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Erik Rhodes

Biography

Erik Rhodes

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Overview

  • Born
    February 10, 1906 · El Reno, Indian Territory, USA [now Oklahoma, USA]
  • Died
    February 17, 1990 · Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA (pneumonia)
  • Birth name
    Ernest Rhodes Sharpe
  • Height
    1.78 m

Biography

    • With his slicked back hair and thin moustache Erik Rhodes arrived in Hollywood to recreate his stage role of Rudolfo Tonetti (which he had performed first on Broadway and then in London, 1932-1933) for the filming of La Joyeuse Divorcée (1934), starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. Contrary to his screen image, Erik was born in Oklahoma and graduated from the University of Oklahoma where he won a scholarship to study acting in New York. He made his theatrical debut, delivering eight lines, in the 1928 play 'A Most Immoral Lady', under his birth name Ernest (sometimes spelled Earnest) Sharpe. Because of his good baritone voice, he was next cast in two musicals. An expert mimicker of accents and dialects, he came to specialise in films as the perennial hyperactive continental charmer. In his second notable screen outing, Le Danseur du dessus (1935), he played flamboyant dressmaker Alberto Beddini, famously declaring to Ginger Rogers "All my life I have promised my dresses I'd take them to Italy...and you must be in them". There were other good parts, particularly in the comedy A Night at the Ritz (1935) as would-be master chef Leopold Jaynos. Andre Sennwald's review in The New York Times (May 16,1935) commented on Erik's performance "as the psychopath with a yearning for culinary immortality, he gives 'A Night at the Ritz' its air of polite lunacy and helps to wring laughter out of a featherweight enterprise".

      Erik Rhodes made films at RKO until 1937, more often than not as excitable Europeans (Henri Saffron in Madame poursuit Monsieur (1937), Frank Rochet in Collège rythme (1935), Tony Bandini in L'Avocat criminel (1937) and, not forgetting, Spaghetti Nadzio in Musique pour madame (1937)). By the end of the decade, his screen career had run its course. After his wartime service with U.S. Air Force Intelligence, he went back to Broadway for a lengthy spell in 'Can Can' as a Parisian bon vivant.
      - IMDb mini biography by: I.S.Mowis

Family

  • Spouse
      Emmala Reed (Dunbar) Langdoc LaBranche(April 1972 - February 19, 1984) (her death)

Trivia

  • During World War II he served as a captain in U.S. Air Force Intelligence, but despite his proficiency in European languages he was assigned to the Pacific Theater.
  • Majored in Modern Languages at Oklahoma University and was fluent in Italian, German, Spanish, and French.
  • Appeared in the Broadway version of The Gay Divorcee in 1932 prior to the movie version.
  • Died of pneumonia in Oklahoma City at age 84.
  • Stage actor best remembered in films as the mustachioed, feather- brained, continental type in two Astaire-Rogers mistaken-identity romps: La Joyeuse Divorcée (1934) and Le Danseur du dessus (1935).

Quotes

  • [In a 1987 interview in retirement in Oklahoma City) I am completely alone, but very comfortably so.

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