Famous Like Me > Actor > B > George Brent
Profile of George Brent
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Name: |
George Brent |
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Date of Birth: |
15th March 1899 |
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Place of Birth: |
Shannonsbridge, County Dublin, Ireland |
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Profession: |
Actor |
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From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
George Brent (March 15, 1899 - May 26, 1979) was an actor in American cinema.
Born George Brendan Nolan in Shannonbridge, County Offaly, Ireland in 1899 (according to IMDB, NNDB and Wikipedia, although he was long thought to have been born in 1904) to a family with a history of British Army service. However, during the Anglo-Irish War (1919-1921), he was part of an IRA Active Service Unit as early as 1920 carrying out IRA directives. He fled with a price on his head by the British, although he first claimed that he had only been a courier for guerrilla leader and tactician, Michael Collins. He eventually moved to Hollywood where he made his first film in 1930. Signed to a contract with Warner Brothers he acted for more than twenty years, establishing himself as a dependable but wooden actor, who was not a trained thespian, but a young man who fell into cinema (as an IRA fugitive from his homeland) because of his good looks and charm. He was completely unmoving in Jezebel and at the end of The Spiral Staircase when he is revealed to be the psychopathic killer, his rants, which should be chilling, merely come across as petulance. Even the compelling eye that stares through holes in the walls of the house at his victims didn't belong to Brent, but rather to the film's director, Robert Siodmak.
Highly regarded by Davis, notwithstanding the above, he became her most frequent male co-star, appearing with her in twelve films, including Jezebel (1938), The Old Maid (1939), Dark Victory (1939) and The Great Lie (1941). He also played opposite Greta Garbo in The Painted Veil (1934), Madeleine Carroll in The Case Against Mrs. Ames (1936), Jean Arthur in More Than a Secretary (1936), Myrna Loy in The Rains Came (1939), Merle Oberon in 'Til We Meet Again (1940), Ann Sheridan in Honeymoon For Three (1941), Joan Fontaine in The Affairs of Susan (1945), Barbara Stanwyck in My Reputation (1946), Claudette Colbert in Tomorrow is Forever (1946), Dorothy McGuire in The Spiral Staircase (1946), Lucille Ball in Lover Come Back (1946) and Yvonne De Carlo in Slave Girl (1947). When not playing against a popular female lead, Brent's few starring roles failed to achieve success, and he drifted into "B" pictures from the late 1940s. He retired from acting in 1956 but made a return in 1978 in the made-for-television production Born Again.
Brent was known as a womaniser in Hollywood, and had a lengthy relationship with his co-star Bette Davis. He was married six times including three marriages to actresses - Ruth Chatterton (1932-1934), Constance Worth (1937) and Ann Sheridan (1942-1943). Chatterton and Sheridan were both fellow Warners Brothers players. There were also rumors that he had slept with fellow Irish actor Geraldine Fitzgerald. Bette Davis recounted in her final years about what was her last meeting with Brent after many years of estrangement. She expressed great remorse at his ill health (emphysema), and sadness that such a virile and attractive man could have deteriorated so dramatically. He died shortly after in Solana Beach, California at the age of 80.
George Brent has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, for his contributions to Motion Pictures at 1707 Vine St, and for his contributions to Television at 1614 Vine St.
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