
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles Henry Daniell (5 March 1894 – 31 October 1963) was an English actor who had a long and prestigious career on stage as well as in films. He is perhaps best known for his villainous roles in films like The Great Dictator, The Philadelphia Story and The Sea Hawk. Daniell was given few opportunities to play a 'good guy', including a supporting part as Franz Liszt in the biographical film Song of Love (1947). His last name is sometimes spelled "Daniel".
Daniell's film debut came in 1929 in Jealousy. He appeared as Professor Moriarty in the Basil Rathbone-Nigel Bruce Sherlock Holmes film The Woman in Green (1945). He appeared in other films such as Charlie Chaplin's The Great Dictator (1940) (playing Garbitsch, to sound like "garbage", a parody of Joseph Goebbels), and The Body Snatcher (1945, with Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi) – as well as two other films in the Sherlock Holmes/Basil Rathbone series: The Voice of Terror (1942) and Sherlock Holmes in Washington (1943) with fellow Moriarty George Zucco.
Daniell played the sleazy Baron de Varville opposite Greta Garbo in Camille (1936). Another early triumph was his portrayal of Cecil in The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939). He also played the treacherous Lord Wolfingham (no relation to Francis Walsingham) in The Sea Hawk (1940), fighting Errol Flynn in what is often considered one of the most spectacular sword fighting duels ever filmed. When Michael Curtiz cast him in this film, Henry Daniell initially refused because he couldn't fence. Curtiz accomplished the climactic duel through the use of shadows and over-shoulder shots, with a double fencing Flynn with ingenious inter-cutting of their faces.
Towards the end of the Second World War, he appeared in one of his most memorable film roles, as the cruel Mr. Brocklehurst in Jane Eyre (1944), opposite Joan Fontaine who played Eyre. That same year he appeared in The Suspect as Charles Laughton's blackmailing next-door neighbour. In the 1950s and 1960s, he did much television, and also appeared as the malevolent Dr. Emil Zurich in Edward L. Cahn's The Four Skulls of Jonathan Drake (1959), and in an episode of Maverick, "Pappy" opposite James Garner the same year. An absolute professional, he was always on the set when needed, and impatient when delays in filming took place. Much in demand for his dry, sardonic delivery, Daniell moved easily from big-budget films, such as (uncredited) Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), to television without difficulty. In 1957, Daniell appeared as King Charles II of England in the NBC anthology series The Joseph Cotten Show in the episode "The Trial of Colonel Blood", with Michael Wilding in the title role. In the same year he played the instructing solicitor to Charles Laughton's leading counsel barrister in Witness for the Prosecution (1957).
The actor claimed one of his favourite roles was as Tony Curtis' supervisor in the acclaimed Blake Edwards film Mister Cory (1957) at a time when the actor's career was clearly slowing down, but Daniell retained some of the best and most memorable lines in the movie, "A gentleman never grabs. Manners, Mister Cory. I find them a prerequisite in any circumstance."
Morton W. Snipple
Minister
Colonel Chart
Henry Brocklehurst
Lerocle
Colonel Ingram
Mayhew
Gireaux
Ambassador (uncredited)
Mr. Earnshaw
Dirk Van Prinn
Pierre Radin
Squire Moloch
Count Alexander Cagliostro
Vicar John Weatherford
Stipe
Sidney Kidd
Gondi
Seton Cram
Bill Ogden
Court-martial Judge (uncredited)
Capt. Edgar Stafford
La Motte
Theodorus van Gogh
Mr. Simmons
Doctor
Baron de Varville
Professor James Moriarty
Phili Von Ramme
William Easter
Baron Von Stetten
Dr. Wolfe 'Toddy' MacFarlane
Dr. Zucco
Franz Liszt
Shelley Mason
Jacques Desaix
Garbitsch (archive footage) (uncredited)
Emile Fleuron
Graham
Sheik Ageiba
Judge
Lord Belmont
Public Prosecutor
The Regent - William of Pembroke
Hugh Lewis
Clement
Lord Wolfingham
Ramadi
Sir Anthony Lloyd
Morgana
Minister von Ribbentrop
Capt. Duval
Frederick Seamon
Sir Ronald Dawson
Watson King
Broussais
Dr. Emil Zurich
King Maximillian
Count von Rimpau (as Henry Daniel)
Professor Marvin Griswald
Garbitsch
Jarden
Bobo
Blades
Stranger
Mekere
Norman Warriner
Dr. Jonas
Pierre Radin
Edward Moulton-Barrett
Julian Davis
Mr. Manningham
Count Maverin
Sir Robert Cecil
Pierre Cauchon - Bishop of Beauvais
King William III
General Savary
Maj. Edward Chevenish
Hubbel
John Wales