George Sanders


George Henry Sanders was a British actor and singer whose career spanned over 40 years. His heavy, upper-class English accent and smooth bass voice often led him to be cast as sophisticated but villainous characters. He is remembered for his roles as the wicked Jack Favell in Rebecca, Scott ffolliott in Foreign Correspondent, The Saran of Gaza in Samson and Delilah, theater critic Addison DeWitt in All About Eve, Sir Brian De Bois-Guilbert in Ivanhoe, King Richard the Lionheart in King Richard and the Crusaders, Mr. Freeze in a two-part episode of Batman, and the voice of Shere Khan in Disney's The Jungle Book. He also starred as Simon Templar, in five of the eight films in The Saint series, and as a suave Saint-like crimefighter in the first four of the sixteen The Falcon films.

Early life

Sanders was born on 3 July 1906 in Saint Petersburg, Russia, at number 6 Petrovski Ostrov, to rope manufacturer Henry Sanders and horticulturist Margaret, who was also born in Saint Petersburg, of mostly German, but also Estonian and Scottish ancestry. Sanders referred to his parents as "well-off" and noted his mother's "forebears of solid social position and impeccable respectability", stating that "to the best of knowledge, father came in the mail".
A biography published in 1990 alleged that family members' "recent disclosures... indicate" that Sanders' father was the out-of-wedlock son of a Russian noblewoman of the Tsar's court, and a prince of the House of Oldenburg who was married to a sister of the Tsar. At the time of Henry Sanders' birth, the Anglo-Russian Sanders family were living at Saint Petersburg; the mother, Dagmar, was a lady-in-waiting to the Dowager Empress, and it was said to be through this connection Henry came to be adopted by the Sanders family.
In 1917, at the outbreak of the Russian Revolution, Sanders and his family moved to Great Britain. Like his brother, he attended Bedales School and Brighton College, a boys' independent school in Brighton, then went on to Manchester Technical College, after which he worked in textile research.
Sanders travelled to South America, where he managed a tobacco plantation. The Depression sent him back to Britain. He worked at an advertising agency, where the company secretary, aspiring actress Greer Garson, suggested that he take up a career in acting.

Career

Early British work

Sanders learned how to sing and got a role on stage in Ballyhoo, which had only a short run, but helped establish him as an actor.
He began to work regularly on the British stage, appearing several times with Edna Best. He co-starred with Dennis King in The Command Performance.
Sanders travelled to New York to appear on Broadway in a production of Noël Coward's Conversation Piece, directed by Coward, which ran for only 55 performances.

Hollywood and 20th Century-Fox

20th Century-Fox was looking for an actor to play a villain in its Hollywood-made film Lloyd's of London. Sanders was duly cast as Lord Everett Stacy, opposite Tyrone Power, in one of his first leads, as the hero; Sanders' smooth, upper-class English accent, his sleek manner, and his suave, superior, and somewhat threatening air made him in demand for American films for years to come. Lloyd's of London was a big hit, and in November 1936, Fox placed Sanders under a seven-year contract.

Character roles

Sanders returned to Hollywood, where RKO wanted him to play the hero in a series of B-movies, The Saint. The Saint in New York had already been made starring Louis Hayward in the title role, but when he decided not to return to the role, Sanders took over for The Saint Strikes Back. In 1940, Sanders played Jack Favell in Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca, opposite Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine.

A-picture leading man

Sanders was borrowed by United Artists to play the lead in The Moon and Sixpence, based on the novel by W. Somerset Maugham.
RKO had canceled its Saint series and replaced it with The Falcon in 1941. George Sanders was assigned the leading role of Gay Laurence, debonair man about town always involved in murder cases. Saint author Leslie Charteris thought the resemblance between the Falcon and the Saint was obvious, and sued the studio for unfair competition. Sanders himself was also unhappy about playing still another screen sleuth in still more "B" pictures, and bowed out of the series in 1942 after only four films.
In July 1942, Fox suspended Sanders for refusing the lead in The Undying Monster. "I like to be seen in pictures that at least seem to be slightly worthwhile." In September, he was again suspended for refusing an "unsympathetic role" in The Immortal Sergeant. In November 1942, Fox and Sanders came to terms, with the studio offering him a raise in pay and the lead in a film, School for Saboteurs, which became They Came to Blow Up America.
RKO called him back for This Land Is Mine. They bought an original story for him, Nine Lives, but the film was never made. He was lent to Columbia Pictures for Appointment in Berlin.
In February 1943, Fox announced it was developing three film projects for Sanders – The Porcelain Lady, a murder mystery, plus biopics of Charles Howard, 20th Earl of Suffolk and a hero of World War II, and Canadian physician Norman Bethune. Fox originally announced that he would play the detective in Laura alongside Laird Cregar, but neither ended up being in the final film. In 1947, Sanders portrayed King Charles II in Fox's lavish production of the scandalous historical bodice-ripper, Forever Amber.
Sanders signed a new three-film contract with RKO, starting with Action in Arabia. Superficially, the film looked expensive but it was actually a low-budget feature, embellished by spectacular location footage filmed in 1933 for an unfinished production about Lawrence of Arabia.

''All About Eve'' and beyond

For his role as the acerbic, cold-blooded theatre critic Addison DeWitt in All About Eve, Sanders won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.
Sanders was leading man in Black Jack, but was back to supporting-villain roles in I Can Get It for You Wholesale. He signed a three-picture deal with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer where he appeared in The Light Touch and Ivanhoe, playing Sir Brian de Bois-Guilbert, dying in a duel with Robert Taylor after professing his love for Jewish maiden Rebecca, played by Elizabeth Taylor. It was a huge success.
Sanders went to Italy to appear opposite Ingrid Bergman in Journey to Italy. Back in Hollywood, he made several films for MGM: Jupiter's Darling, Moonfleet, The Scarlet Coat, and The King's Thief .
In 1955, Sanders was announced as hosting and occasionally appearing in The Ringmaster, a TV series about the circus.
Sanders played the lead in Death of a Scoundrel and the TV series The George Sanders Mystery Theater.
He worked one last time with Power on Solomon and Sheba ; Power died suddenly during filming and was replaced by Yul Brynner.
In 1960, Sanders ventured into the realm of science fiction/horror, starring in Village of the Damned as a professor who is determined to teach an unusual group of white-haired, glowing-eyed children how to be human. The movie was groundbreaking in its use of split- and composite-screen special effects which appeared to show the children's eyes glowing in real time as they used their powers to manipulate the citizens of the village and wreak destruction.
In 1961, he appeared in The Rebel with Tony Hancock before being top-billed in Cairo, then appeared in The Cracksman, Dark Purpose, and The Golden Head. Peter Sellers and Sanders appeared together in The Pink Panther sequel A Shot in the Dark. Sanders had earlier inspired Sellers's character Hercules Grytpype-Thynne in the BBC radio comedy series The Goon Show.
In 1966, Sanders declared bankruptcy due to some poor investments.
Sanders was cast in the musical comedy, Sherry!, but withdrew from the show while it was out-of-town. He was replaced by Clive Revill for Broadway.

Final films

Sanders appeared briefly in the espionage thriller The Quiller Memorandum, and in the crime-thriller Warning Shot. He followed those up by voicing the bengal tiger Shere Khan in Disney's animated hit film The Jungle Book. He was featured in a quadruple role in the Sonny & Cher vehicle Good Times, William Friedkin's debut film; followed by an eclectic variety of low-budget films, such as The Candy Man and the campy The Girl from Rio.
In 1969, Sanders announced his retirement from acting. He had a major supporting role in John Huston's The Kremlin Letter, in which his first scene showed him dressed in drag and playing the piano in a gay bar in San Francisco. He also obtained supporting roles in Doomwatch and Endless Night, the latter being an adaptation of Agatha Christie's novel of the same name. He received top billing for his final film, Psychomania, released posthumously.

Novels

Two ghostwritten crime novels were published under his name to cash in on his fame at the height of his wartime film series. The first was Crime on My Hands, written in the first person, and mentioning his Saint and Falcon films.

Singing and Piano Playing

During the production of The Jungle Book, Sanders was unavailable to provide the singing voice for his character Shere Khan during the final recording of the song, "That's What Friends Are For". According to Richard Sherman, Bill Lee, a member of The Mellomen, was called in to substitute for Sanders.
Sanders was an accomplished pianist who maintained his technique for many years. In 1959, while filming The Last Voyage, LIFE magazine observed him on the set "playing Chopin etudes" during breaks in filming.

Personal life

On 27 October 1940, Sanders married Susan Larson. The couple divorced in 1949. From later that year until 1954, Sanders was married to Zsa Zsa Gabor, with whom he starred in the film Death of a Scoundrel. On 10 February 1959, Sanders married Benita Hume, widow of Ronald Colman. She died of bone cancer in 1967, aged 60, the same year that Sanders's brother Tom Conway died of liver failure. Sanders had become distant from his brother because of Conway's drinking problem.
In 1942, the Hollywood Women's Press Club named Sanders that year's winner of the Sour Apple Award, which is given nearly annually to entertainers who have exhibited rude or difficult behavior on set.
Sanders' autobiography Memoirs of a Professional Cad was published in 1960 and gained critical praise for its wit. Sanders suggested the title A Dreadful Man for his biography, later written by his friend Brian Aherne and published in 1979. Sanders' fourth and final marriage on 4 December 1970 was to Magda Gabor, the elder sister of his second wife. This marriage lasted 32 days ending in an annulment.

Final years and death

By the late 1960s, Sanders had become increasingly reclusive and suffered from depression due to a string of personal tragedies, including the deaths of his third wife, his mother and his brother Tom, all within the span of a year. This was followed by a failed investment, which cost him millions of dollars. According to Aherne's biography, he also had a minor stroke. Sanders could not bear the prospect of losing his health or needing help to carry out everyday tasks, and became severely depressed. He was also drinking heavily. After discovering that he could no longer play his grand piano, he dragged it outside and smashed it with an axe. His last girlfriend, Lorraine Chanel, with whom he had an on-off relationship in the last four years of his life, persuaded him to sell his beloved house in Majorca, Spain, which he later bitterly regretted. From then on, he drifted.
On 23 April 1972, Sanders checked into a hotel in Castelldefels, a coastal town near Barcelona, where he phoned his friend George Mikell. Two days after swallowing the contents of five bottles of the barbiturate Nembutal, he died from cardiac arrest. He left behind two suicide notes, one of which read:
David Niven wrote in Bring on the Empty Horses, the second volume of his memoirs, that in 1937, his friend George Sanders had predicted that he would commit suicide from a barbiturate overdose when he was 65, and that in his 50s, he had appeared to be depressed because his marriages had failed and several tragedies had befallen him.
Sanders has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, for films at 1636 Vine Street and television at 7007 Hollywood Boulevard.

Complete filmography

Love, Life and Laughter as Singer in Public Bar Things to Come as Pilot Strange Cargo as Roddy BurchFind the Lady as Curly RandallThe Man Who Could Work Miracles as IndifferenceDishonour Bright as LisleLloyd's of London as Lord Everett StacyLove Is News as Count Andre de GuyonSlave Ship as LeftyThe Lady Escapes as Rene BlanchardLancer Spy as Baron Kurt von Rohback / Lt. Michael BruceInternational Settlement as Del ForbesFour Men and a Prayer as Wyatt LeighMr. Moto's Last Warning as Eric NorvelThe Outsider as Anton RagatzySo This Is London as Dr. de ResekeThe Saint Strikes Back as Simon Templar / The SaintConfessions of a Nazi Spy as SchlagerThe Saint in London as Simon Templar / The SaintNurse Edith Cavell as Capt. HeinrichsAllegheny Uprising as Capt. SwansonThe Saint's Double Trouble as Simon Templar aka The Saint / 'Boss' Duke BatesGreen Hell as ForresterThe House of the Seven Gables as Jaffrey PyncheonRebecca as Jack FavellThe Saint Takes Over as Simon Templar / The SaintForeign Correspondent as Scott ffolliottBitter Sweet as Baron von TranischThe Son of Monte Cristo as Gen. Gurko LanenThe Saint in Palm Springs as Simon Templar / The SaintRage in Heaven as Ward AndrewsMan Hunt as Major Quive-SmithSundown as CoombesThe Gay Falcon as Gay Laurence / The FalconA Date with the Falcon as Gay Laurence / The FalconSon of Fury: The Story of Benjamin Blake as Sir Arthur BlakeThe Falcon Takes Over as Gay Lawrence / The FalconHer Cardboard Lover as Tony BarlingTales of Manhattan as WilliamsThe Falcon's Brother as Gay Lawrence / The FalconThe Moon and Sixpence as Charles StricklandThe Black Swan as Capt. Billy LeechQuiet Please, Murder as Jim FlegThis Land Is Mine as George LambertThey Came to Blow Up America as Carl Steelman / Ernst ReiterAppointment in Berlin as Wing Cmdr. Keith WilsonParis After Dark as Dr. Andre MarbelThe Lodger as Inspector John WarwickAction in Arabia as Michael GordonSummer Storm as Fedor Mikhailovich PetroffHangover Square as Dr. Allan MiddletonThe Picture of Dorian Gray as Lord Henry WottonThe Strange Affair of Uncle Harry as Harry Melville QuinceyA Scandal in Paris as Eugène François VidocqThe Strange Woman as John EveredThe Private Affairs of Bel Ami as Georges DuroyThe Ghost and Mrs. Muir as Miles FairleyLured as Robert FlemingForever Amber as King Charles IIThe Fan as Lord Robert DarlingtonSamson and Delilah as The Saran of GazaAll About Eve as Addison DeWittBlack Jack as Mike AlexanderI Can Get It for You Wholesale as J.F. NobleThe Light Touch as Felix GuignolIvanhoe as De Bois-GuilbertAssignment – Paris! as Nicholas StrangCall Me Madam as General Cosmo ConstantineWitness to Murder as Albert RichterKing Richard and the Crusaders as King Richard IJourney to Italy as Alexander 'Alex' JoyceJupiter's Darling as Fabius MaximusMoonfleet as Lord AshwoodThe Scarlet Coat as Dr. Jonathan OdellThe King's Thief as Charles IINever Say Goodbye as VictorWhile the City Sleeps as Mark LovingThat Certain Feeling as Larry LarkinDeath of a Scoundrel as Clementi SabourinThe Seventh Sin as Tim WaddingtonRock-A-Bye Baby as Danny Poole The Whole Truth as CarlissFrom the Earth to the Moon as Stuyvesant NichollThat Kind of Woman as A.L.Solomon and Sheba as AdonijahA Touch of Larceny as Sir Charles HollandThe Last Voyage as Captain Robert AdamsBluebeard's Ten Honeymoons as Henri LandruCone of Silence as Sir Arnold HobbesVillage of the Damned as Gordon ZellabyThe Rebel as Sir Charles BrewerFive Golden Hours as Mr. BingLe Rendez-vous as J.K. / KellermannOperation Snatch as Maj. HobsonIn Search of the Castaways as Thomas AyertonCairo as The MajorThe Cracksman as Guv'norDark Purpose as Raymond FontaineThe Golden Head as Basil PalmerA Shot in the Dark as Benjamin BallonLast Plane to Baalbeck as Prince MakowskiThe Golden Head as Basil PalmerThe Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders as The BankerTrunk to Cairo as Professor SchliebenThe Quiller Memorandum as GibbsWitchdoctor in Tails as the narrator Warning Shot as Calvin YorkGood Times as Mordicus / Knife McBlade / White hunter / ZarubianThe Jungle Book as Shere Khan, the Tiger Laura as Waldo LydeckerKing of Africa as Captain Walter PhillipsThe Candy Man as Sidney CarterThe Girl from Rio as MasiusThe Body Stealers as General ArmstrongThe Best House in London as Sir Francis LeybourneThe Kremlin Letter as WarlockRendezvous with Dishonour as General DownesDoomwatch as The Admiral – Sir GeoffreyEndless Night as Andrew Lippincott Psychomania as Shadwell

Television

Screen Directors Playhouse as Charles Ferris / BaronFord Star Jubilee "You're the Top" The George Sanders Mystery Theater What's My Line? 15 September 1957 Mystery GuestThe Rogues as Leonard CarvelVoyage to the Bottom of the Sea - "The Traitor" as FentonThe Man From U.N.C.L.E. - "The Gazebo in the Maze Affair" and "The Yukon Affair" as G. Emory PartridgeDaniel Boone as Col. Roger BarrBatman as Mr. FreezeMission: Impossible - "The Merchant" as Armand Anderssarian

Broadway

Conversation Piece, at the 44th Street Theatre, 1934