Boris Karloff
William Henry Pratt, known professionally as Boris Karloff, was an English actor. His portrayal of Frankenstein's monster in the horror film Frankenstein, his 82nd film, established him as a horror icon, and he reprised the role for the sequels Bride of Frankenstein and Son of Frankenstein. He also appeared as Imhotep in The Mummy, and voiced the Grinch in, as well as narrating, the animated television special of Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, which won him a Grammy Award.
Aside from his numerous film roles, Karloff acted in many live stage plays and appeared on dozens of radio and television programs as well. For his contribution to film and television, Karloff was awarded two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on 8 February 1960.
Early life
William Henry Pratt was born on 23 November 1887, at 36 Forest Hill Road, Peckham. His parents were Edward John Pratt of the Indian Civil Service, and Eliza Sara Millard. Both his parents died when Karloff was young, and he was primarily raised by a half-sister and his elder siblings. His brother, Sir John Thomas Pratt, was a British diplomat. Karloff's father, Edward John Pratt, was Anglo-Indian, with a British father and Indian mother, meaning that Karloff was at least a quarter Indian, while Karloff's mother also had some Indian ancestry; thus Karloff had a relatively dark complexion that differed from his peers at the time. His mother's maternal aunt was Anna Leonowens, whose tales about life in the royal court of Siam were the basis of the novel Anna and the King of Siam. Pratt was bow-legged, had a lisp, and stuttered as a young boy. He learned how to manage his stutter, but not his lisp, which was noticeable throughout his career in the film industry.Pratt spent his childhood years in Enfield, in the County of Middlesex. He was the youngest of nine children, and following his mother's death, was brought up by his elder siblings. After first attending Enfield Grammar School, he received a private education at Uppingham School and Merchant Taylors' School. Following this, he attended King's College London, where his studies aimed at a career with the British Government's Consular Service. However, in 1909, he left university without graduating and drifted, departing England for Canada, where he worked as a farm labourer, truck driver, and did various odd jobs in Saskatchewan and British Columbia until he happened upon stage acting in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, which led to a later film career.
Professional career
Adoption of stage name
Pratt began appearing in theatrical performances in Canada in 1911. He was present in Regina, Saskatchewan, in June 1912, the day the Regina Cyclone destroyed much of the city. The theatre group he was with gave a benefit performance that night at the Regina Theatre to assist in relief efforts. The next week, appearing in Saskatoon, they donated half of the receipts from their performances to Regina relief.During this period, he chose Boris Karloff as his stage name. Karloff always said he chose the first name "Boris" simply because it sounded foreign and exotic, and that "Karloff" was a family name. Karloff's daughter, Sara, publicly denied any knowledge of Slavic forebears, "Karloff" or otherwise. It has been speculated by film historians that he took the stage name from a mad scientist character named "Boris Karlov" in the novel The Drums of Jeopardy by Harold MacGrath, but the novel was not published until 1920, at least eight years after Karloff had been using the name on stage and in films. Another possible influence was thought to be a character in the Edgar Rice Burroughs fantasy novel The Rider, which features a "Prince Boris of Karlova", but, because the novel was not published until 1915, the influence may be backward, that Burroughs saw Karloff in a play and adapted the name for the character.
One reason for the name change was to prevent embarrassment to the Pratt family. Whether or not his brothers actually considered young William the "black sheep of the family" for having become an actor, Karloff apparently worried they felt that way. He did not reunite with his family until he returned to Britain to make The Ghoul, extremely worried that his siblings would disapprove of his new, macabre claim to world fame. Instead, his brothers jostled for position around him and happily posed for publicity photographs upon their reunion with him. After the photo was taken, Karloff's brothers immediately started asking about getting a copy of their own. The story of the photo became one of Karloff's favorites.
Canadian and American stage work
Karloff joined the Jeanne Russell Company in 1911 and performed in towns including Kamloops and Prince Albert. After the devastating tornado in Regina on 30 June 1912, Karloff, who was in the midst of an engagement at the Regina Theatre, and other performers helped with clean-up efforts. He later took a job as a railway baggage handler and joined the Harry St. Clair Company that performed in Minot, North Dakota, for a year in an opera house above a hardware store.While he was trying to establish his acting career, Karloff had to perform years of manual labour in Canada and the United States to make ends meet. Among this work, he spent one year laying track, digging ditches, shoveling coal, clearing land, and working with surveying parties for the B.C. Electric Railway Company, at the rate of $2.50 per day. From this gruelling work with the BCER and other employers, Karloff was left with back problems for the rest of his life. Because of his health, he did not serve in World War I.
During this period, Karloff worked in various theatrical stock companies across the U.S. to hone his acting skills. Some acting companies mentioned were the Harry St. Clair Players and the Billie Bennett Touring Company. By early 1918, he was working with the Maud Amber Players in Vallejo, California, but because of the Spanish flu outbreak in the San Francisco area and the fear of infection, the troupe was disbanded. He was able to find work with the Haggerty Repertory for a while.
Early Hollywood career
Once Karloff arrived in Hollywood, he appeared in small roles in dozens of silent films, but the work was sporadic and he often had to take up manual labour such as digging ditches or delivering construction plaster to make ends meet.His first certain screen role was in a film serial, The Lightning Raider with Pearl White. He was in another serial that same year, The Masked Rider, the earliest of his film appearances that has survived. Karloff could also be seen in His Majesty, the American with Douglas Fairbanks, The Prince and Betty, The Deadlier Sex with Blanche Sweet, and The Courage of Marge O'Doone. He played an Indian in The Last of the Mohicans with Wallace Beery and he would often be cast as an Arab or Indian in his early films.
Karloff's first major role came in a film serial, The Hope Diamond Mystery. He was Indian in Without Benefit of Clergy and an Arab in Cheated Hearts and villainous biracial hired hand in The Cave Girl. He was a maharajah in The Man from Downing Street, a Nabob in The Infidel and had roles in The Altar Stairs, Omar the Tentmaker , The Woman Conquers, The Gentleman from America, The Prisoner and the serial Riders of the Plains.
Karloff did a Western, The Hellion, and a drama, Dynamite Dan. He could be seen in Parisian Nights, Forbidden Cargo, The Prairie Wife and the serial Perils of the Wild. Karloff went back to bit part status in Never the Twain Shall Meet, directed by Maurice Tourneur, but he had a good support part in Lady Robinhood starring Evelyn Brent in the titular role.
Karloff went on to be in The Greater Glory, Her Honor, the Governor, The Bells , The Nickel-Hopper with Mabel Normand, The Golden Web, The Eagle of the Sea, Flames, Old Ironsides with Wallace Beery and Esther Ralston, Flaming Fury, Valencia, The Man in the Saddle with Hoot Gibson, Tarzan and the Golden Lion , Let It Rain, The Meddlin' Stranger, The Princess from Hoboken, The Phantom Buster with Buddy Roosevelt, and Soft Cushions.
Karloff had roles in Two Arabian Knights, The Love Mart with Noah Beery Sr., The Vanishing Rider , Burning the Wind, Vultures of the Sea, and The Little Wild Girl.
He was in The Devil's Chaplain, The Fatal Warning for Richard Thorpe, The Phantom of the North, Two Sisters, Anne Against the World, Behind That Curtain with Warner Baxter, and The King of the Kongo, a serial directed by Thorpe.
While one day sitting at the bus stop in the pouring rain, Lon Chaney Sr., 'The Man of a Thousand Faces', spotted Karloff and offered him a ride. Chaney told him "to find something different that will set you apart and is different from anything someone else has done or is willing to do and do it better".
Karloff had an uncredited bit part in The Unholy Night directed by Lionel Barrymore, and bigger parts in The Bad One, The Sea Bat starring Charles Bickford and directed by Lionel Barrymore and Wesley Ruggles, and The Utah Kid directed by Thorpe.
A film which brought Karloff recognition was The Criminal Code, a prison drama directed by Howard Hawks in which he reprised a dramatic part he had played on stage. In the same period, Karloff had a supporting role as a mob boss in Hawks' gangster film Scarface starring Paul Muni and George Raft, but the film was not released until 1932 because of censorship problems.
He did another serial for Thorpe, King of the Wild, then had support parts in Cracked Nuts with Wheeler and Woolsey, Young Donovan's Kid with Jackie Cooper, Smart Money with Edward G. Robinson and James Cagney in their only film together, The Public Defender with Richard Dix, I Like Your Nerve with Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Loretta Young, and Graft with Regis Toomey and future agent Sue Carol.
Another significant role in the autumn of 1931 saw Karloff play a key supporting part as an unethical newspaper reporter in Five Star Final with Edward G. Robinson, a film about tabloid journalism which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture.
He could also be seen in The Yellow Ticket with Elissa Landi, Lionel Barrymore and Laurence Olivier during Olivier's memorable first round in Hollywood, The Mad Genius with John Barrymore, The Guilty Generation with Robert Young and Tonight or Never with Gloria Swanson.