Roland Young
0.3Acting

Roland Young

Nov 10, 1887 - London, England, UK

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Roland Young (11 November 1887 – 5 June 1953) was an English actor.

Young made his first stage appearance in London's West End in Find the Woman in 1908, and in 1912 he made his Broadway debut in Hindle Wakes. He appeared in two comedies written for him by Clare Kummer, Good Gracious Annabelle! (1916) and A Successful Calamity (1917) before he served with the United States Army during World War I. He returned to New York when the war ended, and married Kummer's daughter, Frances. For the next few years he alternated between New York and London. He made his film debut in the 1922 silent film Sherlock Holmes, in which he played Watson opposite John Barrymore as Holmes.

He signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and made his talkie debut in The Unholy Night (1929), directed by Lionel Barrymore. He was loaned to Warner Bros. to appear in Her Private Life, with Billie Dove and Fox Film Corporation, winning critical approval for his comedic performance as Jeanette MacDonald's husband in Don't Bet on a Woman. He was again paired with MacDonald in the film version of Good Gracious Annabelle!, titled Annabelle's Affairs. He appeared in Cecil B. de Mille's The Squaw Man, and played opposite Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne in The Guardsman (both 1931). He appeared with Evelyn Brent in Columbia's The Pagan Lady (1932) and Pola Negri in RKO's A Woman Commands (1932). His final film under his MGM contract was Lovers Courageous (1932), opposite Robert Montgomery. In 1933 he had a starring role in the risqué comedy for Fox Film called Pleasure Cruise along side Genevieve Tobin.

Young began to work as a freelance performer and found himself in constant demand. He appeared with Jeanette MacDonald, Genevieve Tobin and Maurice Chevalier in One Hour With You (1932) and with Kay Francis in Street of Women (1932). Alexander Korda invited him to return to Britain to make his British film debut in Wedding Rehearsal (1932). He returned to Hollywood and appeared in a diverse group of films that included comedies, murder mysteries, and dramas, and also worked on Broadway. Among his films of this period were Ruggles of Red Gap (1935), David Copperfield (1935) (playing Uriah Heep), and the H.G. Wells fantasy The Man Who Could Work Miracles (1936).

In 1937, he achieved one of the most important successes of his career in Topper, as a bank president haunted by the ghosts of his clients, played by Cary Grant and Constance Bennett. It was one of the most successful films of the year, and Young was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. Topper's wife was played by Billie Burke, who wrote in her memoir that Young "was dry and always fun to work with". They also appeared together in The Young in Heart (1938), and both of the Topper sequels, Topper Takes a Trip (1938) and Topper Returns (1941).

He continued working steadily through the 1940s, playing small roles opposite some of Hollywood's leading actresses, such as Joan Crawford, Marlene Dietrich, Paulette Goddard and Greta Garbo in her final film, Two-Faced Woman (1941). In the 1950s, Young appeared on several episodic television series, including Lux Video Theatre, Studio One, Pulitzer Prize Playhouse and The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre.

Credits

Cast

Media
Movie1940The Philadelphia StoryUncle Willie
Movie1945And Then There Were NoneWilliam Blore
Movie1937TopperCosmo Topper
Movie1948You Gotta Stay HappyRalph Tutwiler
Movie1942Tales of ManhattanEdgar - Wilson's butler
Movie1935Ruggles of Red GapEarl of Burnstead
Movie1932One Hour with YouProfessor Olivier
Movie1941The Flame of New OrleansCharles Giraud
Movie1942They All Kissed the BrideMarsh
Movie1937King Solomon's MinesCmdr. John Good
Movie1938The Young in HeartCol. Anthony 'Sahib' Carleton
Movie1929The Bishop Murder CaseSigurd 'Erik' Arnesson
Movie1935David CopperfieldUriah Heep
Movie1941Topper ReturnsCosmo Topper
Movie1936The Man Who Could Work MiraclesGeorge McWhirter Fotheringay
Movie1940Star DustThomas Brooke
Movie1932This Is the NightGerald Gray
Movie1926Camille: The Fate of a CoquetteLord Kyne
Movie1938Topper Takes a TripCosmo Topper
Movie1922Sherlock HolmesDr. Watson
Movie1930Madam SatanJimmy Wade
Movie1933A Lady's ProfessionLord Reginald Withers
Movie1941Two-Faced WomanOscar 'O.O.' Miller
Movie1931The GuardsmanThe Critic
Movie1953That Man from TangierGeorge
Movie1942The Lady Has PlansRonald Dean
Movie1937Ali Baba Goes to TownSultan
Movie1932Wedding RehearsalReggie Buckley Candysshe - Marquis of Buckminster
Movie1940IreneMr. Smith
Movie1950Let's DanceEdmund Pohlwhistle
Movie1932Street of WomenLinkhorne 'Link' Gibson
Movie1929The Unholy NightLord Montague
Movie1937Call It a DayFrank Haines
Movie1949The Great LoverC.J. Dabney
Movie1940DulcyRoger Forbes
Movie1933His Double LifePriam Farrel
Movie1931The Pagan LadyDr. Heath
Movie1933Blind AdventureHolmes
Movie1934Here Is My HeartNicki
Movie1931The Squaw ManSir John Applegate
Movie1936One Rainy AfternoonMaillot
Movie1932Lovers CourageousJeffrey
Movie1936Give Me Your HeartEdward 'Tubbs' Barrow
Movie1938Sailing AlongAnthony Gulliver
Movie1940He Married His WifeBill Carter
Movie1936The Unguarded HourWilliam "Bunny" Jeffers
Movie1944Standing Room OnlyIra Cromwell
Movie1948Bond StreetGeorge Chester-Barrett
Movie1939Yes, My Darling DaughterTitus Jaywood
Movie1939Here I Am a StrangerProfessor Daniels
Movie1931Don't Bet on WomenHerbert Drake
Movie1932Hollywood on Parade No. A-5Self
Movie1933Pleasure CruiseAndrew Poole
Movie1951St. Benny the DipMatthew
Movie1930New MoonCount Strogoff
Movie1929Wise GirlsDuke Merrill
Movie1931Annabelle's AffairsRoland Wimbleton
Movie1931The ProdigalDoc
Movie1932A Woman CommandsKing Alexander
Movie1940No, No, NanetteMr. 'Happy' Jimmy Smith
Movie1943Forever and a DayHenry Barringer
Movie1994That's Entertainment! III(archive footage)
Movie1939The Night of NightsBarry Keith-Trimble
Movie1933They Just Had to Get MarriedHillary Hume
Movie1940Private AffairsAmos Bullerton
Movie1929Her Private LifeCharteris
Movie1924GritHoudini Hart
Movie1936GypsyAlan Brooks
TV Show1948Studio OneHarold. Mummery1
TV Show1948The Ed Sullivan ShowSelf1
TV Show1950Lux Video TheatreSumner1
TV Show1950What's My Line?Self1

Crew

No crew credits available.