Alfred Lunt

Alfred Lunt

Actor
Born
August 12, 1892
Died
August 3, 1977
Awards
2 wins, 3 nominations

Alfred Lunt was an American actor, particularly known for his professional partnership with his wife Lynn Fontanne (1887-1983). Lunt was one of Broadway's leading male stars. Lunt was born in 1892 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His father Alfred D. Lunt was active in the lumber business, while his mother…

Biography

Alfred Lunt was an American actor, particularly known for his professional partnership with his wife Lynn Fontanne (1887-1983). Lunt was one of Broadway's leading male stars.

Lunt was born in 1892 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His father Alfred D. Lunt was active in the lumber business, while his mother Harriet Washburn Briggs was a housewife. Lunt's ancestry in both Maine and Massachusetts dated back to the colonial era. He was a distant descendant of Henry Lunt, an early settler of Newbury, Massachusetts. Lunt's paternal grandmother was Scottish American. Lunt's maternal ancestors lived in New England since colonial times, and including a number of Mayflower arrivals.

Alfred D. Lunt died in 1893. The widowed Harriet married a Finnish-American physician, Dr. Karl Sederholm. The Sederholms eventually settled in Genesee Depot, Wisconsin, a small unincorporated community in Waukesha County, Wisconsin. Lunt was raised in Genesse Depot, along with three younger half-siblings, He attended Carroll College in nearby Waukesha, Wisconsin.

Lunt fist gained publicity in 1919, for his starring role in the comedy play "Clarence" by Booth Tarkington (1869-1946). He distinguished himself in a variety of theatrical roles, including in Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew" and Chekhov's "The Seagull ". On May 26, 1926, Lunt married actress Lynn Fontane. The two became the preeminent Broadway acting couple. Their successes included a play written specifically for them, the menage a trois-themed "Design for Living" (1932) by Noël Coward.

Lunt started acting in films in the 1920s. His film debut was the silent drama "Backbone" (1923) for Goldwyn Pictures. Subsequent films included the South Sea romance "The Ragged Edge" (1923), the romantic comedy "Second Youth" (1924), the circus-themed comedy "Sally of the Sawdust" (1925), and the comedy film "Lovers in Quarantine" (1925).

Lunt's most successful film effort was the comedy film "The Guardsman" (1931). In the film, A jealous husband creates a second identity in order to woo his wife, and she plays along. Lunt played the role of the husband, and Lynn Fontane the role of the wife. It was a critical success, but not particularly successful at the box office. Lunt was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for this role, but the Award was instead won (in a tie) by Wallace Beery and Fredric March.

Lunt returned to being mostly a theatrical actor. He had a cameo in the World War II film "Stage Door Canteen" (1943), and appeared as himself in the documentary film "Show Business at War" (1943). During the 1940s, Lunt and and Fontane starred in several radio dramas. In the 1950s and the 1960s, they appeared frequently on television.

Lunt officially retired from the stage in 1958, at the age of 66. His last film appearance was the television film "The Magnificent Yankee" (1965), where he played the United States Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. (1841-1935).

Lunt spend his last years in retirement at his summer home "Ten Chimneys" in in Genesse Depot. He died in August 1977, about a week before his 85th birthday. The cause of death was cancer. Fontane remained in "Ten Chimneys" until her own death in 1983. Ten Chimneys was afterwards converted into a house museum, and a resource center for theater.

Actor

The Magnificent YankeeThe Magnificent Yankee(1965)as Oliver Wendell Holmes
The United States Steel HourThe United States Steel Hour(1953)as Host
Producers' ShowcaseProducers' Showcase(1954)as Rudi Sebastian
Stage Door CanteenStage Door Canteen(1943)as Alfred Lunt
The GuardsmanThe Guardsman(1931)as The Actor

Self

The Dick Cavett ShowThe Dick Cavett Show(1968)as Self
The 24th Annual Tony Awards(1970)as Self - Honorary Award Recipient
The Ed Sullivan ShowThe Ed Sullivan Show(1948)as Self
The March of Time, Vol. 9, No. 10: Show Business at WarThe March of Time, Vol. 9, No. 10: Show Business at War(1943)as Self

Archive Footage

Great PerformancesGreat Performances(1971)as Self - Presenter of Academy Award to James Stewart
The 17th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards(1965)as Oliver Wendell Holmes

Known for

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Photos 9

Lynn Fontanne and Alfred Lunt in The Guardsman (1931)Maude Eburne, Lynn Fontanne, Alfred Lunt, and Zasu Pitts in The Guardsman (1931)Lynn Fontanne and Alfred Lunt in The Guardsman (1931)Lynn Fontanne and Alfred Lunt in The Guardsman (1931)Lynn Fontanne and Alfred Lunt in The Guardsman (1931)Lynn Fontanne and Alfred Lunt in The Guardsman (1931)

Credit Score: Alfred Lunt

987654
1922192319241925192619271928192919301931193219331934193519361937193819391940194119421943194419451946194719481949195019511952195319541955195619571958195919601961
Rudi Sebastian
Fri Oct 18 1957 – Sun Jan 06 1957
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownWinsNomsVotes
1Producers' Showcase30.0019547.2720197
2The United States Steel Hour20.0019538.0316220
3The Guardsman16.2519316.302654
4Sally of the Sawdust3.2519256.600636
5Second Youth2.6019244.30017
6Stage Door Canteen2.5019436.3021939
7Lovers in Quarantine1.6319250.0000
8The Ragged Edge1.6319230.0000
9Backbone1.6319230.0000