Henry Wilcoxon

Henry Wilcoxon

Infobox actor
bgcolour = silver
name = Henry Wilcoxon


imagesize =
caption = as the Vicar in 'The Miniver Story'
birthname = Harry Frederick Wilcoxon
othername =
birthdate = 8 September, 1905
location = Dominica, British West Indies
deathdate = 6 March, 1984
deathplace = Los Angeles, California, USA (heart failure; cancer)
spouse = Sheila Browning (1936-) (divorced)
Joan Woodbury (17 December 1938 - ?) (divorced) 3 children
academyawards = Best Picture
1952 "The Greatest Show on Earth" (Producer)
emmyawards =
goldenglobeawards =
tonyawards =

Harry "Henry" Frederick Wilcoxon (September 8, 1905 – March 6, 1984) was an actor born in Dominica, British West Indies, and best known as a leading man in many of Cecil B. DeMille's films, also serving as DeMille's associate producer on his later films.

Biography

Henry Wilcoxon was born on September 8, 1905 in Roseau, the capital city of Dominica. His father was Robert Stanley Wilcoxon and his mother Lurline (or Lurleene) Minuette Nunes, who had been a theatre actress and producer."Daynard, Don "Henry Wilcoxon" in Peter Harris (ed.) "The New Captain George's Whizzbang" #13 (1971), pp. 2-7] [http://www.demercado.com/ansell.htm "The deMercado Family Website" "Monthly Comments: Jamaica" Vol. 6 - 'Memories and Reflections,' by Ansell Hart] . Accessed August 7, 2008] [ [http://boards.ancestry.com.au/localities.caribbean.general/657/mb.ashx "BMD records"] . Accessed August 7, 2008] Wilcoxon's father, known as "Tan" Wilcoxon, was a wealthy banker who worked at the Colonial Bank.

Childhood

Following is a summary of the early childhood of Henry and his brother, from his autobiography. [Henry Wilcoxon and Katherine Orrison "Lionheart in Hollywood", 1991] Henry was about eleven months old when his mother Lurleene died suddenly (and, to the children, mysteriously). Tan immediately sent his children off to England in spite of his own mother's refusal to take care of them owing to poor health. Henry was still in diapers and his brother Robert Owen Wilcoxon (known as Owen) was nearly four when their grandmother met them.

Tan advertised for a foster home, and the brothers were sent to the first family that responded. There Henry and Owen were locked in an attic room and fed leftovers while the money and clothing that came with them went to the family's own children. Henry and Owen were kept in appalling conditions, both afflicted with lice, Henry crippled with rickets and Owen developed a lifelong stutter and epileptic fits. Even when the abuse was discovered, neither father nor grandmother wanted to take them back; instead the boys were sent to an orphanage and might have remained there if a good foster home not heard of their plight and considered taking them in. The Stewart family, with a large house in Acton, London (consisting mainly of maiden sisters) accepted the abandoned children. The youngest, Ruth, took special care of Owen. Henry had atrocious behavior but was taken in hand by older sister Sally. The boys had to call each sister “Auntie”, were taught table manners, sent to Sunday School, tutored in school work and Henry's legs fitted with braces. Several years Tan Wilcoxon appeared from the West Indies with a new wife Rosamund and it was decided to unite Henry and Owen with their father and new “mother”. Henry was seven and Owen almost ten. Tan took them back to Bridgetown, Barbados. Life with father and "that woman Rosa" was unhappy. Henry was sent to Harrison College, Barbados. At 14 Henry was the underwater swimming champion of Barbados, and good enough to become a salvage diver. Then he was sent to Woolmere College in Kingston, Jamaica. With the end of the war in 1918, Tan sent Henry to [http://www.ashfordschool.co.uk/ Ashford Boarding School] in Kent, and Owen to sea "to make a man of him". Henry remained at the school for all his High School years - even on summer holiday, excepting those times he was allowed to visit the Stewart “aunties” for a weekend.

Acting

After completing his education, Wilcoxon was employed by Joseph Rank, the father of J. Arthur Rank, before working for Bond Street tailors Pope and Bradshaw. While working for the tailors, Wilcoxon applied for a visa to work as a chauffeur in the United States, but upon seeing his application refused, turned to acting.

tage

Wilcoxon's first stage performance "was in the E. M. Dell play "The 100th Chance"," before he joined the Birmingham Repertory Theatre and toured "for several years" playing "all roles that came his way." Among these roles, he found critical success playing Captain Cook in a production of Rudolph Besier's "The Barretts of Wimpole Street" at the Queen's Theatre alongside Gwen Ffrangcon-Davies, Scott Sunderland and Cedric Hardwicke.

Early Screen work

In 1931, Wilcoxon made his screen debut appearing as "Larry Tindale" in "The Perfect Lady" (AKA "The Lovelorn Lady"), swiftly followed by a role opposite Heather Angel in "Self Made Lady", alongside Louis Hayward and others. In 1932, he appeared in a remake of the 1929 film "The Flying Squad" (based on the novel by Edgar Wallace), reprising the role originated by future-Hitchcock regular John Longden.

Also in 1932, "while acting on stage in "Eight Bells", a talent scout for Paramount Pictures reportedly arranged a screen test which came to the attention of producer-director Cecil B. DeMille in Hollywood." DeMille recalls in his autobiography:cquote|"One of my longest and closest professional and personal associations began because I was impatient about waiting my turn for the use of a projection room at the studio, while I was casting "Cleopatra". I had already engaged Claudette Colbert for the title role, but had not yet found a satisfactory Marc Antony to play opposite her.

"However, I did have some film footage of horses that I wanted to see, for possible use in the picture. I took it to the projection room, but found the room in use... While waiting in the booth, I heard, come from the soundtrack of the test film [being shown] , a resonant, manly voice, with only a pleasant trace of an English accent... I asked who the young actor was.

"'Oh,' I was told, 'he's a young Englishman that Paramount signed from the London stage. Name of Harry Wilcoxon, but the executives don't think Harry is dignified enough, so we're changing his name to Henry Wilcoxon.'

"'Harry or Henry,' I said, 'he is Marc Antony.'" [Cecille B. DeMille quoted by Daynard, Don "Henry Wilcoxon" in Peter Harris (ed.) "The New Captain George's Whizzbang" #13 (1971), pp. 2-7]

Wilcoxon was next given the lead role of Richard the Lion-Hearted in DeMille's big-budget film "The Crusades" (1935) opposite Loretta Young. That film, however, was a financial failure, "losing more than $700,000". After the lack of success of "The Crusades", Wilcoxon's career stalled; although he featured -- and starred -- in a number of films, most were "minor B's like "The President's Mystery" and "Prison Nurse" for [Republic Pictures|Republic [Pictures] ." Wilcoxon himself deemd "his worst acting job [to be] in "Mysterious Mr. Moto" (1938), in which year he also featured in "Five of a Kind" with the Dionne quintuplets.

The War Years

In 1936, Wilcoxon married Sheila Browning but divorced her not long after. On December 17, 1938 he married Joan Woodbury an actress, who, according to film critic Don Daynard, "continued her career but never graduated from the minors," featuring in such films as "Barnyard Follies", "In Old Cheyenne" and "Brenda Starr, Reporter". [Daynard describes "Brenda Starr, Reporter" as "one of the most inept serials ever released."]

In 1941, Wilcoxon appeared as Captain Hardy alongside Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh in Alexander Korda's "Lady Hamilton" (AKA "That Hamilton Woman"), during the filming of which::"a wad of flame fell from a torch directly on Olivier's head setting his wig afire. Wilcoxon, standing right beside him, tried to extinguish the blaze but was unsuccessful. Finally he had to wrench the wig from Olivier's head but he had both hands badly burned while Olivier had his eyebrows scorched." When America entered the war in December, 1941, Wilcoxon enlisted in the US Coast Guard, supposedly "le [aving] his hme twenty minutes after the announcement that the States had declared war and proceed [ing] to enlist then and there." He served with the Coast Guard until 1946, gaining the rank of Lieutenant.

During his period of service, he had three films released in 1942, among them "Mrs. Miniver", [His role in "Mrs. Miniver" must have had special meaning to Henry because his only brother, Sub-Lieut. Robert Owen Wilcoxon of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve, had been killed by a German bomb when assisting in the Dunkirk evacuation on May 29th 1940.] which received considerable public acclaim, as well as six Academy Awards. Wilcoxon, in his role as the Vicar, "wrote and re-wrote" the key sermon with director William Wyler "the night before the sequence was to be shot." The speech "made such an impact that it was used in essence by President Roosevelt as a morale builder and part of it was the basis for leaflets printed in various languages and dropped over enemy and occupied territory."

Upon his return from war service, Wilcoxon "picked up his relationship with Cecil B. DeMille," and after starring as Sir Lancelot in the 1949 musical version of Mark Twain's "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" (with Bing Crosby in the title role), he featured (with "fifth starring billing") in DeMille's "Samson and Delilah" (1949). To help pre-sell the film, "DeMille arranged for Wilcoxon to tour the country giving a series of lectures on the film and its research in 41 key cities in the United States and Canada." However, "after the fourteenth city," Wilcoxon collapsed "from a mild bout of pneumonia," and the tour was continued by "press-agent Richard Condon and Ringling Brothers public relations man Frank Braden" (who also collapsed, in Minneapolis). Condon finished touring by the time of the films release in October, 1949. Wilcoxon, meanwhile, had returned to England under contract to feature in "The Miniver Story" (1950), a sequel to the multi-Oscar-winning "Mrs. Miniver" (1942) in which he reprised his role as the Vicar.

Later life as producer and bit-part TV actor

In the early 1950s, "several young actors and actresses came to Wilcoxon and wife Joan Woodbury and asked them to form a play-reading group," which began to take shape as 'the Wilcoxon Players' in 1951, when the two "transformed their living room into a stage." 'Guest star' performers sometimes appeared in the plays produced by the group, among them Larry Parks and Corinne Calvet, and soon the "Wilcoxon Group Players Annual Nativity Play" was being performed "at the Miles Playhouse in Santa Monica." The group was recognized by the American Cancer Society in 1956 with a Citation of Merit, awarded for donations received by attendees of the groups Easter productions.

Wilcoxon played a "small but important part" in DeMille's 1952 production "The Greatest Show on Earth", on which film he also served as Assistant Producer, helping steer the film towards it's Academy Award for Best Picture, 1952. He also acted as associate producer on, and acted (as the pharaoh's captain of the guards) in, DeMille's remake of his own "The Ten Commandments" (1956). Wilcoxon was sole producer on the 1958 film "The Buccaneer", a remake of DeMille's 1938 effort, which DeMille only "supervized" while Anthony Quinn directed.

After DeMille died, Wilcoxon did "considerable work... in pre-production" on "a film based on the life of Lord Baden-Powell, founder of the Boy Scout movement," which DeMille had left unrealized, and was also ultimately abandoned. After a relatively inactive period "for the next nine years," Wilcoxon had a "chance meeting with actor Charlton Heston and director Franklin Schaffner at Universal studios," a meeting which saw him appear in "The War Lord" (1965), for which he again "went on tour... visiting 21 cities to publicize the picture."

He was credited as co-producer on a "90-minute tribute to Cecille B. DeMille televised by NBC" entitled "The World's Greatest Showman: The Legend of Cecil B. DeMille" (1963), which production was hampered by the absence of "some of DeMille's best-remembered films of the 30s and 40s" when rights-holder MCA refused their use. At the opening of the DeMille Theatre in New York, he produced a "two-reel short," that in the estimation of critic Don Miller "was much better than this 90-minute tribute." [Don Miller quoted in Daynard, Don "Henry Wilcoxon" in Peter Harris (ed.) "The New Captain George's Whizzbang" #13 (1971), pp. 2-7]

In the last two decades of his life, he worked sporadically and accepted minor acting roles in a number of television and film productions. He appeared in shows including "Daniel Boone", "Perry Mason", "I Spy", "It Takes a Thief", "Wild Wild West" and "Gunsmoke" as well as in a smaller number of films, including a memorable turn as the golfer-turned-atheist Bishop Pickering in the 1980 comedy classic "Caddyshack".

Other interests

Wilcoxon was an amateur painter, whose work was exhibited on at least one occasion in London. He was also "an avid antique collector and accomplished flier." With his wife Joan, he had three daughters: Wendy Joan, Heather Ann and Cecilia Dawn. He died in Los Angeles in March, 1984.

Partial filmography

*"Cleopatra" (1934)
*"The Crusades" (1935)
*"The Last of the Mohicans" (1936)
*"Souls at Sea" (1937)
*"If I Were King" (1938)
*"Mysterious Mr. Moto" (1938)
*"Tarzan Finds a Son!" (1939)
*"That Hamilton Woman" (1941)
*"Scotland Yard" (1941)
*"The Corsican Brothers" (1941)
*"Mrs. Miniver" (1942)
*"Unconquered" (1947)
*"A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" (1949)
*"Samson and Delilah" (1949)
*"The Miniver Story" (1950)
*"The Greatest Show on Earth" (1952)
*"Scaramouche" (1952)
*"The Ten Commandments" (1956)
*"The War Lord" (1965)
*"The Private Navy of Sgt. O'Farrell" (1968)
*"Man in the Wilderness" (1971)
*"Against a Crooked Sky" (1975)
*"Caddyshack" (1980)

References

Memoir

*cite book | author=Wilcoxon, Henry and Orrison, Katherine | title=Lionheart in Hollywood | location=New York | publisher=Scarecrow Press | year=1991 | id=ISBN 0-8108-2476-0

External links

*imdb name|id=0928295|name=Henry Wilcoxon
*tcmdb name|id=206030|name=Henry Wilcoxon

Persondata
NAME= Wilcoxon, Henry
ALTERNATIVE NAMES= Wilcoxon, Harry Frederick
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Actor
DATE OF BIRTH= 8 September, 1905
PLACE OF BIRTH= Dominica, British West Indies
DATE OF DEATH= 6 March, 1984
PLACE OF DEATH= Los Angeles, California, USA (heart failure; cancer) =


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