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Edward Everett Horton

Edward Everett Horton

Few actors were more beloved of audiences across multiple generations -- and from more different fields of entertainment -- than Edward Everett Horton. For almost 70 years, his work delighted theatergoers on two coasts (and a lot of the real estate in between) and movie audiences, first in the silents and then in the talkies, where he quickly became a familiar supporting player and then a second lead, often essaying comically nervous "fuddy-duddy" parts, and transcended the seeming limitations of character acting to rival most of the leading men around him in popularity; he subsequently moved into television, both as an actor and narrator, and gained a whole new fandom for his work as the storyteller in the animated series "Fractured Fairy Tales." Edward Everett Horton was born in Brooklyn, NY, in 1886 -- when it was a separate city from New York City -- the son of Edward Everett Horton and Isabella Diack Horton. His grandfather was Edward Everett Hale, the author of the story The Man Without a Country. He attended Boys High School and later studied at the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute and at Oberlin College in Ohio, and Columbia University in Manhattan. His path to graduation was thwarted when he joined the university's drama club -- despite his 6'2" build, his first role had him cast as a woman. He never did graduate from Columbia, but he embarked on a performing career that was to keep him busy for more than six decades. In those days, he also sang -- in a baritone -- and joined the Staten Island-based Dempsey Light Opera Company for productions of Michael Balfe's The Bohemian Girl and Gilbert & Sullivan's The Mikado. His singing brought him to the Broadway stage as a chorus member, and he subsequently spent three years with the Louis Mann company honing his acting skills while playing in stock -- Horton made his professional acting debut in 1908 with a walk-on role in The Man Who Stood Still. By 1911, he was working steadily and regularly, and often delighting audiences with his comedic talents, and remained with the Mann company for another two years. He was a leading man in the Crescent Theatre stock company, based in Brooklyn, and spent the remainder of the teens playing leading roles in theater companies across the United States, eventually basing himself in Los Angeles. Horton entered movies in 1918, and became well known to screen audiences with his performance in the 1923 version of Ruggles of Red Gap. He was identified almost entirely with comedic work after that, and by the end of the '20s had starring roles in a string of comedic shorts. It was after the advent of sound, however, that he fully hit his stride on the big screen. Horton's first talking feature was The Front Page (1931), directed by Lewis Milestone, based on the hit play by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, in which he played fidgety reporter Roy Bensinger. Starting in the early '20s, Horton based most of his stage work on the West Coast, producing as well as acting. He leased the Majestic Theater in Los Angeles and found success with works such as The Nervous Wreck, in which he worked with Franklin Pangborn, a character actor who would also -- like Horton -- specialize in nervous, fidgety roles (though Pangborn, unlike Horton, never rose beyond character actor and supporting player status in features). In 1932, he leased the Hollywood Playhouse, which he subsequently operated for a season starring in Benn Wolfe Levy's Springtime for Henry, in which he performed more than 3000 times, making enough money from that play alone to buy his summer home in the Adirondacks. Horton fit in his movie work in between productions of Springtime for Henry (which was filmed in 1934, without Horton), and was always in demand. Amid his many roles over the ensuing decade, Horton worked in a half-dozen of the Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers musicals at RKO. His other notable roles onscreen during the 1930s included a portrayal of The Mad Hatter in the 1933 Alice in Wonderland, and a neurotic paleontologist (who first appears disguised as a woman) in Frank Capra's Lost Horizon (1937). He worked in at least six movies a year from the early '30s through the end of the 1940s, and there were occasional serious variations in his roles -- Horton played an unusually forceful part in Douglas Sirk's Summer Storm (1944), and he delivered a comedic tour de force (highlighted by a delightful scene with Carmen Miranda) in Busby Berkeley's The Gang's All Here (1943). Horton kept busy for more than 60 years, and not just in acting -- along with his brother George he bought up property in the San Fernando Valley from the 1920s onward, eventually assembling Beleigh Acres, a 23-acre development where he lived with his mother (who passed away at age 102). His hobbies included antiques, and at the time of his death in 1970, he had a collection with an estimated value of a half million dollars. He was busy on television throughout the 1950s and '60s, not only in onscreen work but also voice-overs for commercials, and he even hosted the Westminster Kennel Club dog show at Madison Square Garden. Horton was a regular cast member on the comedy Western series F Troop, playing Roaring Chicken (also referred to as Running Chicken), the Hekawi indian tribe medicine man. But his most enduring work from the 1960s was as the narrator of "Fractured Fairy Tales," the Jay Ward-produced co-feature to Rocky & Bullwinkle, in which he was prominently billed in the opening credits of every episode. That engagement endeared him to millions of baby boomers and their parents, and his work in those cartoons continues to gain Horton new fans four decades after his death. He grew frail in appearance during the 1960s, and was not averse to playing off of that reality on series such as Dennis the Menace, where he did a guest-star spot in one episode as Uncle Ned, a health-food and physical-culture fanatic. Horton never married, and shared a home later in life with his sister, Hannabelle Grant. He was hospitalized weeks before his death from cancer in September 1970, and was so busy that during that hospitalization he showed up as a guest star in two episodes of the sitcom The Governor and J.J., His final big-screen appearance was in the Bud Yorkin/Norman Lear comedy Cold Turkey, which wasn't released until the following year. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide


Filmography of Edward Everett Horton:

Edward Everett Horton Trivia

When was Edward Everett Horton born?
Edward Everett Horton date of birth: March 18, 1886

Who did Edward Everett Horton portray in Lonely Wives?
Edward Everett Horton was Mr. Smith in Lonely Wives

What role did Edward Everett Horton play in Lost Horizon?
Edward Everett Horton played Alexander P. Lovett in Lost Horizon

Who did Edward Everett Horton play in The Town Went Wild?
Edward Everett Horton was Everett Conway in The Town Went Wild

Who did Edward Everett Horton portray in Top Hat?
Edward Everett Horton was Horace Hardwick in Top Hat

Who did Edward Everett Horton play in Shall We Dance?
Edward Everett Horton was Jeffrey Baird in Shall We Dance?

Who did Edward Everett Horton portray in Reaching for the Moon?
Edward Everett Horton was Rogers Valet in Reaching for the Moon

What role did Edward Everett Horton portray in The Gay Divorcee?
Edward Everett Horton played Egbert Fitzgerald in The Gay Divorcee

Who did Edward Everett Horton play in The Front Page?
Edward Everett Horton was Bensinger in The Front Page

Who did Edward Everett Horton portray in Trouble in Paradise?
Edward Everett Horton was Francois Filiba in Trouble in Paradise

Who did Edward Everett Horton portray in The Gang's All Here?
Edward Everett Horton was Peyton Potter in The Gang's All Here

What role did Edward Everett Horton play in Holiday?
Edward Everett Horton played Nick Potter in Holiday

What role did Edward Everett Horton play in Here Comes Mr. Jordan?
Edward Everett Horton played Messenger 7013 in Here Comes Mr. Jordan

Who did Edward Everett Horton play in Down to Earth?
Edward Everett Horton was Messenger 7013 in Down to Earth

Who did Edward Everett Horton play in Sex and the Single Girl?
Edward Everett Horton was Chief in Sex and the Single Girl

What role did Edward Everett Horton portray in Pocketful of Miracles?
Edward Everett Horton played Hutchins, the Butler in Pocketful of Miracles

Who did Edward Everett Horton play in Arsenic and Old Lace?
Edward Everett Horton was Mr. Witherspoon in Arsenic and Old Lace

Who did Edward Everett Horton play in Ziegfeld Girl?
Edward Everett Horton was Nobel Sage in Ziegfeld Girl

Who did Edward Everett Horton portray in It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World?
Edward Everett Horton was Dinckler in It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World

Who did Edward Everett Horton portray in Lonely Wives?
Edward Everett Horton was Mr. Zero in Lonely Wives


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