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IMDbPro

Douglas Walton(1910-1961)

  • Actor
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Douglas Walton
Trailer for this suspense film
Play trailer2:12
Adieu ma belle (1944)
3 Videos
51 Photos
Born in Ontario, Canada, Douglas, like other Canadian actors before and since, made his way to Chicago, then New York. Being of slight frame with a boyish face with a tuft of blond hair completing that latter effect, Walton looked the part of ineffectual, effeminate, snobbish sophisticates, whining cowards, and other assorted types which were in demand during Hollywood's heyday of 1930s and 1940s film-noir. Not interested in the stage, Douglas made his way to Hollywood, where casting directors were availing themselves of his type. From mere small character roles, he began to receive lines to speak--to accent the parts. Walton's soft tenor voice lent well to the 'weakling' roles, but he could talk in a deeper voice for dramatic moments, an early example being his young Albert de Mondego in Le comte de Monte Cristo (1934), in which he registers a fine dramatic range. A year later, another opportunity presented itself. One of the real gems in La Fiancée de Frankenstein (1935) is the opening scene with Elsa Lanchester as Mary Shelley with Walton as husband Percy and American character actor Gavin Gordon as Lord Byron. In one of the old Universal sound stages with a huge fireplace and an even huger picture window looking out on a stormy night, the histrionics of these three make the film, if nothing else did--but as a sequel, 'Bride' lends enough to campiness to make it work wonderfully. Walton continued his run of high-profile film outings later that year with the much-anticipated Les révoltés du Bounty (1935) starring Clark Gable. As jealous, priggish midshipman Stewart, he lends the right characterization to make the part his own. Walton's best role of the period was probably Lord Darnley in Marie Stuart (1936), in which he gives an over-the-top, playing-to-the-hilt rendition of the effeminate noble weakling who by default weds Katharine Hepburn as the vivacious Mary Stuart. Director John Ford was noted for pushing his actors, and he must have been satisfied with Walton and his impressive registering everything in the human emotional range from Darnley's fawning and jealous snits to the fear and terror of his impending doom. Into the late '30s the parts were more conventional secondary characters.

By 1939, halfway through his career of almost 60 films, he decided to take his first (and only) Broadway role, in the original comedy "Billy Draws a Horse". Unfortunately, the play folded after only a week and a half in late December. Ford called on him again for two films: his western remake of La patrouille perdue (1934), Bad Lands (1939); and his reading of Eugene O'Neill's Les Hommes de la mer (1940).

There were other high-profile films into the 1940s, including Le grand passage (1940) and Le Portrait de Dorian Gray (1945), but by the late decade, he was simply credited as 'Fop' in the epic flop Ambre (1947) or, as in the remainder of his films, given no credit at all.

Walton left film after 1950 and passed away form a heart attack a decade later at only 51.
BornOctober 16, 1910
DiedNovember 15, 1961(51)
BornOctober 16, 1910
DiedNovember 15, 1961(51)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

Photos51

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Known for

Boris Karloff and Elsa Lanchester in La Fiancée de Frankenstein (1935)
La Fiancée de Frankenstein
7.8
  • Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • 1935
Dick Powell and Claire Trevor in Adieu ma belle (1944)
Adieu ma belle
7.5
  • Lindsay Marriott
  • 1944
Le comte de Monte Cristo (1934)
Le comte de Monte Cristo
7.4
  • Albert Mondego
  • 1934
Clark Gable and Mamo Clark in Les révoltés du Bounty (1935)
Les révoltés du Bounty
7.6
  • Stewart
  • 1935

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actor



  • Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi, and Rod Serling in Suspense (1949)
    Suspense
    7.3
    TV Series
    • 1954
  • Claudette Colbert in Captives à Bornéo (1950)
    Captives à Bornéo
    7.3
    • Australian POW (uncredited)
    • 1950
  • Yvonne De Carlo and Howard Duff in La Fille des prairies (1949)
    La Fille des prairies
    5.9
    • Bookmaker (uncredited)
    • 1949
  • Vanessa Brown and Richard Ney in The Secret of St. Ives (1949)
    The Secret of St. Ives
    5.6
    • Allan St. Ives
    • 1949
  • Peggy Knudsen, Lynne Roberts, and Charles Russell in Trouble Preferred (1948)
    Trouble Preferred
    7.4
    • Slippy Patterson - Pickpocket (uncredited)
    • 1948
  • Clark Gable, Charles Bickford, Brian Donlevy, Van Johnson, and Walter Pidgeon in Tragique décision (1948)
    Tragique décision
    7.3
    • Englishman on Loudspeaker (voice, uncredited)
    • 1948
  • Janet Leigh, Tom Drake, Edmund Gwenn, and Pal in Hills of Home (1948)
    Hills of Home
    6.6
    • Minister (uncredited)
    • 1948
  • Ambre (1947)
    Ambre
    6.5
    • Fop (uncredited)
    • 1947
  • Le pays du dauphin vert (1947)
    Le pays du dauphin vert
    6.8
    • Sir Charles Maloney (uncredited)
    • 1947
  • Julie Bishop, Don Castle, and Lee Tracy in High Tide (1947)
    High Tide
    6.5
    • Clinton Vaughn
    • 1947
  • Warren Douglas, Anna Lee, and Gilbert Roland in Haute lutte (1947)
    Haute lutte
    7.3
    • Hugo Bunning as a Young man
    • 1947
  • Morgan Conway, Anne Jeffreys, and Dick Wessel in Dick Tracy contre Cueball (1946)
    Dick Tracy contre Cueball
    5.9
    • Percival Priceless
    • 1946
  • Gary Cooper and Lilli Palmer in Cape et poignard (1946)
    Cape et poignard
    6.6
    • British Pilot (uncredited)
    • 1946
  • Brian Donlevy, James Brown, Bill Edwards, Diana Lynn, and Gail Russell in Our Hearts Were Growing Up (1946)
    Our Hearts Were Growing Up
    6.7
    • Terence Marlowe (uncredited)
    • 1946
  • Ray Milland, Paulette Goddard, and Patric Knowles in Kitty ou la duchesse des bas-fonds (1945)
    Kitty ou la duchesse des bas-fonds
    6.9
    • Philip (uncredited)
    • 1945

Videos3

Trailer
Trailer 2:22
Trailer
Trailer
Trailer 3:32
Trailer
Trailer
Trailer 3:32
Trailer
Murder, My Sweet
Trailer 2:12
Murder, My Sweet

Personal details

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  • Height
    • 1.82 m
  • Born
    • October 16, 1910
    • Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • Died
    • November 15, 1961
    • New York City, New York, USA(heart attack)
  • Spouses
      Huguette Suzanne Marie Philomene BoudetJune 9, 1950 - November 15, 1961 (his death)
  • Publicity listings
    • 1 Pictorial

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    Turned to painting using his real name, J. Douglas Duder.

FAQ

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  • When did Douglas Walton die?
    November 15, 1961
  • How did Douglas Walton die?
    Heart attack
  • How old was Douglas Walton when he died?
    51 years old
  • Where did Douglas Walton die?
    New York City, New York, USA
  • When was Douglas Walton born?
    October 16, 1910

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