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Monty Woolley (August 17, 1888 – May 6, 1963) was an American actor.

Contents

Early life and academia

He was born Edgar Montillion Woolley in New York City to a wealthy family (his father owned the Bristol Hotel) and grew up in the highest social circles. Woolley attended Yale University, where Cole Porter was an intimate friend and classmate, and Harvard University. He eventually became a professor and lecturer at Yale. Thornton Wilder and Stephen Vincent Benet were among his students.

Acting career

He left his academic career and began acting on Broadway in 1936. He was typecast as the wasp-tongued, supercilious sophisticate. His most famous role is that of the cranky radio wag forced to stay immobile because of a seemingly-injured hip in 1942's The Man Who Came to Dinner, which he had performed onstage before taking it to Hollywood. In the film, he caricatured Alexander Woollcott, a radio and press celebrity of the 1930s and 1940s. Like Clifton Webb, Woolley signed with 20th Century Fox in the 1940s and appeared in many films through the mid-1950s. He played himself in Warner Bros.' fictionalized film biography of Cole Porter, Night and Day (1946).

He was also a frequent radio presence as a guest performer, from the time he first appeared as the foil to Al Jolson. Woolley became a familiar guest presence on such shows as The Fred Allen Show, Duffy's Tavern, The Big Show, The Charlie McCarthy Show, and others. In 1950, Woolley landed the starring role in the short-lived NBC series, The Magnificent Montague. He played a former Shakespearean actor whose long fall onto hard times forced him to swallow his pride and take a role on daily network radio, becoming an unlikely star while sparring with his wife, Lily (Anne Seymour); and, his wise-cracking maid, Agnes (Pert Kelton). The show lasted from November 1950 through September 1951.

Woolley was nominated twice for the Academy Award, as Best Actor in 1943 for The Pied Piper and as Best Supporting Actor in 1945 for Since You Went Away. He also has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Personal life

Woolley and Cole Porter enjoyed many amusing disreputable adventures together in New York and on foreign travels.[1]

According to Bennett Cerf in his 1944 book Try and Stop Me, Woolley was at a dinner party and suddenly belched. A woman sitting nearby glared at him; he glared back and said, "What did you expect--chimes?" Cerf said that Woolley liked his own impromptu line so much he insisted that it be added to the script of his next stage role.

Health and retirement

After completing his last film Kismet he worked on radio for about a year, after which he was forced to retire due to ill health.

Death

Monty Woolley, affectionately know as "The Beard," died due to complications with kidney and heart ailments on 6 May 1963. He was 74 years old. He is interred at the Greenridge Cemetery, Saratoga Springs, Saratoga County, New York.

Filmography

References

  1. ^ Schwartz, Charle (1979). Cole Porter: A Biography. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0306800977.  

External links








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