Sunday, August 14, 2011

BORN IN A TRUNK: ETHEL GRIFFIES

Ethel Griffies
1878-1975

On April 26, 1878 in Sheffield, England actress Lillie Roberts presented her husband actor-manager Samuel Rupert Woods with a daughter, Ethel. Three years later the couple presented the girl on stage and an 80 year career began. Known professionally as Ethel Griffies (A youthful bid for independence? A youthful indiscretion? Ethel Woods sounded too much some ancient king? Advice from a fortune teller to have a 13 lettered name?), the actress learned her craft in the provinces and made her London debut in 1899 at the Haymarket. Her Broadway debut would occur in 1924 in a short run production of Havoc directed by and co-starring Leo G. Carroll.

Forty-three years on the New York stage would see some also rans including The Shop at Sly Corner featuring Boris Karloff and Una O'Connor which closed in one week in 1949 and The Natural Look featuring Gene Hackman, Zorha Lampert, Jerry Orbach, Doris Roberts and Brenda Vaccaro which opened and closed on March 11, 1967.

Ethel did enjoy successes such as Irving Berlin's Miss Liberty in 1949-50, The Criminal Code in 1929-30 (filmed by Howard Hawks), Frederick Knott's Write Me a Murder in 1961-62 and John Galsworthy's Old English directed by and starring George Arliss. Ethel Griffies would make the film version with George Arliss, also appearing in his movies The House of Rothschild and The Millionaire.

Old English was not Ethel's first foray unto the silver screen. In 1917 she appeared in The Cost of a Kiss and that same year she married the movie's co-star, Edward Cooper. Five years Ethel's junior, the marriage would last 40 years until Edward's death in 1956. This was Ethel's second marriage. Her first husband, Walter Beaumont passed in 1910.

Edward Cooper's Broadway career encompassed roles in plays as varied as Hay Fever and The Hasty Heart. He appeared in Lady Dedlock with Ethel in the 1928-29 season. On-screen the couple are featured in, besides The Cost of a Kiss, Torch Singer, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, and Holy Matrimony.

Edward Cooper, Roger Livesey
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp

Edward Cooper has over 75 movie/tv credits to his name, most often uncredited in the role of a butler as in On the Avenue, Small Town Girl, The Dark Angel, and others. The next time you spot the prison clerk in 1935s Les Miserables, the BBC official in The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp or the Indian Chief in Diplomaniacs say to yourself "That's the guy who married Mrs. Whack!".


Ethel Griffies, Zeffie Tilbury
Werewolf of London

Mrs. Whack may be my favourite character in Ethel Griffie's movie career. She and the incredible Zeffie Tilbury as Mrs. Moncaster in 1935s Werewolf of London steal the picture as Horror's best comedy relief. Obsessed botanist Henry Hull was bitten by werewolf Warner Oland in Tibet and now, jaunty scarf around his neck and walking stick in hand, Hull stalks the streets of London by the light of the full moon. Competing landladies and drinking companions Whack and Moncastle are alternately curious and frightened by the philosophical and dangerous stranger in their midst. You never saw a flirt like Mrs. Whack!

Ethel didn't always require an acting partner the likes of Miss Tilbury to make her presence felt. In 1944s The White Cliffs of Dover she dominates fellow train travelers Irene Dunne and Frank Morgan with nary a word. While her forceful personality is played for laughs in that British flag-waver, in John Ford's 1941 Oscar winner How Green Was My Valley she is quite intimidating as the tyrannical housekeeper, Mrs. Nicholas.

Ethel played another tippler, Grace Poole in the 1934 and 1943 versions of Jane Eyre. She played as many landladies as her husband played butlers, in fact, taking that role in both the 1931 and 1940 versions of Waterloo Bridge.

Well-remembered titles from the 1930s include Alice in Wonderland, Doctor Bull, Four Frightened People, The Painted Veil, and Anna Karenina. You can see Ethel in some of your favourite films of the 1940s, Stranger on the Third Floor (landlady), Billy the Kid, A Yank in the R.A.F., The Keys of the Kingdom, Forever and a Day and The Horn Blows at Midnight.

In Caftan Woman's universe actors get an extra gold star for appearing in a Charlie Chan picture and Ethel has two to her credit in the waning days of that series' run at 20th Century Fox.


Ethel Griffies, Sidney Toler
Dead Men Tell

Dead Men Tell, 1941 finds Ethel as Patience Nodbury, a superstitious eccentric with a treasure map and a murderous ghostly ancestor. Sidney Toler's Chan is so patient in his scene with Miss Nodbury that he might be channeling Warner Oland, that is when Oland isn't biting botanists in Tibet.

Ethel Griffies, Sidney Toler, Oliver Blake
Castle in the Desert

Castle in the Desert, 1942 gives Ethel another eccentric in Madame Saturnia, a mystic, a busybody and, of course, a murder suspect. She seems almost sane compared to some of the crackpots the Inspector and Jimmy (Sen Yung) are dealing with in this outing.

Ethel Griffies
The Birds

The Chan series notwithstanding, to the general public an actor's bid for immortality comes through an association with either Walt Disney or Alfred Hitchcock. Ethel certainly has her Hitchcock connection as Mrs. Bundy, the emphatic amateur ornithologist in The Birds, 1963. She is most enjoyable in the diner scene where, at 83 years old, Ethel has lost none of her ability to dominate a scene and hold your attention.

In his IMDb mini-bio on Ethel, Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide, states: "Presumably at the invitation of fellow Briton Arthur Treacher, Ethel Griffies was a frequent guest on TVs Merv Griffin Show in the late 1960s, never failing to bring down the house with her wickedly witty comments on her 80 years in show business."

Doesn't that make you long for a specialty channel devoted to retro talk shows? I would love to hear Ethel's story in her own words. Luckily we still have decades of movie work to enjoy.












18 comments:

  1. Oh, CW, you are preaching to the choir! What wouldn't I give to see those tv shows with Arthur Treacher & Ethel? She's one of those faces that everyone knows, but whose name is rarely remembered. Super post!

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  2. Indeed, FlickChick. The love we have for our character people keeps us returning to favourite old movies again and again.

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  3. I loved Ethel Griffies, in the Hitchcock film, The Birds. Thank you for telling us more about her.

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  4. My pleasure.

    I get a kick out of Ethel in "The Birds" as well. Although sometimes I call it the "blah, blah, blah, end of the world, show me Rod Taylor" scene.

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  5. I remember Ethel Griffies in THE BIRDS. Great actress and great profile as usual.

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  6. Thanks for the compliment.

    Ethel Griffies is unforgettable.

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  7. Great post! I love Ethel in CASTLE IN THE DESERT and DEAD MEN TELL. I own both films, so get to enjoy her all the time. She was a hoot.

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  8. Yvette, I thought about your "Castle in the Desert" post while working on this one. I had to rewatch "Dead Men Tell" after I finished. I think Patience Nodbury, besides being a fun character, is one of the greatest names of all time. It's practically Dickensian.

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  9. I recognized her from "The Birds" but did not know about the rest of her career. Very interesting.

    I second your call for a retro station on TV talk shows. I think the late night TV talk shows lost their magic when the guests wouldn't stay. I used to love it on The Tonight Show when the previous guests would move down the couch and often interact with each other.

    Ethel Griffies and Arthur Treacher? I would love to see those clips.

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  10. Another great post on one of those stalwart, immeasurably talented character actors who really make the movie for us.

    I like the idea of a retro channel for old TV talk shows. Lots of fun material there.

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  11. Kevin, it's true. Talk shows used to be like a party. The co-host on The Mike Douglas Show was there all week and it felt you really got to know them. Merv Griffin always seemed to be enjoying himself so much with the panel of guests. Is it my nostalgic memory or were the guests all witty and friendly? And was the hawking of their latest project done in a low-key manner so as not to get in the way of the fun?

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  12. Thanks, Jacqueline.

    More and more amazing finds pop up on YouTube. Perhaps some enterprising poster has access to the great old talk shows and is just waiting for the right time. Well, the right time is now!

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  13. CW, I love articles about the character actors that made movies shine. I looked at her picture and thought, I KNOW that face, but could not put a movie to it. Then I suddenly remembered "Werewolf of London", a real favorite of mine (I LOVE the original horror movies). But something was nagging at my mind.

    The minute I saw the picture from The Birds, I hit myself upside of the head (as we say in Indiana). Of course! Loved her in that part.

    This was so interesting, CW, and I'd like to see some of the other movies of Ethel's I didn't know about!

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  14. Becky, I will bet that for the next little while every time you watch a movie you are going to spot Ethel Griffies. It's the way of the movie universe.

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  15. Ah yes, CW, that is the way of the movie universe. Great turn of phrase. I love to find a write who can do that. And I will be doing that just that. Well, a lady who worked her whole life in movies deserves no less...

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  16. N and CF, is passing the "The Irresistibly Sweet Blog Award", to your wonderful blog," Caftan Woman". Please stop by N and CF to pick up your award.

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  17. Thank you, Dawn. How very thoughtful!

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