Here are 10 things you should know about Bonita Granville, born 101 years ago today. She enjoyed success in pictures, radio, television and the business world.
Tag: Hollywood Canteen
10 Things You Should Know About Gary Cooper
Here are 10 things you should know about Gary Cooper, born 122 years ago today. He was a surprisingly versatile actor who wasn’t limited by his persona as a strong, silent Everyman.
10 Things You Should Know About John Qualen
Here are 10 things you should know about John Qualen, born 123 years ago today. He played characters of many nationalities, but Scandinavians were his bread and butter.
10 Things You Should Know about Harry Davenport
Here are 10 things you should know about Harry Davenport, born 146 years ago today. No less an authority than Bette Davis reportedly said of him, “Without a doubt, he was the greatest character actor of all time.”
Happy 136th Birthday, Sydney Greenstreet!
Sydney Greenstreet, born 136 years ago today in Sandwich, England, made only 24 movies in a brief, eight-year movie career, but what an indelible mark he made in that brief span.
As a young man, Greenstreet sets his sights on a career as a tea planter in Ceylon, but drought conditions brought him back to England, where he managed a brewery. He also took acting lessons, as a lark.
He made his stage debut in a 1902 production of Sherlock Holmes and would go on to appear in many plays, in England and the U.S, appearing frequently with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontaine in Theatre Guild productions.
Sydney Greenstreet’s film debut came at age 62 in The Maltese Falcon, and few actors in the history of cinema could boast as high a ratio of classics to movies made: Casablanca, Christmas in Connecticut, They Died with Their Boots On, Across the Pacific, Passage to Marseille, The Mask of Dimitrios, Flamingo Road.
Of Greenstreet’s 24 pictures, Peter Lorre costarred in nine of them (and in a tenth—Hollywood Canteen (1944)—the pair made a shared cameo appearance). Greenstreet made six pictures with Humphrey Bogart.
Throughout his film career, Greenstreet battled diabetes and Bright’s disease, and his health forced him to retire from films in 1949. In 1950-51, though, he would star in a radio series for NBC, The New Adventures of Nero Wolfe. He died at age 75 in 1954, survived by his wife of 36 years, Dorothy Marie Ogden, and their son, John Ogden Greenstreet.
Happy birthday, Mr. Greenstreet, wherever you may be.