Philippe De Lacy
3.2Acting

Philippe De Lacy

Jul 25, 1917 - Nancy, France

Philippe De Lacy a.k.a. Philippe deLacy (July 25, 1917 – July 29, 1995) was a former silent film era child actor.

Born during World War I, the already fatherless Philippe lost his mother and five siblings when a German shell devastated the family home. Only two days old at the time of tragedy, the boy was kept alive, but barely, in the basement of his grandmother's house. He was adopted by Mrs. Edith De Lacy, who was associated with the U.S. Woman's Overseas Hospital. After the war ended, Mrs. De Lacy brought Philippe to America, where his stunning looks soon created opportunities for him as a model for magazine advertisements. His modeling assignments brought him to the attention of Hollywood, and he appeared in his first film in a bit part at the age of four.

Phillipe's childhood story was used as the subject of a fictional children's book, Little Philippe of Belgium, written by Madeline Brandeis as part of her "Children of the World" series.

De Lacy freelanced for several studios in the 1920s, but mostly for Paramount. In 1924 he played the role of Michael Darling in the classic silent version of Peter Pan, with Betty Bronson. He played the young Don Juan at ten years of age in John Barrymore's Don Juan (1926), and in 1927 he played the young prince Karl Heinrich in Ernst Lubitsch's memorable The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg, which also starred Ramon Novarro and Norma Shearer. Also in 1927 he starred with Greta Garbo and John Gilbert in Love, an updated version of the Tolstoy novel Anna Karenina in which he played the young son of Anna, Serezha Karenin. When the sound era arrived De Lacy's acting career was declining, and he never made the transition from child actor to adult. Apart from his films, De Lacy also did some work in the theatre. However he had lost his boyish charm by his early teens and retired from the screen in the early 1930s.

De Lacy concentrated on the production end of films as a producer, director and cinematographer. He became an assistant to director Louis De Rochemont and worked with him in the 1940 film The Ramparts We Watch. Eventually he became an executive with the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency, a position he held for over 25 years. De Lacy’s first credit was in 1942 as an editorial associate for the US armed forces propaganda film We Are The Marines. Radio and television announcer Westbrook Van Voorhis provided the narration for the documentary, which was effectively a full-length fighting feature. In 1944 De Lacy was involved in another documentary, this time for the US Navy, filmed aboard the carrier Yorktown. The narrators in this documentary were actors Robert Taylor (who was actually a lieutenant in the navy at the time) and Charles Boyer who supplied the French narration. De Lacy was the cinematographer in The Fighting Lady and had three real life naval commanders to assist him. This film won the 1945 Oscar for Best Documentary. De Lacy then turned his hand to directing a television series in 1950, and in addition, he also became manager of a local Hollywood television station.

Credits

Cast

Media
Movie1927Is Zat So?Little Jimmy Parker
Movie1927The TigressPippa
Movie1925The Happy WarriorRalph (at 8 years)
Movie1926Beau GesteDigby Geste - younger
Movie1928The Student Prince in Old HeidelbergHeir Apparent
Movie1924Peter PanMichael Darling
Movie1927The Magic GardenJohn Guido Forrester, as a child
Movie1929General CrackChristian, as a boy
Movie1929The Royal RiderKing Michael XI
Movie1927LoveSerezha Karenin (as Philippe de Lacy)
Movie1930The Sins of the ChildrenRudolph Wagenkampf as a Child (uncredited)
Movie1922A Doll's HouseIvar
Movie1929The Four FeathersHarry Faversham - age 10
Movie1928The Broken MaskPertio, as a boy
Movie1923RositaRosita's Brother
Movie1927Mother MachreeBrian - Child
Movie1927The Way of All FleshAugust, as a child
Movie1930Sarah and SonBobby
Movie1930One Romantic NightPrince Georg
Movie1929Square ShouldersEddie
Movie1920The Riddle: Woman
Movie1925A Lover's OathHis Son
Movie1928Napoleon's BarberThe Barber's Son
Movie1929The Marriage PlaygroundTerry Wheater
Movie1926Flesh and the DevilLeo as a boy (uncredited)
Movie1929The Redeeming SinPetit
Movie1926Don JuanDon Juan - at age 10 (uncredited)
Movie1923The Wheel of Fortune
Movie1926Faithful WivesThe Child

Crew

Media
Movie1955Cinerama HolidayDirectorDirecting
Movie1963The Best of CineramaDirectorDirecting