Melville Cooper

Melville Cooper

actor, soundtrack

Melville Cooper was born on Oct 15, 1896 in UK. Melville Cooper's big-screen debut came with Black Coffee directed by Leslie S. Hiscott in 1931, strarring Inspector Japp. Melville Cooper is known for It Should Happen to You directed by George Cukor, Judy Holliday stars as Gladys Glover and Peter Lawford as Evan Adams III. The upcoming new movie Melville Cooper plays is From the Earth to the Moon which will be released on Mar 29, 1964.

Born George Melville Cooper on October 15, 1896, in Birmingham England, he was the son of non-professionals W.C.J. and Frances (Brennan) Cooper, and attended various English public schools, including King Edward's School in Birmingham. Attracted to the stage as a teenager, he made his debut at Stratford-on-Avon at age 18, but his young career was interrupted by World War I. Serving in a Scottish regiment on the Western Front, he was captured and made prisoner of war for a time by the Germans.Following the war Cooper returned to the theatre and earned good reviews in the play "The Farmer's Wife" in 1921. He made his official London debut with a production of "Back to Methuselah in 1924, and furthered his career on stage with roles in "The Third Finger" (1927) and "Journey's End" (1929). He turned to films in middle age with the English entry Black Coffee (1931) and, after supporting roles in the popular costumers La dernière aventure de Don Juan (1934) and Le chevalier de Londres (1934), decided to cross the waters to seek work in America. Taking his first Broadway curtain call with "Laburnum Grove" (1935), he also appeared in "Jubilee" (1935) and "Tovarich" (1937) and subsequently became a sometime stage director, as in the case of the 1947 production of "We Love a Lassie."In Hollywood Cooper was effectively cast as ineffectual types and played in a number of "A" pictures. Giving great snob appeal, he made a most reliable and disdainful butler, chauffeur or doorman in such films as The Bishop Misbehaves (1935), Quatre au paradis (1938), Trop de maris (1940), C'est moi le papa (1949) and La scandaleuse ingénue (1950). More quality roles, however, wormed their way outside this stereotype with his blundering and cowardly Sheriff of Nottingham opposite dashing Errol Flynn in Les aventures de Robin des Bois (1938); conman sidekick to Barbara Stanwyck in Un coeur pris au piège (1941); portentous Mr. Collins whom Greer Garson nearly married in Orgueil et préjugés (1940); and Mr. Tringle, the wedding supervisor, in Le Père de la mariée (1950) being particular standouts.Cooper made an active jaunt into TV roles in the 1950s but returned strongly to the stage after biding farewell to films in 1958. In the 1960s he enjoyed such scene-stealing theatrical roles as Colonel Pickering in "My Fair Lady," Pellinore in "Camelot" and Reverend Chasuble in "The Importance of Being Earnest". He made one last return to Broadway playing (what else?) a valet in a short-run revival of the farcical comedy "Charley's Aunt" in 1970, which co-starred Rex Thompson, Louis Nye and 'Maureen O'Sullivan'. Married three times, his first was to London-born actress Rita Page who had a bit part in one of his films Âmes rebelles (1942), and died in 1954. They had one daughter, Valerie. The 76-year-old Cooper died in Los Angeles of cancer in 1973, and was survived by third wife Elizabeth.

  • Birthday

    Oct 15, 1896
  • Place of Birth

    Birmingham, England, UK

Known For

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