Robert Warwick Movies
As a boy growing up in Sacramento,
Robert Warwick sang in his church choir. Encouraged to pursue music as a vocation, Warwick studied in Paris for an operatic career. He abandoned singing for straight acting when, in 1903, he was hired by Clyde Fitch as an understudy in the Broadway play Glad of It. Within a few year, Warwick was a major stage star in New York. He managed to retain his matinee-idol status when he switched from stage to screen, starring in such films as
A Modern Othello and
Alias Jimmy Valentine and at one point heading his own production company. He returned to the stage in 1920, then resumed his Hollywood career in authoritative supporting roles. His pear-shaped tones ideally suited for talkies, Warwick played such characters as Neptune in
Night Life of the Gods (1933), Sir Francis Knolly in
Mary of Scotland (1936) and Lord Montague in
Romeo and Juliet (1936). He appeared in many of the
Errol Flynn "historicals" at Warner Bros. (
Prince and the Pauper,
Adventures of Robin Hood,
The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex); in more contemporary fare, he could usually be found in a military uniform or wing-collared tuxedo. From
The Great McGinty (1940) onward, Warwick was a particular favorite of producer/director
Preston Sturges, who was fond of providing plum acting opportunities to veteran character actors. Warwick's best performance under Sturges' guidance was as the brusque Hollywood executive who insists upon injecting "a little sex" in all of his studio's product in
Sullivan's Travels (1942). During the 1950s, Warwick played several variations on "Charles Waterman," the broken-down Shakespearean ham that he'd portrayed in
In a Lonely Place (1950). He remained in harness until his eighties, playing key roles on such TV series as The Twilight Zone and
The Law and Mr. Jones. Robert Warwick was married twice, to actresses
Josephine Whittell and
Stella Lattimore. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide