The Audacious Mr. Squire as
    Harry Smallwood
    1923
    A Christmas Carol (Short) as
    Ebenezer Scrooge
    1923
    Love in an Attic (Short) as
    The Producer
    1923
    The Bells (Short) as
    Mathias
    1923
    The Dream of Eugene Aram (Short) as
    Eugene Aram
    1923
    The School for Scandal (Short) as
    Sir Peter Teakle
    1923
    The Sins of a Father (Short)
    1923
    The Test (Short) as
    De Bourbonne
    1923
    Henrietta Maria; or, The Queen of Sorrow (Short) as
    Charles I
    1923
    Lucrezia Borgia; Or, Plaything of Power (Short) as
    Cesare Borgia
    1922
    Tense Moments from Great Plays as
    Macbeth / Squire Meadows (segments "Macbeth", and "It's Never Too Late to Mend")
    1922
    It's Never Too Late to Mend (Short) as
    Squire Meadows
    1922
    Macbeth (Short) as
    Macbeth
    Writer
    -
    The Magical World of Disney (TV Series) (novel "Doctor Syn, a Smuggler Tale of the Romney Marsh" - 3 episodes, 1963) (novel "Christopher Syn" - 1 episode, 1963)
    - The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh: Part 3 (1963) - (novel "Doctor Syn, a Smuggler Tale of the Romney Marsh")
    - The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh: Part 2 (1963) - (novel "Doctor Syn, a Smuggler Tale of the Romney Marsh")
    - The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh: Part 1 (1963) - (novel "Christopher Syn") / (novel "Doctor Syn, a Smuggler Tale of the Romney Marsh")
    1963
    Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow (novel: Christopher Syn)
    1962
    Night Creatures (novel "Dr. Syn" - uncredited)
    1937
    Doctor Syn (novel)
    Self
    1960
    This Is Your Life (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - Dame Sybil Thorndike (1960) - Self

    References

    Russell Thorndike Wikipedia