Robert Morley

Robert Morley

ActorWriterDirector
Born
May 26, 1908
Died
June 3, 1992
Awards
4 wins, 6 nominations

Bushy-browed, triple-chinned and plummy-voiced English actor and raconteur of wide girth and larger-than-life personality. The son of a career army officer, Morley was expected to join the diplomatic corps. As a 'compromise', he tried his hand as a beer salesman. However, bitten by the acting bug…

Biography

Bushy-browed, triple-chinned and plummy-voiced English actor and raconteur of wide girth and larger-than-life personality. The son of a career army officer, Morley was expected to join the diplomatic corps. As a 'compromise', he tried his hand as a beer salesman. However, bitten by the acting bug since first performing in a kindergarten play, he prevailed over the wishes of his parents and enrolled at RADA. He made his theatrical debut at London's Strand Theatre, in a 1929 production of "Treasure Island", playing the part of a pirate for $5 a week. During the next few years, Morley honed his craft by touring regional theatres, writing or co-writing the occasional play, and, when money was hard to come by, selling vacuum cleaners. For a while, he managed his own repertory company in tandem with fellow actor Peter Bull in the Cornish seaside resort of Perranporth. Morley eventually returned to the London stage in a much acclaimed performance as "Oscar Wilde", a role he took to Broadway in October 1938.

On the strength of this, he was invited to Hollywood and garnered an Oscar nomination for his first screen role as the effete, simple-minded monarch Louis XVI, in MGM's lavish production of Marie Antoinette (1938). Back in Britain, he then played the armaments millionaire Andrew Undershaft in George Bernard Shaw's Major Barbara (1941), a performance praised by Bosley Crowther as "deliciously satanic, profoundly suave and tender" (NY Times, May 15 1941). Happily managing to avoid military participation in the Second World War, Morley spent the remainder of the decade acting in such prestigious theatrical showpieces as "The Man Who Came to Dinner", and as star and co-author of "Edward, My Son". His defining performance in the play led the critic Brooks Atkinson to comment on his "studied authority ... which might sound like an affectation in an actor of inferior style"(NY Times, June 4 1992).

Morley acted on screen in a variety of very British, sometimes eccentric, sometimes giddy, often pompous, but rarely dislikeable characters. At his best, he was the expatriate Elmer Almayer, at once pitiable and overbearing, in Outcast of the Islands (1951); the Sydney Greenstreet parody Peterson in John Huston's Beat the Devil (1953); as another languid monarch, George III in the colourful period drama Beau Brummell (1954); as Oscar Wilde (1960), recreating his original stage triumph; and as a food critic in the hugely enjoyable Who Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe? (1978). He also performed occasionally in TV movies and miniseries. His wit was much appreciated on chat shows, both in Britain and the U.S., where was a frequent and popular guest. He was also the voice of British Airways in commercials of the 70's and early 80's, promising "we'll take good care of you" -- something he did with his acting for over half a century. Robert Morley was awarded a CBE in 1957. He died as the result of a stroke in Reading, Berkshire, at the age of 84.

Director

The World Our StageThe World Our Stage(1958)

Actor

IstanbulIstanbul(1989)as Atkins
Around the World in 80 DaysAround the World in 80 Days(1989)as Wentworth
The Lady and the HighwaymanThe Lady and the Highwayman(1988)as Lord Chancellor
War and RemembranceWar and Remembrance(1988)as Alistair Tudsbury
Little DorritLittle Dorrit(1987)as Lord Decimus Barnacle

Soundtrack

Alice in WonderlandAlice in Wonderland(1985)

Self

This Is Your LifeThis Is Your Life(1955)as Self
WoganWogan(1982)as Self
An Invitation to RememberAn Invitation to Remember(1989)as Self
Coral Browne: Caviar for the General(1989)as Self
Years AheadYears Ahead(1982)as Self

Archive Footage

Hunt for the Stars(2024)as Bernstein
Tea With the DamesTea With the Dames(2018)as Self
Wags of '66(2011)as Self
Ted Kotcheff's Gourmet CinemaTed Kotcheff's Gourmet Cinema(2011)as Maximillian Vandeveer
Embracing Chaos: Making the African QueenEmbracing Chaos: Making the African Queen(2010)as Rev. Samuel Sayer - The Brother

Known for

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Photos 77

Robert Morley, Tom Poston, and Janette Scott in The Old Dark House (1932)Robert Morley in Outcast of the Islands (1951)Robert Morley in Outcast of the Islands (1951)Trevor Howard and Robert Morley in Outcast of the Islands (1951)Robert Morley in Outcast of the Islands (1951)Robert Morley in Outcast of the Islands (1951)

Credit Score: Robert Morley

98765
1934193519361937193819391940194119421943194419451946194719481949195019511952195319541955195619571958195919601961196219631964196519661967196819691970197119721973197419751976197719781979198019811982
King Louis XVI
Fri Aug 26 1938
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownWinsNomsVotes
1Marie Antoinette24.3819387.3043584
2Around the World in 80 Days13.0019566.75832004
3The African Queen13.0019527.71488859
4The Great Muppet Caper3.7519817.10118362
5Who Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe?3.2519786.4003003
6Quentin Durward3.2519566.3001243
7Beat the Devil3.2519536.40011413
8Major Barbara3.2519416.8001668
9The Alphabet Murders3.0919665.2002110
10The Old Dark House3.0919635.5002919