Individual Details
Sir Godfrey Seymour TEARLE
(12 Oct 1884 - 8 Jun 1953)
Events
Families
Spouse | Mary Essy "Molly" PLANT (1880 - 1938) |
Father | George Osmond TEARLE (1852 - 1901) |
Mother | Marianne Jane "Minnie" CONWAY (1852 - 1896) |
Notes
Occupation
In 1893, he made his stage debut as young Prince Richard, Duke of York, in his father's production of Richard III, and in 1908 he appeared in his first film as Romeo in Romeo and Juliet. He became a Shakespearean actor of note, appearing on stage in the title roles of Othello, Macbeth, and Henry V. His theatrical career was interrupted when he joined the Royal Artillery for a four-year stint beginning in 1915.One of Tearle's most memorable screen roles was in Alfred Hitchcock's The 39 Steps (1935), in which he portrayed Professor Jordan, a seemingly respectable country squire whose missing finger unmasks him as an enemy agent. He was cast as an RAF gunner in One of Our Aircraft Is Missing (1942), a German General in Undercover (film) (1943), an aging World War I veteran in Medal for the General (1944), and as Franklin D. Roosevelt in The Beginning or the End, MGM's 1946 account of the Manhattan Project.
Tearle made his Broadway theatre debut in Carnival in 1919. In his review in The New York Times, Alexander Woollcott noted, "It is difficult to guess why Godfrey Tearle should have selected as the vehicle of his American debut the play called Carnival, which was presented to New York for the first time last evening at the Forty-fourth Street Theatre. It is a spare and unsubstantial piece at best, and the role it offers him is distinctly secondary in importance and opportunity."[1] Additional Broadway credits include The Fake (1924), The Flashing Stream (1939), and Antony and Cleopatra (1947).
In 1953 he played the part of Ollie Matthews, the Bishop of Welchester in the comedy film The Titfield Thunderbolt directed by Charles Crichton.