Stewart Granger
For Canadian former basketball player, see Stewart Granger (basketball). |
Stewart Granger at the height of his fame |
Stewart Granger (
May 6,
1913 –
August 16,
1993) was an
English film
actor, mainly associated with heroic and romantic leading roles. Tall, dark and dignifiedly handsome, Granger was a popular leading man in the 40's, 50's and 60's,
He was born in
London, and educated at
Epsom College the grandson of the actor
Luigi Lablache, his real name being
James Lablache Stewart. He was obliged to change it in order not to be confused with the famous American actor
James Stewart. As Granger reported in an interview once, his off-screen friends called him "Jimmy".
In
1933, he made his film debut as an extra. His first starring role was in the
Gainsborough period
melodrama The Man in Grey (
1943), a film that helped to make him a huge star in
Britain. In the early
1950s he moved to
Hollywood and starred in a number of
swashbucklers and other adventure films.
Granger's theatrical voice and tall stature made him a natural for he-man roles, but he was just as dashing in comedies, which was shown by his performance in
North To Alaska with
John Wayne.
He was married three times:#
Elspeth March (
1938â€"
1948); (two children, Jamie and Lindsay)#
Jean Simmons (
1950â€"
1960), (with whom he had starred in
Adam and Evelyne); (one child) #
Caroline LeCerf (
1964â€"
1969); (one daughter Samantha)
In
1956, Granger became a
naturalized citizen of the
United States.
In
Germany, Granger acted in the role of
Old Surehand in three western-movies made after novels by German author
Karl May, with French actor
Pierre Brice (in the role of the fictional red Indian-chief
Winnetou), in "
Unter Geiern" (
Frontier Hellcat) (1964), "
Der Ölprinz" (
Rampage at Apache Wells) (1965) and "
Old Surehand" (
Flaming Frontier) (
1965).
With
Pierre Brice and
Lex Barker, who was also a Karl-May-movie hero, he was united in the movie "
Gern hab' ich die Frauen gekillt" (
Killer's Carnival) (1966). In the German
Edgar Wallace-movie series of the 1960's he was to be seen in "
The Trygon Factor" (1966). Towards the end of his career Granger even starred in a German soap-opera called "
Das Erbe der Guldenburgs" (
The Guldenburg Heritage) (
1987).
He died in
Santa Monica, California, from
prostate cancer aged 80.
The Man in Grey (
1943)
Thursday's Child (
1943)
Madonna of the Seven Moons (
1944)
Love Story (
1944)
Waterloo Road (
1944), with
John MillsCaesar and Cleopatra (
1945), with
Claude RainsCaptain Boycott (
1947)
Saraband for Dead Lovers (
1948), with
Joan GreenwoodAdam and Evelyne (
1949)
King Solomon's Mines (
1950) as
Allan QuatermainScaramouche (
1952), with
Mel FerrerThe Prisoner of Zenda (
1952), with
Deborah KerrAll the Brothers Were Valiant (
1953), with
Robert TaylorBeau Brummell (
1954), with
Elizabeth Taylor and
Peter UstinovGreen Fire (
1954)
Moonfleet (
1955) by
Fritz LangFootsteps in the Fog (
1956)
The Last Hunt (
1956)
Bhowani Junction (
1956)
North to Alaska (
1960)
Sodom and Gomorrah (
1962) by
Robert AldrichThe Hound of the Baskervilles (
1972) (
TV) as
Sherlock HolmesThe Wild Geese (
1978), with
Richard Burton,
Roger Moore and
Hardy Krüger