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IMDbPro

Ernest Cossart(1876-1951)

  • Actor
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Ernest Cossart
Ernest Cossart came to Hollywood to play a succession of butlers, valets and man-servants with names like Binns, Jeepers or Brassett. In fact, if you saw Ange (1937) or Letter of Introduction (1938), you may have assumed that he simply stepped from one movie set to another. Always at home donning bat-wing collars, cut-away coats and striped trousers, portly, beetle-browed Ernest Cossart was America's notion of the perfect English 'gentleman's gentleman' (along with fellow émigrés Arthur Treacher, Barnett Parker, Eric Blore and Alan Mowbray, though perhaps a little less condescending).

With ancestors deriving from Scandinavia, Germany, Poland, Russia, and England, Ernest Cossart was born Emil Gottfried Adolph von Holst in Cheltenham, England, the son of a prominent musician. His brother Gustav Holst became a famous composer and music teacher. Emil adopted the stage name 'Ernest Cossart' after a brief spell as clerk for a wine merchant. He gave his first theatrical performance in 1896, then acted with provincial repertory companies before moving to the U.S. in 1908. His career on Broadway got off to a flying start with a leading role (as a colonel of Hussars) in the musical comedy "The Girls of Gottenberg". For the next twenty years (interrupted only by wartime service with the Canadian Army), his name remained high up in the list of credits.

Cossart's Hollywood career did not eventuate until 1935, when he was signed by Paramount. Except for occasional loan-outs, he remained with this, the most cosmopolitan of the studios, until 1945. Aside from butling, Cossart could also be relied upon to effectively impersonate Roman Catholic priests (Father McGee in Le roman d'Al Jolson (1946)), chimney sweeps (Tom Clink in La tour de Londres (1939), uttering the famous line "Better have a black face than be worried about black deeds") and waiters (Champagne valse (1937)). Easily one of his best roles was as the irascible, but kind-hearted Irish father of Ginger Rogers in Kitty Foyle (1940). Cossart retired from acting in 1949, having made his curtain call in the flop Broadway play "The Ivy Green". He died two years later in New York at the age of 74.
BornSeptember 24, 1876
DiedJanuary 21, 1951(74)
BornSeptember 24, 1876
DiedJanuary 21, 1951(74)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

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Known for

Freddie Bartholomew, Cedric Hardwicke, and Jimmy Lydon in Tom Brown étudiant (1940)
Tom Brown étudiant
6.6
  • Squire Brown
  • 1940
Deanna Durbin in Trois jeunes filles à la page (1936)
Trois jeunes filles à la page
6.5
  • Binns
  • 1936
Ginger Rogers and Dennis Morgan in Kitty Foyle (1940)
Kitty Foyle
6.9
  • Pop
  • 1940
Deanna Durbin in Les trois jeunes filles ont grandi (1939)
Les trois jeunes filles ont grandi
6.8
  • Binns the Butler
  • 1939

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actor



  • The Ford Theatre Hour (1948)
    The Ford Theatre Hour
    7.8
    TV Series
    • Inspector
    • Mr. Baxley
    • 1950
  • Ronald Reagan, Jack Carson, Edward Arnold, Virginia Field, Wayne Morris, and Patricia Neal in John Loves Mary (1949)
    John Loves Mary
    6.2
    • Oscar Dugan
    • 1949
  • Kraft Television Theatre (1947)
    The Philco Television Playhouse
    7.4
    TV Series
    • 1948
  • L'amour d'un inconnu (1947)
    L'amour d'un inconnu
    5.9
    • Billings
    • 1947
  • It's Your America
    6.1
    Short
    • English Pub Proprietor (uncredited)
    • 1946
  • Evelyn Keyes and Larry Parks in Le roman d'Al Jolson (1946)
    Le roman d'Al Jolson
    7.2
    • Father McGee
    • 1946
  • Charles Boyer and Jennifer Jones in La folle ingénue (1946)
    La folle ingénue
    7.4
    • Syrette
    • 1946
  • Vanessa Brown, Dorinda Clifton, Ruth Nelson, and Loren Tindall in The Girl of the Limberlost (1945)
    The Girl of the Limberlost
    6.2
    • Roger Henley
    • 1945
  • Joseph Cotten and Jennifer Jones in Le Poids d'un mensonge (1945)
    Le Poids d'un mensonge
    7.0
    • Bishop
    • 1945
  • Rita Hayworth, Janet Blair, and Lee Bowman in Cette nuit et toujours (1945)
    Cette nuit et toujours
    6.2
    • Sam Royce
    • 1945
  • Charles Coburn, Constance Dowling, and Nelson Eddy in Knickerbocker Holiday (1944)
    Knickerbocker Holiday
    5.3
    • Tienhoven
    • 1944
  • Claude Rains, Ronald Reagan, Robert Cummings, Betty Field, and Ann Sheridan in Crimes sans châtiment (1942)
    Crimes sans châtiment
    7.5
    • Pa Monaghan
    • 1942
  • Brian Aherne, Claudette Colbert, and Ray Milland in La Folle Alouette (1941)
    La Folle Alouette
    6.1
    • Theodore
    • 1941
  • Fredric March and Martha Scott in Au seuil du paradis (1941)
    Au seuil du paradis
    6.6
    • John E. Morris
    • 1941
  • Jack Benny and Kay Francis in Charley's Aunt (1941)
    Charley's Aunt
    6.8
    • Brasset
    • 1941

Personal details

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  • Height
    • 1.75 m
  • Born
    • September 24, 1876
    • Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, UK
  • Died
    • January 21, 1951
    • New York City, New York, USA(undisclosed)
  • Spouse
    • Maude Davies1906 - January 21, 1951 (his death, 1 child)
  • Children
    • Valerie Cossart
  • Relatives
    • Gustav Holst(Sibling)
  • Other works
    Active on Broadway in the following productions:
  • Publicity listings
    • 3 Articles

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    Brother of composer Gustav Holst, father of Valerie Cossart.

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