Edward Everett Horton
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edward Everett Horton Jr. (March 18, 1886 – September 29, 1970) was an American character actor. He had a long career in film, theater, radio, television, and voice work for animated cartoons. Horton began his stage career in 1906, singing and dancing and playing small parts in vaudeville and in Broadway productions. In 1919, he moved to Los Angeles, California, where he began acting in Hollywood films. His first starring role was in the comedy Too Much Business (1922), but he portrayed the lead role of an idealistic young classical composer in the drama Beggar on Horseback (1925). In the late 1920s, he starred in two-reel silent comedies for Educational Pictures, and made the transition to talking pictures with Educational in 1929. As a stage-trained performer, he found more film work easily, and appeared in some of Warner Bros.' early talkies, including The Terror (1928) and Sonny Boy (1929).
Horton initially used his given name, Edward Horton, professionally. His father persuaded him to adopt his full name professionally, reasoning that other actors might be named Edward Horton, but only one named Edward Everett Horton. Horton soon cultivated his own special variation of the time-honored double take (an actor's reaction to something, followed by a delayed, more extreme reaction). In Horton's version, he would smile ingratiatingly and nod in agreement with what just happened; then, when realization set in, his facial features collapsed entirely into a sober, troubled mask.
Horton starred in many comedy features in the 1930s, usually playing a mousy fellow who put up with domestic or professional problems to a certain point, and then finally asserted himself for a happy ending. He is best known, however, for his work as a character actor in supporting roles. These include The Front Page (1931), Trouble in Paradise (1932), Alice in Wonderland (1933), The Gay Divorcee (1934, the first of several Astaire/Rogers films in which Horton appeared), Top Hat (1935), Danger - Love at Work (1937), Lost Horizon (1937), Holiday (1938), Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941), Arsenic and Old Lace (1944), Pocketful of Miracles (1961), It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), and Sex and the Single Girl (1964). His last role was in the comedy film Cold Turkey (1971), in which his character communicated only through facial expressions.
Filmography
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
as Mr. Dinckler 1963
Top Hat
as Horace Hardwick 1935
Trouble in Paradise
as François Filiba 1932
Holiday
as Nick Potter 1938
Lost Horizon
as Alexander P. " Lovey " Lovett 1937
Design for Living
as Max Plunkett 1933
Pocketful of Miracles
as Hudgins 1961
The Gay Divorcee
as Egbert Fitzgerald 1934
Shall We Dance
as Jeffrey Baird 1937
Here Comes Mr. Jordan
as Messenger 7013 1941
Bluebeard's 8th Wife
as Marquis De Loiselle 1938
The Front Page
as Bensinger 1931
Sex and the Single Girl
as The Chief 1964
Angel
as Graham 1937
The Devil Is a Woman
as Gov. Don Paquito 'Paquitito' 1935
The Merry Widow
as Ambassador Popoff 1934