Warren William, the stalwart leading man of pre-Production Code
talkies, was born Warren William Krech on December 2, 1894 in Aitkin,
Minnesota, the son of a newspaper publisher. William originally planned
to become a journalist, but he had a change of heart, and instead went
to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and trained to become an
actor. He served in the military in France during World War I,
remaining in that country after the Armistice to tour with a theatrical
company.
He made his Broadway debut as William Warren in the H.G. Wells play
"The Wonderful Visit" in 1924. While appearing in 17 more plays on
Broadway from 1924 to 1930, he also managed to appear in three silent
pictures under his own name, Warren Krech. His only substantial role
was in his first flicker, Fox's
The Town That Forgot God (1922).
In 1923, he played a credited bit part in support of "Perils of
Pauline" star
Pearl White in her last serial
photoplay,
Plunder (1923) but he went
uncredited in a bit part in the Roaring
Twenties/
John Gilbert-as-bootlegger
movie,
Twelve Miles Out (1927).
Possessed of a first-rate speaking voice, rich, deep, and mellifluous,
he was a natural for the talkies, and in 1931, he joined the stock
company at Warner Bros., the studio that gave the world cinema sound.
Projecting a patrician persona, Warren William initially thrived in the
all-talking pictures. He appeared in a lead role in his first talkie,
Honor of the Family (1931),
an adaptation Honoré de Balzac's novel "Cousin Pons." Subsequently, he
appeared as second leads and leads in support of the likes of
Dolores Costello
(
Drew Barrymore's grandmother),
H.B. Warner,
Walter Huston, and
Marian Marsh, before headlining
The Mouthpiece (1932) as a
district attorney who quits for the other side of the law, defending
mobsters before a last reel conversion. It was his break-through role,
followed up by a turn as a crooked campaign manager with more than just
the affairs of state on his mind in
The Dark Horse (1932). He then
moved on to leading roles in A-list pictures, including the high-suds
soap opera
Three on a Match (1932), the
classic musical
Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933),
Frank Capra's
Lady for a Day (1933), and the
original
Imitation of Life (1934)
starring
Claudette Colbert and
Louise Beavers.
William's outstanding performances in these roles include
Skyscraper Souls (1932),
The Match King (1932), and
Employees' Entrance (1933).
He also broadened his range to play the fraudulent clairvoyant in
The Mind Reader (1933).
The early 30s was the apogee of William's career. He appeared opposite
strong female stars, including
Barbara Stanwyck,
Claudette Colbert,
Bette Davis,
Ann Dvorak and
Loretta Young.
With his patrician looks and bearing, William was loaned out to
Cecil B. DeMille to play the
patrician's patrician, Julius Caesar, again opposite of Ms. Colbert in
Cleopatra (1934), a typical prodigal
DeMille production in which
Henry Wilcoxon avenged his mentor's
assassination by rousing the rabble. William went on as the second Sam
Spade (renamed Ted Shayne) in the "Maltese Falcon" remake
Satan Met a Lady (1936) with
Bette Davis. He eventually found himself in
B-films. The same year he played Caesar, he made his inaugural and
terminal appearance as
William Powell's premier
replacement in the role of Philo Vance in
The Dragon Murder Case (1934),
a character he would resurrect five years later in
The Gracie Allen Murder Case (1939).
After making his first appearance as the cinema sleuth Vance, William
returned to his roots as a court-room advocate, cast as the first Perry
Mason in
The Case of the Howling Dog (1934).
After four films, he was replaced as Erle Stanley Gardner's A-#1
attorney in 1936 by former silent screen heart-throb
Ricardo Cortez, the man who had
first played Sam Spade, in the original
The Maltese Falcon (1931).
Before leaving the studio, William appeared in one more picture under
contract at Warners Bros., the A-list
Stage Struck (1936); then the
erstwhile Warners trouper trooped over to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer for a few
years, to work as a character actor.
Another movie series beckoned and William appeared as Michael Lanyard's
"The Lone Wolf," in nine movies made by Columbia from 1939 to 1943
beginning with
The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt (1939).
Of the ten actors who appeared as "The Lone Wolf" in the 30 years the
series ran, off and on, from 1919 until 1949, he made twice as many
films as his nearest competitor (which included such top stars as
Thomas Meighan and
Melvyn Douglas). William continued to act
in character parts calling for a patrician presence until his premature
death in 1948.
Personally, Warren William was a shy and retiring type. Speaking of
him, five-time Warners co-star
Joan Blondell said that William "was an
old man even when he was a young man." According to San Francisco
critic Mick LaSalle's 2002 book "Dangerous Men: Pre-Code Hollywood and
the Birth of the Modern Man" (New York: St. Martin's Press, 2002),
William, who quite unlike his early Warner Bros.' stereotype as a
heartless "love 'em and leave 'em"-style seducer, remained married to
one woman throughout his adult life. He was an active inventor with
multiple patents, designing one of the first recreational vehicles,
reportedly so he could continue to sleep while being driven to the
studio in the morning.
Warren William died in Hollywood on September 24, 1948, of multiple
myeloma.