Barry Jones (actor)
Barry Cuthbert Jones was a Guernsey-born actor best known for his appearances in the plays of Bernard Shaw in Britain, Canada and the US.
Biography
Jones was born on Guernsey in the Channel Islands on 6 March 1893, the son of William John Jones and his wife Amelia. He was educated at Elizabeth College, Guernsey. On the outbreak of the First World War in 1914 he joined the Army, and served with the Royal Guernsey Light Infantry and Royal Irish Fusiliers until February 1921.He made his first appearance on the stage at the Grand Theatre, Leeds, with Sir Frank Benson's company in March 1921 as the Clerk of the Court in The Merchant of Venice. After two years touring with the Benson company he went to North America. He played stock engagements in Toronto and Boston. and made his first appearance in New York at the Garrick Theatre in April 1924 in Man and the Masses. After playing in those cities and Chicago over the next four years, he entered into partnership with Maurice Colbourne in 1928 and for the next three years they toured Canada and the United States with a repertory mostly consisting of plays by Bernard Shaw – You Never Can Tell, John Bull's Other Island, The Philanderer, The Doctor's Dilemma, Fanny's First Play, Arms and the Man, Candida, Man and Superman, and The Apple Cart – as well as A. A. Milne's The Dover Road and Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest.
In 1931 Jones made his London début after taking over the management of the Ambassadors Theatre together with Colbourne. Jones played King Eric VIII in The Queen's Husband in which he made a success in the West End and on tour in Canada, where he also appeared in 1932 in Too True to be Good and The Apple Cart. In 1933, returning to London, Jones appeared at the Phoenix Theatre as Jacques in As You Like It with Colbourne as Orlando, Fabia Drake as Rosalind and Joyce Carey as Celia.
After touring the US in 1934 he returned to the West End to play Charles Lankaster in Moonlight is Silver and in 1935 he joined Ivor Novello's company as King Stefan in the musical Glamorous Night. In 1936 he succeeded Ralph Richardson as Emile Delbar in Promise by Henri Bernstein. Later in the year, at the Lyric, he played the title role in Charles the King, written by Colbourne.
After five more West End productions he once again toured Canada, this time under the auspices of the British Council, playing Charles in Charles the King, the Judge in Shaw's Geneva, and Tobias in James Bridie's Tobias and the Angel. He then played in New York before touring the US with Gertrude Lawrence in Private Lives in 1941 and playing Dr Blenkinsopp in The Doctor's Dilemma on Broadway and on tour later in that year.
Returning to Britain in 1942, Jones became a special constable in London, and after playing Frederick in Somerset Maugham's Home and Beauty in the West End and on tour he joined the RNVR. He served until October 1945 and after demobilisation he toured for ENSA in The Apple Cart in Austria, Italy and Germany. At Covent Garden in July 1948 he appeared as Hopeful in an adaptation of The Pilgrim's Progress. At the Phoenix in March 1949 he succeeded Eric Portman as Andrew Crocker-Harris in The Browning Version and Arthur Gosport in Harlequinade, both by Terence Rattigan.
Jones's roles in the 1950s included Howard Jones in Mrs Inspector Jones, Socrates in Barefoot in Athens and, also in New York, John Tarleton in Shaw's Misalliance and the King in William Saroyan's The Cave Dwellers. At the Haymarket in 1959–1960 he played Mackenzie Savage in the long-running comedy The Pleasure of His Company.
Jones and Colbourne shared a house in Campden Hill, London, and subsequently on Jones's native Guernsey, where Colbourne died on 22 September 1965, aged 71. Jones outlived him by sixteen years, dying at the Guernsey house on 1 May 1981 at the age of 88
Selected filmography
Women Who Play as Ernest SteeleNumber Seventeen as Henry DoyleArms and the Man as Captain BluntschliThe Gay Adventure as DarntonMurder in the Family as Stephen OsborneSquadron Leader X as Bruce FenwickFrieda as HollidayDancing with Crime as GregoryThe Calendar as Sir John GarthUneasy Terms as Inspector GringallThat Dangerous Age as Arnold CaneThe Bad Lord Byron as Colonel StonhopeTwelve O'Clock High as Lord Haw-Haw Madeleine as Lord AdvocateSeven Days to Noon as Professor WillingdonThe Mudlark as Speaker The Clouded Yellow as Nicholas FentonWhite Corridors as Dr. ShoesmithAppointment with Venus as ProvostThe Magic Box as The Bath DoctorPlymouth Adventure as William BrewsterHamlet as PoloniusReturn to Paradise as Pastor CorbettPrince Valiant as King LukeDemetrius and the Gladiators as ClaudiusBrigadoon as Mr. LundieThe Glass Slipper as DukeAlexander the Great as AristotleWar and Peace as Prince Mikhail Andreevich RostovSaint Joan as De CourcellesThe Safecracker as Bennett CarfieldThe 39 Steps as Professor LoganKarolina Rijecka as AdmiralA Study in Terror as Duke of ShiresThe Heroes of Telemark as Professor LoganAppearances in TV series
Hallmark Hall of Fame Robert Montgomery Presents as Captain WhalleyThe Saint as Otis Q. FennickRandall and Hopkirk (Deceased) as Patrick HoltThe Outer Limits as Dwight HartleyMartin Chuzzlewit as Martin Chuzzlewit the ElderThe Spread of the Eagle as Julius CaesarSherlock Holmes as Charles Augustus MilvertonSource: Halliwell's Who's Who in the Movies published by Harper-Collins –