Arthur Wontner (1875-1960), the critics' choice. "No better "Sherlock
Holmes" than Arthur Wontner is likely to be seen and heard in pictures,
in our time... The keen, worn, kindly face and quiet prescient smile
are out of the very pages of the book",
Vincent Starrett's 'The Private Life of
Sherlock Holmes'.
Arthur Wontner made his first stage appearance in 1897 and his first
film 18 years later. Best-known today for his characterization of
"Sherlock Holmes" in five films produced between 1931 and 1938, some
Holmes aficionados prefer Wontner's studious interpretation to the more
aggressive, energetic portrayals of
Basil Rathbone. Ironically, Wontner
landed the role on the strength of his performance in the 1930 stage
production, Sexton Blake, based on a pulp-fiction character who'd been
created as a Sherlock Holmes imitation. In later years, he played
several small but memorable character roles, such as the elderly
automobile fancier in
Genevieve (1953).
Wontner was fifty-six when he made his first Sherlock Holmes film,
"Sherlock Holmes' Fatal Hour" (actually called
Sherlock Holmes' Fatal Hour (1931)
in England). The story was based on "The Final Problem", but with some
liberal rearranging.
Norman McKinnel
played "Moriarty" in this movie but would be replaced by
Lyn Harding ("Dr. Grimesby Roylott" in
Doyle's play, "The Speckled Band") for the others in the series. "The
Missing Rembrandt" (based on "Charles Augustus Milverton") and "The
Sign of Four" would be the next two films with Wonter.
For the final two, he would be pitted against "Professor Moriarty".
The Triumph of Sherlock Holmes (1935)
was from "The Valley of Fear", and last up was
Murder at the Baskervilles (1937). Apparently, the
studio had difficulty in making the short story fill out to a
feature-length film, as both "Moriarty" and "Henry Baskerville" are
added to the movie. Strangely enough, though made in 1937, it wasn't
released in the U.S. until 1941, when
Basil Rathbone had already made
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939).
To cash in on the success of that film, Wontner's movie was retitled
"Murder at the Baskervilles".
Two actors played "Watson":
Ian Hunter in
The Sign of Four: Sherlock Holmes' Greatest Case (1932)
and
Ian Fleming, an Australian
actor, who played "Watson" as "nice but dim". Of the five Holmes movies
Wontner made, three were for Twickenham Studios, a low-budget
production company. "Silver Blaze" and "The Sign of Four" were made by
ARP. However, one of the films,
Sherlock Holmes and the Missing Rembrandt (1932),
is lost.
Sherlock Holmes' Fatal Hour (1931)
was unobtainable for decades, but it turned up on an American video
dealer's list and was shown at the annual film evening in November
2000. It was very appropriate because it was first shown to the Society
by Tony Howlett at the very first film evening in 1951, when Arthur
Wontner, himself, was present.
The Society has the other three movies on film, "The Triumph of
Sherlock Holmes", "Silver Blaze" and "The Sign of Four".
(This biography is used with the kind permission of The Sherlock Holmes
Society of London.)