The son of a travelling salesman and a department store merchandise
demonstrator, Arthur was obliged to fend for himself from an early age,
selling newspapers and working at starvation wages for a condiment
manufacturer. Although underage, he escaped from this life by joining
the Bugle Corps at the outset of World War One. His experience in army
shows as a comedian and singer encouraged him to try for an acting
career.
Again a civilian, Arthur took advantage of a government program to
enroll at a dramatic school run by the wife of prominent Shakespearian
actor/producer Sir Frank Benson. Deciding to adopt a stage name, he
simply reversed his first and middle names, adding a meaningless
initial 'K' in order to distinguish himself from another George Arthur.
He made his professional debut as a spear-carrier in a production at
the Memorial Theatre at Stratford-on-Avon, and soon was playing minor
parts in Benson's West End Shakespearian productions.
Learning that American film director
Harold M. Shaw was in London planning a
cinematic adaptation of the novel "Kipps" by
H.G. Wells, Arthur, with characteristic
brashness and skillful self-promotion, managed to persuade Shaw that he
was perfect for the title role - as indeed he was. Even before its
release it was apparent to all that the film would be a hit, and Arthur
found himself in demand as a film actor, and in a position to hobnob
with visiting celebrities like
Charles Chaplin,
Mary Pickford and
Douglas Fairbanks.
The success of
Kipps (1921) led to two
films with visiting American star
Mae Marsh
and dreams of Hollywood. Leaving behind a newly-acquired wife (Milba
Lloyd, later employed by
Cecil B. DeMille in his art
department), Arthur sailed to America and was received with profound
indifference by American film makers. Arthur turned to Chaplin for
help, and the latter found him a role in a
John Gilbert film at Fox. Arthur
was then able to persuade director
James Cruze to give him a prominent part in
his all-star production of
Hollywood (1923), today one of the most
eagerly sought-after
'lost' films of the silent era.
A five-year contract with producer
Pat Powers
in his pocket, Arthur was convinced that he was firmly established in
Hollywood as a light comedian / juvenile, and brought the rest of his
family over from England. Within a few months Powers's venture
collapsed, and Arthur was reduced to operating a grocery store and
remodelling houses to eke out a living. Having long nurtured plans of
producing a film of his own, he managed to bluff his way into obtaining
sufficient money to finance an ultra-low budget production. He turned
to would-be director
Josef von Sternberg to helm the
film, and with a script by the latter and a largely non-professional
cast,
The Salvation Hunters (1925)
was made. Arthur screened the film for Chaplin, who showed it to
Pickford and Fairbanks, and it was decided that United Artists would
distribute it. A critical success, Sternberg's career was launched, and
Arthur obtained a contract with MGM.
Arthur now enjoyed his best days as a film actor. Separated from his
first wife, he romanced
Renée Adorée and
Jean Arthur, and was a frequent
visitor to San Simeon. MGM paired Arthur with
Karl Dane in a very successful series of light
comedies, which ended when the advent of sound revealed Dane's thick
accent. The team was able to keep going for a while in vaudeville and
short films for RKO and Paramount, and Arthur tried his hand as a
singer / composer and novelist, but by 1933 he was pretty much
desperate for work. He was able to obtain bit parts at MGM, but
focussed his attention on a new career as theatrical producer. He
opened a short-lived Grand Guignol theatre in Hollywood, followed by a
much more ambitious venture in partnership with
E.E. Clive, but after a final film appearance
in
Vanessa, Her Love Story (1935),
he wound up working as a film salesman in Michigan, and then as a
theatrical reviewer on Station WQXR. He also published a
not-very-successful magazine guide to New York theatre and night life.
Following Pearl Harbor, Arthur, now a US citizen, joined the Air Force
as a private. Shortly before being shipped overseas, he married again.
He spent the war years organising shows for the troops.
On his return Arthur tried to revive his magazine, with little success.
Once again he reinvented himself, this time as a producer and
distributor of short films for television. This provided him with a
comfortable living into the 1960s.