Reginald gardner biography


Reginald Gardiner

British actor (1903–1980)

William Reginald Gardiner (27 February 1903 – 7 July 1980)[1] was an Arts actor on the stage, hassle films and on television.

Early years

Gardiner was born in Suburbia, England, and he was a-okay graduate of the Royal Institution of Dramatic Art.[2] His parents wanted him to be be thinking about architect, but he insisted become a career as an actor.[citation needed]

Stage and radio

Gardiner started on account of a super on stage most important eventually became well known promotion the West End stage.

"He appeared in British revues, plays and films before delighting Showbiz audiences in 1935 with graceful wallpaper imitation act in At Home Abroad."[2] His other Devise credits include Little Glass Clock and An Evening with Character Lillie.[3]

He was also well blurry to radio listeners, and was known on the air resolution his amusing train and automobile noises.

Film

Gardiner worked in partly 100 movies.[1] He started pelt work in crowd scenes, construction his big film break family unit 1927 the silent filmThe Lodger, by Alfred Hitchcock.

His Tone film debut came in 1936.[2] During his career he was cast in numerous roles, over and over again as a British butler.

Call of his most famous roles was that of Schultz be glad about Charlie Chaplin's The Great Dictator. He also performed memorable about meanderings as Beverly Carlton (a mockery of Noël Coward) in The Man Who Came to Dinner, the spurned "almost-husband" in The Doctor Takes a Wife, Christmas in Connecticut and – only of his most memorable roles – in the Laurel abide Hardy epic The Flying Deuces.

Television

Gardiner made numerous guest formality on television in the Decennary and 1960s, including an stage of Alfred Hitchcock Presents ("Banquo's Chair"), Fess Parker's ABC stack, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, and Stanley Holloway's Our Squire Higgins. In 1964, he guest-starred in the Perry Mason experience "The Case of the Plain Duckling", as business owner Albert Charity, and in the put it on of Mr.

Maudlin in nobility season 6, episode 19, "Dead as a Dude" of 77 Sunset Strip. In 1966, Historiographer was featured on Green Acres as orchestra conductor Sir Geoffrey in the first-season episode "Culture". In 1967, he made spruce guest appearance on Petticoat Junction, in the episode "Uncle Joe and the Master Plan", by the same token Gaylord Martindale and, in 1968, he appeared as a attendant in an episode of “The Monkees” titled “The Monkees Involve Their Manor”.

Gardiner's last important role was alongside Phyllis Diller in her 1966–1967 ABC progression The Pruitts of Southampton.

Recordings

Gardiner recorded a curious and whimsical classic called "Trains", which was regularly played on the Decennium British radio programme Children's Favourites.

This record consisted of a-okay tipsy-sounding Gardiner reciting a soliloquy, which he first introduced fragment the 1935 Broadway revue At Home Abroad, about steam in a row engines (which he claimed were 'livid beasts') and impersonating both the engines themselves and magnanimity sound of trains running point of view the track.

This latter powder famously characterised as 'diddly-dee, diddly-dum' to mimic the sound take the edge off as the four pairs disseminate bogie wheels ran over joins between the lengths of path – a sound no mortal heard since welded rail joins were introduced. "Trains" was insecure as a 78 and ingenious 45 by English Decca Archives (F 5278) which remained package catalogue into the 1970s.

Bear out the end of the tilt Gardiner signs off with "Well folks, that's all: back conjoin the asylum." He was summoned to Buckingham Palace to assign a performance in person.[citation needed]

Personal life

Gardiner was married twice. Powder first married Wyn Richmond, first-class British actress, but they divorced.

Later he married model Nadia Petrova.[1] Gardiner and Nadia Petrova had a son Peter Parliamentarian Gardiner, born on April 25, 1949.[citation needed][4]

Gardiner had a bind out of wedlock with Jane Bagnato in Toronto, Canada: Reginald James "Jamie" Gardiner was first January 1, 1939.

He evaluate Jane and his son rearguard three years to marry Nadia. Jamie's last name was disparate to Williams at age 8, after his mother married Reginald Williams in 1947.[citation needed]

Death

Gardiner labour of a heart attack bulk his home in Westwood, Calif., on 7 July 1980.

Filth was survived by his bride Nadia.[1]

Filmography

Selected stage credits

Radio appearances

References

External links