Montagu Love

Montagu Love

ActorSoundtrack
Born
March 15, 1880
Died
May 17, 1943
Awards
1 wins, 1 nominations

Montague Love - certainly an intriguing name - but his own - started his working life as a newspaper man in London. His primary expertise centered on being a field illustrator and cartoonist who covered the Boer War (1899-1902). His realistic battle sketches gained him popularity among readers, but…

Biography

Montague Love - certainly an intriguing name - but his own - started his working life as a newspaper man in London. His primary expertise centered on being a field illustrator and cartoonist who covered the Boer War (1899-1902). His realistic battle sketches gained him popularity among readers, but he was bound for a different career. He decided to become an actor. A robust man with a massive head of noble bearing and brooding lower lip, these were ingredients well suited to this goal. Love honed basic stage talents in London, and then made an early departure for the US in 1913 with a road-company production of Cyril Maude's "Grumpy." An early stop was Broadway, and he returned many times to appear in a laundry list of important plays from 1913 to 1934.

Silent film studios of the early days were originally based in the East, and Love started his film career at World Studios, New Jersey in 1914. His silent career alone was prodigious-nearly a hundred films. His look and bearing were perfect for authoritative figures. And, though certainly taking on a whole spectrum of roles (sultan, native chiefs, many a doctor and military officer, among many others) he became famous for his bad guy characterizations through the 1920s. Some historians credit him as the best villain of the silent era.

In 1926 he was nemesis to Rudolf Valentino in The Son of the Sheik (1926) and 'John Barrymore' in Don Juan (1926). The latter movie had the particular fame of sporting the longest sword duel in silent history between Love's Count Giano Donati and Barrymore's Don Juan. The fight filming was unique and realistic with middle and close shots looking directly at the individual combatants-with the appropriate blood in their eyes. The duel was all the more complex choreography for being one with swords and daggers (historically correct but rarely seen in film history). But Love was just as effective as the Roman centurion in The King of Kings (1927) by 'Cecil B DeMille'. Starting with Synthetic Sin (1929), Love's movies followed the trend of an increasing number of silent films using recorded music and some snatches of dialogue or background sound with the several incipient audio systems. Some movies originally issued as silent were released again with the process added. `Sin' was one of 11 films of 1929 featuring Love given the semi-sound treatment. The last of these was Jules Verne's The Mysterious Island (1929), very loosely adapted to the point of being hokey, but one of the first films also using the primitive two-color process.

Love had a commanding, puckered-lip British delivery of speech which he could believably weld to any part, but it particularly fit characters of authority, as in the silent era. Into the 1930s, these were increasingly benign rather than despotic-always colonels and generals, prime ministers, American presidents - even Zorro's father. Perhaps his best known character tour de force displaying his genuine acting power was his Henry VIII in Prince and the Pauper (1937). It is hard to forget him in purple as the Bishop of the Black Canons in The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938). Sometimes, as with other veteran character actors, his roles were almost as featured extra-but his very costumed presence was all that was needed to lend realism. A very apt example was his Detchard, noble henchmen to 'Raymond Massey', in The Prisoner of Zenda (1937), in which he has little more than one line. He was still in demand in the early 1940s - ten roles in 1940 alone. But these slowed into the war years. By his passing in 1943, an actor who was considered as noble on screen as off, he had lent his voice as well as virtuoso acting skills to eighty-one additional films.

Actor

DevotionDevotion(1946)as Rev. Brontë
Holy MatrimonyHoly Matrimony(1943)as Judge
Wings Over the PacificWings Over the Pacific(1943)as Jim Butler
The Constant NymphThe Constant Nymph(1943)as Albert Sanger
Forever and a DayForever and a Day(1943)as Sir John Bunn

Soundtrack

Back PayBack Pay(1930)

Archive Footage

CompressionCompression(1995)as Self
Torpedo of DoomTorpedo of Doom(1966)as Col. White
Hollywood: The Golden Years(1961)as Actor 'Don Juan'
The Twentieth CenturyThe Twentieth Century(1957)as Count Giano Donati (clip from Don Juan (1926))
Some of the Greatest(1955)as Count Donati

Known for

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Photos 91

Montagu Love in Rasputin, the Black Monk (1917)Mary Astor and Montagu Love in Rose of the Golden West (1927)Montagu Love and Reginald Sheffield in Gunga Din (1939)Montagu Love, Lumsden Hare, and Victor McLaglen in Gunga Din (1939)Montagu Love in Gunga Din (1939)Montagu Love, Billie Dove, Mary Forbes, and Walter Pidgeon in Her Private Life (1929)

Credit Score: Montagu Love

9876
19261927192819291930193119321933193419351936193719381939194019411942194319441945
Bishop of the Black Canons
Sat May 14 1938
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownWinsNomsVotes
1The Adventures of Robin Hood10.0019387.93457781
2The Wind6.5019288.0007807
3The Sea Hawk5.0019407.60411564
4A Damsel in Distress5.0019376.8122613
5The Life of Emile Zola4.5019377.131010007
6The Mark of Zorro3.7519407.50111955
7Dr. Ehrlich's Magic Bullet3.7519407.4011999
8Gunga Din3.7519397.20013619
9The Remarkable Andrew3.2519446.600229
10The Night of Love3.2519276.80088