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Charles Boyer

Charles Boyer (French: [ʃaʁl bwaje]; 28 August 1899 – 26 August 1978) was a French-American actor who appeared in more than 80 films between 1920 and 1976.[1] After receiving an education in drama, Boyer started on the stage, but he found his success in American films during the 1930s. His memorable performances were among the era's most highly praised, in romantic dramas such as The Garden of Allah (1936), Algiers (1938), and Love Affair (1939), as well as the mystery-thriller Gaslight (1944). He received four Oscar nominations for Best Actor. He also appeared as himself on the CBS sitcom I Love Lucy.

Charles Boyer
Boyer in 1942
Born(1899-08-28)28 August 1899
Figeac, France
Died26 August 1978(1978-08-26) (aged 78)
Burial placeHoly Cross Cemetery, Culver City, California, U.S.
OccupationActor
Years active1920–1976
Spouse
(m. 1934; died 1978)
Children1
AwardsAcademy Honorary Award (1943)

Life and career edit

Early years edit

Boyer was born in Figeac, Lot, France, the son of Augustine Louise Durand and Maurice Boyer, a merchant.[2] Boyer (whose surname comes from boièr, the Occitan word for "cowherd") was a shy small-town boy who discovered the movies and theatre at the age of eleven.

Early acting career edit

Boyer performed comic sketches for soldiers while working as a hospital orderly during World War I.[3] He began studies briefly at the Sorbonne, and was waiting for a chance to study acting at the Paris Conservatory.[4]

He went to the capital city to finish his education, but spent most of his time pursuing a theatrical career. In 1920, his quick memory won him a chance to replace the leading man in a stage production, Aux jardins de Murcie. He was successful. Then he appeared in a play La Bataille and Boyer became a theatre star overnight.[3][5][6]

In the 1920s, he played charming and charismatic characters on both stage and in silent films.[7]

Early French films edit

Boyer's first film was L'homme du large (1920), directed by Marcel L'Herbier. He had roles in Chantelouve (1921), Le grillon du foyer (1922), and Esclave (1922).[7]

At first, he performed film roles only for the money and found that supporting roles were unsatisfying. However, with the coming of sound, his deep voice made him a romantic star.[3]

Boyer focused on theatre work for a number of years. He returned to the screen with Infernal Circle (1928), Captain Fracasse (1929), and La barcarolle d'amour (1930).

Early trips to Hollywood edit

Boyer was first brought to Hollywood by MGM who wanted him to play the Chester Morris part in a French version of The Big House (1930), Révolte dans la prison (1931).

Boyer had an offer from Paramount to appear in a small role in The Magnificent Lie (1931) with Ruth Chatterton, directed by Berthold Viertel. It was his first English speaking role.[7]

He went back to MGM to make Le procès de Mary Dugan (1931), the French version of The Trial of Mary Dugan (1929). He did Tumultes (1932) for director Robert Siodmak.

Then he did the English-language The Man from Yesterday (1932) with Claudette Colbert at Paramount again directed by Viertel. He had a choice small role in Jean Harlow's Red-Headed Woman (1932) at MGM.[8]

Return to France edit

 
Boyer and Annabella in La bataille (1933)

Boyer went back to France where he starred in F.P.1 Doesn't Answer (1932), Moi et l'impératrice (1933), Les Amoureux (1933) (The Sparrowhawk), and La bataille (1933) with Annabella. The last was also filmed in an English-language version called The Battle, with Merle Oberon replacing Annabella and Boyer reprising his role.

He did The Only Girl (1933) with Lilian Harvey and performed on the Paris stage in Le Bonheur which was another success. It would be the last time he appeared on the Parisian stage.[6]

He returned to Hollywood for Caravan (1934) with Loretta Young at Fox. He was also in the French-language version Caravane, again with Annabella.[9]

Then in France he starred in Liliom (1934), directed by Fritz Lang, his first classic.[10]

Boyer starred in some English language movies: Thunder in the East (1934).

In France he was in Le bonheur (1934), reprising his stage performance for director Marcel L'Herbier.

Walter Wanger edit

 
With Sigrid Gurie and Hedy Lamarr in Algiers (1938)
 
Boyer in Love Affair (1939)
 
With Irene Dunne in Love Affair (1939)

Boyer co-starred with Claudette Colbert in the psychiatric drama Private Worlds (1935) for Walter Wanger at Paramount. He signed a five-year contract with Wanger.[11]

Then he romanced Katharine Hepburn in Break of Hearts (1935) for RKO, and Loretta Young in Shanghai (1935) for Wanger.

Boyer became an international star with Mayerling (1936), co-starring Danielle Darrieux and directed by Anatole Litvak. Boyer played Rudolf, Crown Prince of Austria.

Back in Hollywood he was teamed with Marlene Dietrich in The Garden of Allah (1936) for David O. Selznick. He and Dietrich were reunited on I Loved a Soldier (1936) for director Henry Hathaway at Paramount but the film was abandoned.

Boyer paired with Jean Arthur in History Is Made at Night (1937) for Wanger, and Greta Garbo in Conquest (1937) at MGM (where he played Napoleon Bonaparte). Boyer's fee for the latter was $150,000 but with all the re-takes he wound up earning $450,000.

Boyer returned to France briefly to make Orage (1938), opposite Michèle Morgan for director Marc Allégret.[3]

Back in Hollywood he had the lead in Tovarich (1937) with Claudette Colbert, directed by Litvak.

In 1938, he landed his famous role as Pepe le Moko, the thief on the run in Algiers, an English-language remake of the classic French film Pepe le Moko with Jean Gabin, produced by Wanger. Although in the movie Boyer never said to costar Hedy Lamarr "Come with me to the Casbah," this line was in the movie trailer. The line would stick with him, thanks to generations of impressionists and Looney Tunes parodies.[3][12] Boyer's role as Pepe Le Moko was already world-famous when animator Chuck Jones based the character of Pepé Le Pew, the romantic skunk introduced in 1945, on Boyer and his best-known performance.[13] Boyer's vocal style was also parodied on the Tom and Jerry cartoons, most notably when Tom was trying to woo a female cat. (See The Zoot Cat).

Boyer made three films with Irene Dunne: Love Affair (1939) at RKO, When Tomorrow Comes (1939) at Universal and Together Again (1944) at Columbia.[14][15]

World War II edit

 
Ingrid Bergman, Angela Lansbury and Boyer in Gaslight (1944)

He went back to France to make Le corsaire (1939) for Marc Allégret. He was making the movie in Nice when France declared war on Germany in September 1939. Production ceased on the declaration of war. Boyer joined the French army.[16] The film was never completed, although some footage of it was later released.[17][18]

By November, Boyer was discharged from the army and back in Hollywood as the French government thought he would be of more service making films.[19]

Boyer played in three classic film love stories: All This, and Heaven Too (1940) with Bette Davis, directed by Litvak at Warners; as the ruthless cad in Back Street (1941) with Margaret Sullavan, at Universal; and Hold Back the Dawn (1941) with Olivia de Havilland and Paulette Goddard, at Paramount.[20]

In contrast to his glamorous image, Boyer began losing his hair early, had a pronounced paunch, and was noticeably shorter than leading ladies like Ingrid Bergman. When Bette Davis first saw him on the set of All This, and Heaven Too, she did not recognize him and tried to have him removed.[13]

Universal edit

 
Boyer and Irene Dunne in Together Again (1944)
 
Charles Boyer in 1955

In January 1942 Boyer signed a three-year contract with Universal to act and produce. The contract would cover nine films.[21]

Before he started the contract he finished a film at Warners, The Constant Nymph (1943) with Joan Fontaine.

Boyer was reunited with Sullavan in Appointment for Love (1942) at Universal and was one of many stars in Tales of Manhattan (1942), directed by Julien Duvivier and Immortal France (1942). He became a US citizen in 1942.[22]

He was one of many stars in Flesh and Fantasy (1943) which he also produced with Julien Duvivier at Universal. He was an uncredited producer on Duvivier's Destiny (1944).

In 1943, he was awarded an Honorary Oscar Certificate for "progressive cultural achievement" in establishing the French Research Foundation in Los Angeles as a source of reference (certificate).

Boyer had one of his biggest hits with Gaslight (1944) with Ingrid Bergman and Joseph Cotten. He followed it with Together Again (1944) re-uniting with Irene Dunne; Congo (1944), a short; and Confidential Agent (1945) with Lauren Bacall, at Warners.

Boyer began his post war career with Cluny Brown (1946) with Jennifer Jones directed by Ernst Lubitsch. He was Warners highest paid actor at this stage earning $205,000 in 1945.[23]

In 1947, he was the voice of Capt. Daniel Gregg in the Lux Radio Theater's presentation of The Ghost and Mrs. Muir,[24] played in the film by Rex Harrison. In 1948, he was made a chevalier of the French Légion d'honneur. That year he did a thriller A Woman's Vengeance (1948).

Another film he did with Bergman, Arch of Triumph (1948), failed at the box office and Boyer was no longer the box office star he had been. "If you are in a big flop, nobody wants you," he said later.[6]

Broadway edit

Boyer went to Broadway, where he made his first appearance in Red Gloves (1948–49), based on Dirty Hands by Jean-Paul Sartre,[25] which went for 113 performances.[26]

In 1951, he appeared on the Broadway stage in one of his most notable roles, that of Don Juan, in a dramatic reading of the third act of George Bernard Shaw's Man and Superman. This is the act popularly known as Don Juan in Hell. In 1952, he won Broadway's 1951 Special Tony Award for Don Juan in Hell. It was directed by actor Charles Laughton. Laughton co-starred as the Devil, with Cedric Hardwicke as the statue of the military commander slain by Don Juan, and Agnes Moorehead as Dona Anna, the commander's daughter, one of Juan's former conquests. The production was a critical success, and was subsequently recorded complete by Columbia Masterworks, one of the first complete recordings of a non-musical stage production ever made. As of 2006, however, it has never been released on CD, but in 2009 it became available as an MP3 download.[27]

Boyer did not abandon cinema: he had leading roles in The 13th Letter (1951), The First Legion (1952), and The Happy Time (1952). He had a character role in Thunder in the East (filmed 1951, released 1953) an Alan Ladd film.

Four Star Playhouse edit

 
Boyer in 1962

Boyer moved into television as one of the pioneering producers and stars of the anthology show Four Star Playhouse (1952–56). It was made by Four Star Productions which would make Boyer and partners David Niven and Dick Powell rich.[3][28]

Boyer returned to France to star in The Earrings of Madame de... (1953) for Max Ophüls alongside Darrieux. While there he was one of many names in Boum sur Paris (1953).[29]

He returned to Broadway for Norman Krasna's Kind Sir (1953–54) directed by Joshua Logan which ran for 166 performances. (In the film version, Indiscreet (1958), Cary Grant was cast in Boyer's role.)[30]

Back in Hollywood, Boyer had a support role in MGM's The Cobweb (1955).

He went back to France to star in Nana (1955) with Martine Carol and then to Italy for What a Woman! (1956) with Sophia Loren.

In 1956, Boyer was a guest star on I Love Lucy and had a cameo in Around the World in 80 Days (1956). In France he had the lead in Paris, Palace Hotel (1956).

He appeared as the mystery guest on the 10 March 1957 episode of What's My Line?[31]

On 17 March 1957, Boyer starred in an adaptation for TV of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play, There Shall Be No Night, by Robert E. Sherwood. The performance starred Katharine Cornell, and was broadcast on NBC as part of the Hallmark Hall of Fame.[32]

He appeared several times in Goodyear Theatre and Alcoa Theatre on TV.

In France, Boyer was one of several stars in It Happened on the 36 Candles (1957) and he co-starred with Brigitte Bardot in La Parisienne (1957) and Michele Morgan in Maxime (1958), the latter directed by Henri Verneuil.

In Hollywood Boyer had a strong supporting role as real life privateer Dominique You alongside Yul Brynner's Jean LaFitte in The Buccaneer (1958).

Boyer co-starred again with Claudette Colbert in the Broadway comedy The Marriage-Go-Round (1958–1960), but said to the producer, "Keep that woman away from me".[33] The production was a hit and ran for 431 performances. Boyer did not reprise his performance in the film version. He kept busy doing work for Four Star.[34]

1960s edit

 
Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6300 Hollywood Blvd.
 
The cast of The Rogues (1964) with Boyer, Gig Young, David Niven, Robert Coote and Gladys Cooper
 
With Elsa Martinelli in The Rogues (1964)

Onscreen, he continued in older roles: in Fanny (1961) starring Leslie Caron; Demons at Midnight (1961), in France, the lead; MGM's remake of The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1962); Adorable Julia (1962) with Lilli Palmer; several episodes of The Dick Powell Theatre; and Love Is a Ball (1963).

He was nominated for the Tony Award as Best Actor (Dramatic) in the 1963 Broadway production of Lord Pengo, which ran for 175 performances.[35]

Later that same year Boyer performed in Man and Boy on the London and New York stage. The Broadway run only went for 54 performances.[36]

Boyer was reunited with David Niven in The Rogues (1964–65), a television series also starring Gig Young. Niven, Boyer and Young revolved from week to week as the episode's leading man, sometimes appearing together, although most episodes wound up being helmed by Young since both Niven and Boyer had flourishing movie careers.

He had good support roles in A Very Special Favor (1965) with Rock Hudson; How to Steal a Million (1966) with Audrey Hepburn and Peter O'Toole; Barefoot in the Park (1967) with Robert Redford and Jane Fonda. He had cameos in Is Paris Burning? (1966) and Casino Royale (1967) and was top billed in The Day the Hot Line Got Hot (1968).[37]

His career had lasted longer than that of other romantic actors, winning him the nickname "the last of the cinema's great lovers."[20] He recorded a laid-back album called Where Does Love Go in 1966. The album consisted of famous love songs sung (or rather spoken) with Boyer's distinctive deep voice and French accent. The record was reportedly Elvis Presley's favorite album for the last 11 years of his life, the one he most listened to.[38]

Boyer supported in The April Fools (1969) and The Madwoman of Chaillot (1969) and guest starred on The Name of the Game.[6]

1970s edit

Boyer's son had died in 1965 and Boyer was finding it traumatic to continue living in Los Angeles so in March 1970 he decided to relocate to Europe.[6]

Boyer's final credits included the musical remake of Lost Horizon (1973) and the French film Stavisky (1974), starring Jean-Paul Belmondo, the latter winning him the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor,[3] and also received the Special Tribute at Cannes Film Festival.[39]

Boyer's final performance was in A Matter of Time (1976) with Liza Minnelli and Ingrid Bergman, directed by Vincente Minnelli.

Radio edit

Boyer was the star of Hollywood Playhouse on NBC in the 1930s, but he left in 1939 "for war service in France," returning on the 3 January 1940, broadcast.[40] When he went on vacation in the summer of 1940, an item in a trade publication reported: "It is an open secret that he doesn't like the present policy of a different story and characters each week. Boyer would prefer a program in which he could develop a permanent characterization."[41] Boyer would later star in his own radio show entitled "Presenting Charles Boyer" during 1950 over NBC.

Personal life edit

 
Boyer's wife Pat Paterson

Boyer became a naturalized citizen of the United States on June 15, 1942, in Los Angeles.[42]

In addition to French and English, Boyer spoke Italian, German, and Spanish.[4]

Boyer was the husband of British actress Pat Paterson, whom he met at a dinner party in 1934. The two became engaged after two weeks of courtship and were married three months later.[13] Later, they moved from Hollywood to Paradise Valley, Arizona.[43] The marriage lasted 44 years until her death.

Boyer's only child, Michael Charles Boyer (9 December 1943 – 23 September 1965),[44] died by suicide at age 21. He was playing Russian roulette after separating from his girlfriend.[45]

Suicide edit

On 26 August 1978, Boyer died by suicide with an overdose of Seconal while at a friend's home in Scottsdale, Arizona. He was taken to the hospital in Phoenix, Arizona, where he died,[43] two days after his wife's death from cancer, and two days before his own 79th birthday. He was interred in Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City, California, alongside his wife and son.

Awards edit

Boyer never won an Oscar, though he was nominated for Best Actor four times in Conquest (1937), Algiers (1938), Gaslight (1944) and Fanny (1961), the latter also winning him a nomination for the Laurel Awards for Top Male Dramatic Performance. He is particularly well known for Gaslight in which he played a thief/murderer who tries to convince his newlywed wife that she is going insane.

He was nominated for the Golden Globe as Best Actor for the 1952 film The Happy Time; and also nominated for the Emmy for Best Continuing Performance by an Actor in a Dramatic Series for his work in Four Star Playhouse (1952–1956).

In 1960, Boyer was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame with a motion pictures star and a television star. Both stars are located at 6300 Hollywood Boulevard.[46][47]

Filmography edit

Features edit

Year Title Role Notes
1920 L'Homme du large Guenn la Taupe – le mauvais génie de Michel
1921 Chantelouve Roger de Thièvres
1922 Le Grillon du foyer Edouard Caleb
Esclave Claude Laporte
1928 Infernal Circle
1929 Captain Fracasse Duc de Vallombreuse
1930 La Barcarolle d'amour Andre le Kerdec
Revolt in the Prison Fred Morgan
1931 The Magnificent Lie Jacques
Le Procès de Mary Dugan Le procureur
1932 Tumultes Ralph Schwarz
The Man from Yesterday Rene Gaudin
Red-Headed Woman Albert
1933 La Bataille Le marquis Yorisaka
The Only Girl The Duke
I.F.1 ne répond plus Ellisen
The Empress and I
L'Épervier Comte Georges de Dasetta
F.P.1 Doesn't Answer
1934 The Battle Marquis Yorisaka
Liliom Liliom Zadowski
Caravan Latzi
Le Bonheur Philippe Lutcher
1935 Private Worlds Dr. Charles Monet
Break of Hearts Franz Roberti
Shanghai Dimitri Koslov
1936 Mayerling L'archiduc Rodolphe
The Garden of Allah Boris Androvsky
I Loved a Soldier Leutnant Baron Almasy Unfinished film
1937 History Is Made at Night Paul Dumond
Conquest Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte
Tovarich Prince Mikail Alexandrovitch Ouratieff
1938 Orage André Pascaud
Algiers Pepe le Moko
1939 Love Affair Michel
When Tomorrow Comes Philip Chagal
Le Corsaire Unfinished film
1940 All This, and Heaven Too Duc de Praslin
1941 Back Street Walter Saxel
Hold Back the Dawn Georges Iscovescu
Appointment for Love Andre 'Pappy' Cassil
1942 Tales of Manhattan Paul Orman
1943 Flesh and Fantasy Paul Gaspar Episode 3
The Heart of a Nation Introductory Narrator US version only
The Constant Nymph Lewis Dodd
1944 Gaslight Gregory Anton
Together Again George Corday
The Fighting Lady Narrator French version only
1945 Confidential Agent Luis Denard
1946 The Battle of the Rails Narrator voice, uncredited
Cluny Brown Adam Belinski
1948 A Woman's Vengeance Henry Maurier
Arch of Triumph Dr. Ravic
1951 The 13th Letter Dr. Paul Laurent
The First Legion Father Marc Arnoux
1952 The Happy Time Jacques Bonnard
Thunder in the East Prime Minister Singh
1953 The Earrings of Madame de... Général André de...
Boum sur Paris Himself
1955 The Cobweb Dr. Douglas N. Devanal
Nana Comte Muffat
1956 Lucky to Be a Woman Count Gregorio Sennetti
Around the World in 80 Days Monsieur Gasse, balloonist
Paris, Palace Hotel Henri Delormel
1957 It Happened on the 36 Candles Himself Uncredited
La Parisienne Le prince Charles
1958 Maxime Maxime Cherpray
The Buccaneer Dominique You
1961 Fanny Cesar
1962 Midnight Folly [fr] Pierre
The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse Marcelo Desnoyers
Adorable Julia Michael Grosselyn
1963 Love Is a Ball M. Etienne Pimm
1965 A Very Special Favor Michel Boullard
1966 How to Steal a Million DeSolnay
Is Paris Burning? Docteur Monod
1967 Casino Royale Le Grand
Barefoot in the Park Victor Velasco
1968 Hot Line Vostov
1969 The April Fools Andre Greenlaw
The Madwoman of Chaillot The Broker
1973 Lost Horizon The High Lama
1974 Stavisky Le baron Jean Raoul
1976 A Matter of Time Count Sanziani Final film role

Short subjects edit

  • The Candid Camera Story (Very Candid) of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures 1937 Convention (1937) as himself (uncredited)
  • Hollywood Goes to Town (1938) as himself
  • Les îles de la liberté (1943) as narrator
  • Congo (1945) as voice
  • On Stage! (1949) as himself
  • 1955 Motion Picture Theatre Celebration (1955) as himself (uncredited)

Television edit

Broadway edit

Award nominations edit

Academy Awards edit

Year Category Film Result
1937 Best Actor Conquest Nominated
1938 Best Actor Algiers Nominated
1944 Best Actor Gaslight Nominated
1961 Best Actor Fanny Nominated

Golden Globe Awards edit

Year Category Film Result
1952 Best Actor – Drama The Happy Time Nominated

References edit

  1. ^ Obituary Variety, 30 August 1978.
  2. ^ John Arthur Garraty, Mark Christopher Carnes and American Council of Learned Societies (1999). American national biography. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-512782-9.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g TCM Film Guide, pf. 29.
  4. ^ a b Swindell, Larry (1983). Charles Boyer: The Reluctant Lover. Doubleday. ISBN 9780385170529.
  5. ^ "From obscurity to instant fame Charles Boyer memorized a play in a few hours and became a star" Swindell, Larry. The Globe and Mail; Toronto 8 Mar 1983: E.3.
  6. ^ a b c d e "Q&A: Charles Boyer" Diehl, Digby. Los Angeles Times 24 Sep 1972: n18.
  7. ^ a b c "Charles Boyer, Epitome of Suave Leading Man, Dies: Charles Boyer, Star for Decades, Dies" Incomplete Source Los Angeles Times 27 August 1978: a1.
  8. ^ "Charles Boyer – Biography". Classic Movie Favorites. Retrieved 24 September 2008.
  9. ^ "Straight From the Studios: Miriam Hopkins Slated to Become a Goldwyn Star; Charles Boyer Is Recalled to Hollywood; News Notes From Celluloid Capital". By Philip K. Scheuer The Washington Post 30 August 1934: 10.
  10. ^ "Charles Boyer". All-Movie Guide. Retrieved 21 June 2009.
  11. ^ "Charles Boyer, French Star" Los Angeles Times 5 May 1935: A1.
  12. ^ Boller, Paul F. Jr.; George, John (1989). They Never Said It: A Book of Fake Quotes, Misquotes, and Misleading Attributions. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-505541-1.
  13. ^ a b c TCM Film Guide, p. 31.
  14. ^ Vidor, Charles (22 December 1944), Together Again (Comedy, Romance), Columbia Pictures, retrieved 3 December 2022
  15. ^ Charles Boyer Refuses to Try To Fool Public: French Star Is Student of Acting, Who Believes in Unremitting Work Charles Boyer By Melrose GowerHollywood, 18 Feb.. The Washington Post (19 February 1939: T3.
  16. ^ Le Corsaire at Louis Jourdan website accessed 20 January 2014
  17. ^ Le Corsair at A Lost Film
  18. ^ "Charles Boyer Called for Service" Los Angeles Times 23 Sep 1939: 1.
  19. ^ "CASE OF CHARLES BOYER" New York Times 24 November 1939: 22.
  20. ^ a b . TCM Movie Database. Archived from the original on 18 April 2009. Retrieved 21 June 2009.
  21. ^ "SCREEN NEWS HERE AND IN HOLLYWOOD: Charles Boyer Signs a 3-Year Producer-Actor Contract With Universal" New York Times 22 Jan 1942: 13.
  22. ^ "Actor Charles Boyer Becomes U.S. Citizen" The Christian Science Monitor 14 February 1942: 8.
  23. ^ "Charles Boyer Highest Paid Warner Actor" Los Angeles Times 20 March 1946: 1.
  24. ^ "Lux Radio Theatre Log". Audio Classics Archive. Retrieved 19 May 2010.
  25. ^ "PREMIERE TONIGHT FOR 'RED GLOVES'; Charles Boyer Stars in Harris Production of Sartre Play, Opening at Mansfield". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  26. ^ "ALONG BROADWAY: Charles Boyer Will Make Stage Debut" Los Angeles Times 10 Oct 1948: D2.
  27. ^ "Don Juan in Hell by George Bernard Shaw". Amazon.com. Saland Publishing. 28 April 2009.
  28. ^ "Charles Boyer Joins New"] The Washington Post 31 Aug 1952: L4.
  29. ^ "Charles Boyer Sheds the Tag of 'Lover Boy'" Boyle, Hal. Chicago Daily Tribune 11 December 1955: f5.
  30. ^ "KIND SIR' ARRIVES AT ALVIN TONIGHT: Krasna Comedy to Star Mary Martin and Charles Boyer – Logan Is Sole Sponsor" By SAM ZOLOTOW. New York Times 4 November 1953: 28.
  31. ^ What's My Line? – James C. Hagerty; Charles Boyer; James Michener (panel) (Mar 10, 1957)
  32. ^ "HALLMARK HALL OF FAME: THERE SHALL BE NO NIGHT, ACT 1 (TV)". The Paley Center for Media. Retrieved 18 May 2010.
  33. ^ Dick, Bernard F. (2008). Claudette Colbert: She Walked in Beauty. University Press of Mississippi.
  34. ^ "Charles Boyer Finance Chief of Handsome Four Star Board" RICH DU BROW. Chicago Daily Tribune 10 April 1960: s_a4.
  35. ^ "Charles Boyer Shines in 'Lord Pengo' Comedy" Los Angeles Times 22 November 1962: B10.
  36. ^ . The Actors Company Theatre. Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 19 May 2010.
  37. ^ "Accent Is On—Guess Who?--Charles Boyer" Los Angeles Times 4 Feb 1962: A32.
  38. ^ . For Elvis Fans Only. EPE. Archived from the original on 28 August 2008. Retrieved 24 September 2008.
  39. ^ "Charles Boyer Awards". Hollywood.com. Retrieved 24 September 2008.
  40. ^ "Boyer Returns" (PDF). Broadcasting. 15 December 1939. p. 82. Retrieved 13 July 2015.[permanent dead link]
  41. ^ "Jergens Summer Plans" (PDF). Broadcast inf. 15 May 1940. p. 36. Retrieved 13 July 2015.[permanent dead link]
  42. ^ British Film Institute (1995). Ginette Vincendeau (ed.). Encyclopedia of European Cinema (Cassell FilmStudies). London: Continuum International Publishing Group (formerly Cassell Academic).
  43. ^ a b "Celebrity Sightings – B". Bankruptcy & Debt Information from Doney & Associates. Retrieved 24 September 2008.
  44. ^ . California Department of Health Services Office of Health Information and Research. Rootsweb. Archived from the original on 22 March 2016. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
  45. ^ Donnelley, Paul. Fade To Black: A Book of Movie Obituaries, 2nd Edition. London: Omnibus Press, 2005, First edition 2003. ISBN 978-1-84449-430-9.
  46. ^ "Hollywood Walk of Fame – Charles Boyer". walkoffame.com. Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved 29 November 2017. Only the motion pictures star is listed
  47. ^ "Hollywood Star Walk – Charles Boyer". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 29 November 2017. Both stars are listed

Bibliography edit

External links edit

charles, boyer, mathematician, charles, boyer, french, ʃaʁl, bwaje, august, 1899, august, 1978, french, american, actor, appeared, more, than, films, between, 1920, 1976, after, receiving, education, drama, boyer, started, stage, found, success, american, film. For the mathematician see Charles P Boyer Charles Boyer French ʃaʁl bwaje 28 August 1899 26 August 1978 was a French American actor who appeared in more than 80 films between 1920 and 1976 1 After receiving an education in drama Boyer started on the stage but he found his success in American films during the 1930s His memorable performances were among the era s most highly praised in romantic dramas such as The Garden of Allah 1936 Algiers 1938 and Love Affair 1939 as well as the mystery thriller Gaslight 1944 He received four Oscar nominations for Best Actor He also appeared as himself on the CBS sitcom I Love Lucy Charles BoyerBoyer in 1942Born 1899 08 28 28 August 1899Figeac FranceDied26 August 1978 1978 08 26 aged 78 Phoenix Arizona U S Burial placeHoly Cross Cemetery Culver City California U S OccupationActorYears active1920 1976SpousePat Paterson m 1934 died 1978 wbr Children1AwardsAcademy Honorary Award 1943 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early years 1 2 Early acting career 1 3 Early French films 1 4 Early trips to Hollywood 1 5 Return to France 1 6 Walter Wanger 1 7 World War II 1 8 Universal 1 9 Broadway 1 10 Four Star Playhouse 1 11 1960s 1 12 1970s 2 Radio 3 Personal life 4 Suicide 5 Awards 6 Filmography 6 1 Features 6 2 Short subjects 6 3 Television 7 Broadway 8 Award nominations 8 1 Academy Awards 8 2 Golden Globe Awards 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksLife and career editEarly years edit Boyer was born in Figeac Lot France the son of Augustine Louise Durand and Maurice Boyer a merchant 2 Boyer whose surname comes from boier the Occitan word for cowherd was a shy small town boy who discovered the movies and theatre at the age of eleven Early acting career edit Boyer performed comic sketches for soldiers while working as a hospital orderly during World War I 3 He began studies briefly at the Sorbonne and was waiting for a chance to study acting at the Paris Conservatory 4 He went to the capital city to finish his education but spent most of his time pursuing a theatrical career In 1920 his quick memory won him a chance to replace the leading man in a stage production Aux jardins de Murcie He was successful Then he appeared in a play La Bataille and Boyer became a theatre star overnight 3 5 6 In the 1920s he played charming and charismatic characters on both stage and in silent films 7 Early French films edit Boyer s first film was L homme du large 1920 directed by Marcel L Herbier He had roles in Chantelouve 1921 Le grillon du foyer 1922 and Esclave 1922 7 At first he performed film roles only for the money and found that supporting roles were unsatisfying However with the coming of sound his deep voice made him a romantic star 3 Boyer focused on theatre work for a number of years He returned to the screen with Infernal Circle 1928 Captain Fracasse 1929 and La barcarolle d amour 1930 Early trips to Hollywood edit Boyer was first brought to Hollywood by MGM who wanted him to play the Chester Morris part in a French version of The Big House 1930 Revolte dans la prison 1931 Boyer had an offer from Paramount to appear in a small role in The Magnificent Lie 1931 with Ruth Chatterton directed by Berthold Viertel It was his first English speaking role 7 He went back to MGM to make Le proces de Mary Dugan 1931 the French version of The Trial of Mary Dugan 1929 He did Tumultes 1932 for director Robert Siodmak Then he did the English language The Man from Yesterday 1932 with Claudette Colbert at Paramount again directed by Viertel He had a choice small role in Jean Harlow s Red Headed Woman 1932 at MGM 8 Return to France edit nbsp Boyer and Annabella in La bataille 1933 Boyer went back to France where he starred in F P 1 Doesn t Answer 1932 Moi et l imperatrice 1933 Les Amoureux 1933 The Sparrowhawk and La bataille 1933 with Annabella The last was also filmed in an English language version called The Battle with Merle Oberon replacing Annabella and Boyer reprising his role He did The Only Girl 1933 with Lilian Harvey and performed on the Paris stage in Le Bonheur which was another success It would be the last time he appeared on the Parisian stage 6 He returned to Hollywood for Caravan 1934 with Loretta Young at Fox He was also in the French language version Caravane again with Annabella 9 Then in France he starred in Liliom 1934 directed by Fritz Lang his first classic 10 Boyer starred in some English language movies Thunder in the East 1934 In France he was in Le bonheur 1934 reprising his stage performance for director Marcel L Herbier Walter Wanger edit nbsp With Sigrid Gurie and Hedy Lamarr in Algiers 1938 nbsp Boyer in Love Affair 1939 nbsp With Irene Dunne in Love Affair 1939 Boyer co starred with Claudette Colbert in the psychiatric drama Private Worlds 1935 for Walter Wanger at Paramount He signed a five year contract with Wanger 11 Then he romanced Katharine Hepburn in Break of Hearts 1935 for RKO and Loretta Young in Shanghai 1935 for Wanger Boyer became an international star with Mayerling 1936 co starring Danielle Darrieux and directed by Anatole Litvak Boyer played Rudolf Crown Prince of Austria Back in Hollywood he was teamed with Marlene Dietrich in The Garden of Allah 1936 for David O Selznick He and Dietrich were reunited on I Loved a Soldier 1936 for director Henry Hathaway at Paramount but the film was abandoned Boyer paired with Jean Arthur in History Is Made at Night 1937 for Wanger and Greta Garbo in Conquest 1937 at MGM where he played Napoleon Bonaparte Boyer s fee for the latter was 150 000 but with all the re takes he wound up earning 450 000 Boyer returned to France briefly to make Orage 1938 opposite Michele Morgan for director Marc Allegret 3 Back in Hollywood he had the lead in Tovarich 1937 with Claudette Colbert directed by Litvak In 1938 he landed his famous role as Pepe le Moko the thief on the run in Algiers an English language remake of the classic French film Pepe le Moko with Jean Gabin produced by Wanger Although in the movie Boyer never said to costar Hedy Lamarr Come with me to the Casbah this line was in the movie trailer The line would stick with him thanks to generations of impressionists and Looney Tunes parodies 3 12 Boyer s role as Pepe Le Moko was already world famous when animator Chuck Jones based the character of Pepe Le Pew the romantic skunk introduced in 1945 on Boyer and his best known performance 13 Boyer s vocal style was also parodied on the Tom and Jerry cartoons most notably when Tom was trying to woo a female cat See The Zoot Cat Boyer made three films with Irene Dunne Love Affair 1939 at RKO When Tomorrow Comes 1939 at Universal and Together Again 1944 at Columbia 14 15 World War II edit nbsp Ingrid Bergman Angela Lansbury and Boyer in Gaslight 1944 He went back to France to make Le corsaire 1939 for Marc Allegret He was making the movie in Nice when France declared war on Germany in September 1939 Production ceased on the declaration of war Boyer joined the French army 16 The film was never completed although some footage of it was later released 17 18 By November Boyer was discharged from the army and back in Hollywood as the French government thought he would be of more service making films 19 Boyer played in three classic film love stories All This and Heaven Too 1940 with Bette Davis directed by Litvak at Warners as the ruthless cad in Back Street 1941 with Margaret Sullavan at Universal and Hold Back the Dawn 1941 with Olivia de Havilland and Paulette Goddard at Paramount 20 In contrast to his glamorous image Boyer began losing his hair early had a pronounced paunch and was noticeably shorter than leading ladies like Ingrid Bergman When Bette Davis first saw him on the set of All This and Heaven Too she did not recognize him and tried to have him removed 13 Universal edit nbsp Boyer and Irene Dunne in Together Again 1944 nbsp Charles Boyer in 1955In January 1942 Boyer signed a three year contract with Universal to act and produce The contract would cover nine films 21 Before he started the contract he finished a film at Warners The Constant Nymph 1943 with Joan Fontaine Boyer was reunited with Sullavan in Appointment for Love 1942 at Universal and was one of many stars in Tales of Manhattan 1942 directed by Julien Duvivier and Immortal France 1942 He became a US citizen in 1942 22 He was one of many stars in Flesh and Fantasy 1943 which he also produced with Julien Duvivier at Universal He was an uncredited producer on Duvivier s Destiny 1944 In 1943 he was awarded an Honorary Oscar Certificate for progressive cultural achievement in establishing the French Research Foundation in Los Angeles as a source of reference certificate Boyer had one of his biggest hits with Gaslight 1944 with Ingrid Bergman and Joseph Cotten He followed it with Together Again 1944 re uniting with Irene Dunne Congo 1944 a short and Confidential Agent 1945 with Lauren Bacall at Warners Boyer began his post war career with Cluny Brown 1946 with Jennifer Jones directed by Ernst Lubitsch He was Warners highest paid actor at this stage earning 205 000 in 1945 23 In 1947 he was the voice of Capt Daniel Gregg in the Lux Radio Theater s presentation of The Ghost and Mrs Muir 24 played in the film by Rex Harrison In 1948 he was made a chevalier of the French Legion d honneur That year he did a thriller A Woman s Vengeance 1948 Another film he did with Bergman Arch of Triumph 1948 failed at the box office and Boyer was no longer the box office star he had been If you are in a big flop nobody wants you he said later 6 Broadway edit Boyer went to Broadway where he made his first appearance in Red Gloves 1948 49 based on Dirty Hands by Jean Paul Sartre 25 which went for 113 performances 26 In 1951 he appeared on the Broadway stage in one of his most notable roles that of Don Juan in a dramatic reading of the third act of George Bernard Shaw s Man and Superman This is the act popularly known as Don Juan in Hell In 1952 he won Broadway s 1951 Special Tony Award for Don Juan in Hell It was directed by actor Charles Laughton Laughton co starred as the Devil with Cedric Hardwicke as the statue of the military commander slain by Don Juan and Agnes Moorehead as Dona Anna the commander s daughter one of Juan s former conquests The production was a critical success and was subsequently recorded complete by Columbia Masterworks one of the first complete recordings of a non musical stage production ever made As of 2006 however it has never been released on CD but in 2009 it became available as an MP3 download 27 Boyer did not abandon cinema he had leading roles in The 13th Letter 1951 The First Legion 1952 and The Happy Time 1952 He had a character role in Thunder in the East filmed 1951 released 1953 an Alan Ladd film Four Star Playhouse edit nbsp Boyer in 1962Boyer moved into television as one of the pioneering producers and stars of the anthology show Four Star Playhouse 1952 56 It was made by Four Star Productions which would make Boyer and partners David Niven and Dick Powell rich 3 28 Boyer returned to France to star in The Earrings of Madame de 1953 for Max Ophuls alongside Darrieux While there he was one of many names in Boum sur Paris 1953 29 He returned to Broadway for Norman Krasna s Kind Sir 1953 54 directed by Joshua Logan which ran for 166 performances In the film version Indiscreet 1958 Cary Grant was cast in Boyer s role 30 Back in Hollywood Boyer had a support role in MGM s The Cobweb 1955 He went back to France to star in Nana 1955 with Martine Carol and then to Italy for What a Woman 1956 with Sophia Loren In 1956 Boyer was a guest star on I Love Lucy and had a cameo in Around the World in 80 Days 1956 In France he had the lead in Paris Palace Hotel 1956 He appeared as the mystery guest on the 10 March 1957 episode of What s My Line 31 On 17 March 1957 Boyer starred in an adaptation for TV of the Pulitzer Prize winning play There Shall Be No Night by Robert E Sherwood The performance starred Katharine Cornell and was broadcast on NBC as part of the Hallmark Hall of Fame 32 He appeared several times in Goodyear Theatre and Alcoa Theatre on TV In France Boyer was one of several stars in It Happened on the 36 Candles 1957 and he co starred with Brigitte Bardot in La Parisienne 1957 and Michele Morgan in Maxime 1958 the latter directed by Henri Verneuil In Hollywood Boyer had a strong supporting role as real life privateer Dominique You alongside Yul Brynner s Jean LaFitte in The Buccaneer 1958 Boyer co starred again with Claudette Colbert in the Broadway comedy The Marriage Go Round 1958 1960 but said to the producer Keep that woman away from me 33 The production was a hit and ran for 431 performances Boyer did not reprise his performance in the film version He kept busy doing work for Four Star 34 1960s edit nbsp Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6300 Hollywood Blvd nbsp The cast of The Rogues 1964 with Boyer Gig Young David Niven Robert Coote and Gladys Cooper nbsp With Elsa Martinelli in The Rogues 1964 Onscreen he continued in older roles in Fanny 1961 starring Leslie Caron Demons at Midnight 1961 in France the lead MGM s remake of The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse 1962 Adorable Julia 1962 with Lilli Palmer several episodes of The Dick Powell Theatre and Love Is a Ball 1963 He was nominated for the Tony Award as Best Actor Dramatic in the 1963 Broadway production of Lord Pengo which ran for 175 performances 35 Later that same year Boyer performed in Man and Boy on the London and New York stage The Broadway run only went for 54 performances 36 Boyer was reunited with David Niven in The Rogues 1964 65 a television series also starring Gig Young Niven Boyer and Young revolved from week to week as the episode s leading man sometimes appearing together although most episodes wound up being helmed by Young since both Niven and Boyer had flourishing movie careers He had good support roles in A Very Special Favor 1965 with Rock Hudson How to Steal a Million 1966 with Audrey Hepburn and Peter O Toole Barefoot in the Park 1967 with Robert Redford and Jane Fonda He had cameos in Is Paris Burning 1966 and Casino Royale 1967 and was top billed in The Day the Hot Line Got Hot 1968 37 His career had lasted longer than that of other romantic actors winning him the nickname the last of the cinema s great lovers 20 He recorded a laid back album called Where Does Love Go in 1966 The album consisted of famous love songs sung or rather spoken with Boyer s distinctive deep voice and French accent The record was reportedly Elvis Presley s favorite album for the last 11 years of his life the one he most listened to 38 Boyer supported in The April Fools 1969 and The Madwoman of Chaillot 1969 and guest starred on The Name of the Game 6 1970s edit Boyer s son had died in 1965 and Boyer was finding it traumatic to continue living in Los Angeles so in March 1970 he decided to relocate to Europe 6 Boyer s final credits included the musical remake of Lost Horizon 1973 and the French film Stavisky 1974 starring Jean Paul Belmondo the latter winning him the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor 3 and also received the Special Tribute at Cannes Film Festival 39 Boyer s final performance was in A Matter of Time 1976 with Liza Minnelli and Ingrid Bergman directed by Vincente Minnelli Radio editBoyer was the star of Hollywood Playhouse on NBC in the 1930s but he left in 1939 for war service in France returning on the 3 January 1940 broadcast 40 When he went on vacation in the summer of 1940 an item in a trade publication reported It is an open secret that he doesn t like the present policy of a different story and characters each week Boyer would prefer a program in which he could develop a permanent characterization 41 Boyer would later star in his own radio show entitled Presenting Charles Boyer during 1950 over NBC Personal life edit nbsp Boyer s wife Pat PatersonBoyer became a naturalized citizen of the United States on June 15 1942 in Los Angeles 42 In addition to French and English Boyer spoke Italian German and Spanish 4 Boyer was the husband of British actress Pat Paterson whom he met at a dinner party in 1934 The two became engaged after two weeks of courtship and were married three months later 13 Later they moved from Hollywood to Paradise Valley Arizona 43 The marriage lasted 44 years until her death Boyer s only child Michael Charles Boyer 9 December 1943 23 September 1965 44 died by suicide at age 21 He was playing Russian roulette after separating from his girlfriend 45 Suicide editOn 26 August 1978 Boyer died by suicide with an overdose of Seconal while at a friend s home in Scottsdale Arizona He was taken to the hospital in Phoenix Arizona where he died 43 two days after his wife s death from cancer and two days before his own 79th birthday He was interred in Holy Cross Cemetery Culver City California alongside his wife and son Awards editBoyer never won an Oscar though he was nominated for Best Actor four times in Conquest 1937 Algiers 1938 Gaslight 1944 and Fanny 1961 the latter also winning him a nomination for the Laurel Awards for Top Male Dramatic Performance He is particularly well known for Gaslight in which he played a thief murderer who tries to convince his newlywed wife that she is going insane He was nominated for the Golden Globe as Best Actor for the 1952 film The Happy Time and also nominated for the Emmy for Best Continuing Performance by an Actor in a Dramatic Series for his work in Four Star Playhouse 1952 1956 In 1960 Boyer was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame with a motion pictures star and a television star Both stars are located at 6300 Hollywood Boulevard 46 47 Filmography editFeatures edit Year Title Role Notes1920 L Homme du large Guenn la Taupe le mauvais genie de Michel1921 Chantelouve Roger de Thievres1922 Le Grillon du foyer Edouard CalebEsclave Claude Laporte1928 Infernal Circle1929 Captain Fracasse Duc de Vallombreuse1930 La Barcarolle d amour Andre le KerdecRevolt in the Prison Fred Morgan1931 The Magnificent Lie JacquesLe Proces de Mary Dugan Le procureur1932 Tumultes Ralph SchwarzThe Man from Yesterday Rene GaudinRed Headed Woman Albert1933 La Bataille Le marquis YorisakaThe Only Girl The DukeI F 1 ne repond plus EllisenThe Empress and IL Epervier Comte Georges de DasettaF P 1 Doesn t Answer1934 The Battle Marquis YorisakaLiliom Liliom ZadowskiCaravan LatziLe Bonheur Philippe Lutcher1935 Private Worlds Dr Charles MonetBreak of Hearts Franz RobertiShanghai Dimitri Koslov1936 Mayerling L archiduc RodolpheThe Garden of Allah Boris AndrovskyI Loved a Soldier Leutnant Baron Almasy Unfinished film1937 History Is Made at Night Paul DumondConquest Emperor Napoleon BonaparteTovarich Prince Mikail Alexandrovitch Ouratieff1938 Orage Andre PascaudAlgiers Pepe le Moko1939 Love Affair MichelWhen Tomorrow Comes Philip ChagalLe Corsaire Unfinished film1940 All This and Heaven Too Duc de Praslin1941 Back Street Walter SaxelHold Back the Dawn Georges IscovescuAppointment for Love Andre Pappy Cassil1942 Tales of Manhattan Paul Orman1943 Flesh and Fantasy Paul Gaspar Episode 3The Heart of a Nation Introductory Narrator US version onlyThe Constant Nymph Lewis Dodd1944 Gaslight Gregory AntonTogether Again George CordayThe Fighting Lady Narrator French version only1945 Confidential Agent Luis Denard1946 The Battle of the Rails Narrator voice uncreditedCluny Brown Adam Belinski1948 A Woman s Vengeance Henry MaurierArch of Triumph Dr Ravic1951 The 13th Letter Dr Paul LaurentThe First Legion Father Marc Arnoux1952 The Happy Time Jacques BonnardThunder in the East Prime Minister Singh1953 The Earrings of Madame de General Andre de Boum sur Paris Himself1955 The Cobweb Dr Douglas N DevanalNana Comte Muffat1956 Lucky to Be a Woman Count Gregorio SennettiAround the World in 80 Days Monsieur Gasse balloonistParis Palace Hotel Henri Delormel1957 It Happened on the 36 Candles Himself UncreditedLa Parisienne Le prince Charles1958 Maxime Maxime CherprayThe Buccaneer Dominique You1961 Fanny Cesar1962 Midnight Folly fr PierreThe Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse Marcelo DesnoyersAdorable Julia Michael Grosselyn1963 Love Is a Ball M Etienne Pimm1965 A Very Special Favor Michel Boullard1966 How to Steal a Million DeSolnayIs Paris Burning Docteur Monod1967 Casino Royale Le GrandBarefoot in the Park Victor Velasco1968 Hot Line Vostov1969 The April Fools Andre GreenlawThe Madwoman of Chaillot The Broker1973 Lost Horizon The High Lama1974 Stavisky Le baron Jean Raoul1976 A Matter of Time Count Sanziani Final film roleShort subjects edit The Candid Camera Story Very Candid of the Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures 1937 Convention 1937 as himself uncredited Hollywood Goes to Town 1938 as himself Les iles de la liberte 1943 as narrator Congo 1945 as voice On Stage 1949 as himself 1955 Motion Picture Theatre Celebration 1955 as himself uncredited Television edit Four Star Playhouse 29 episodes 1952 1956 as Various characters Toast of the Town 2 episodes 1953 as himself Charles Boyer Theater 1953 as himself host The Jackie Gleason Show 1 episode 1953 as himself I Love Lucy 1 episode 1956 as himself Climax 1 episode 1956 as himself Hallmark Hall of Fame 1 episode 1957 Playhouse 90 1 episode 1957 as himself A Private Little Party for a Few Chums 1957 as himself Goodyear Theatre unknown episodes 1957 1958 as Alternate Lead Player 1957 1958 Alcoa Theatre 3 episodes 1957 1958 as man Lemerrier Dr Jacques Roland What s My Line 4 episodes 1957 1958 1962 1963 as himself Mystery Guest The Dinah Shore Chevy Show 1 episode 1960 as himself The Dick Powell Show 4 episodes 1962 1963 as Carlos Morell Andreas A Golden Prison The Louvre 1964 presenter as narrator The Rogues 8 episodes 1964 1965 as Marcel St Clair The Bell Telephone Hour 1 episode 1966 as himself The Name of the Game 1 episode 1969 as Henri Jarnoux Film 72 1 episode 1976 as himselfBroadway editRed Gloves 1948 1949 Don Juan in Hell 1951 1952 Kind Sir 1953 1954 The Marriage Go Round 1958 1960 Lord Pengo 1962 1963 Man and Boy 1963 Award nominations editAcademy Awards edit Year Category Film Result1937 Best Actor Conquest Nominated1938 Best Actor Algiers Nominated1944 Best Actor Gaslight Nominated1961 Best Actor Fanny NominatedGolden Globe Awards edit Year Category Film Result1952 Best Actor Drama The Happy Time NominatedReferences edit Obituary Variety 30 August 1978 John Arthur Garraty Mark Christopher Carnes and American Council of Learned Societies 1999 American national biography Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512782 9 a b c d e f g TCM Film Guide pf 29 a b Swindell Larry 1983 Charles Boyer The Reluctant Lover Doubleday ISBN 9780385170529 From obscurity to instant fame Charles Boyer memorized a play in a few hours and became a star Swindell Larry The Globe and Mail Toronto 8 Mar 1983 E 3 a b c d e Q amp A Charles Boyer Diehl Digby Los Angeles Times 24 Sep 1972 n18 a b c Charles Boyer Epitome of Suave Leading Man Dies Charles Boyer Star for Decades Dies Incomplete Source Los Angeles Times 27 August 1978 a1 Charles Boyer Biography Classic Movie Favorites Retrieved 24 September 2008 Straight From the Studios Miriam Hopkins Slated to Become a Goldwyn Star Charles Boyer Is Recalled to Hollywood News Notes From Celluloid Capital By Philip K Scheuer The Washington Post 30 August 1934 10 Charles Boyer All Movie Guide Retrieved 21 June 2009 Charles Boyer French Star Los Angeles Times 5 May 1935 A1 Boller Paul F Jr George John 1989 They Never Said It A Book of Fake Quotes Misquotes and Misleading Attributions New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 505541 1 a b c TCM Film Guide p 31 Vidor Charles 22 December 1944 Together Again Comedy Romance Columbia Pictures retrieved 3 December 2022 Charles Boyer Refuses to Try To Fool Public French Star Is Student of Acting Who Believes in Unremitting Work Charles Boyer By Melrose GowerHollywood 18 Feb The Washington Post 19 February 1939 T3 Le Corsaire at Louis Jourdan website accessed 20 January 2014 Le Corsair at A Lost Film Charles Boyer Called for Service Los Angeles Times 23 Sep 1939 1 CASE OF CHARLES BOYER New York Times 24 November 1939 22 a b Charles Boyer TCM Movie Database Archived from the original on 18 April 2009 Retrieved 21 June 2009 SCREEN NEWS HERE AND IN HOLLYWOOD Charles Boyer Signs a 3 Year Producer Actor Contract With Universal New York Times 22 Jan 1942 13 Actor Charles Boyer Becomes U S Citizen The Christian Science Monitor 14 February 1942 8 Charles Boyer Highest Paid Warner Actor Los Angeles Times 20 March 1946 1 Lux Radio Theatre Log Audio Classics Archive Retrieved 19 May 2010 PREMIERE TONIGHT FOR RED GLOVES Charles Boyer Stars in Harris Production of Sartre Play Opening at Mansfield The New York Times Retrieved 6 June 2019 ALONG BROADWAY Charles Boyer Will Make Stage Debut Los Angeles Times 10 Oct 1948 D2 Don Juan in Hell by George Bernard Shaw Amazon com Saland Publishing 28 April 2009 Charles Boyer Joins New The Washington Post 31 Aug 1952 L4 Charles Boyer Sheds the Tag of Lover Boy Boyle Hal Chicago Daily Tribune 11 December 1955 f5 KIND SIR ARRIVES AT ALVIN TONIGHT Krasna Comedy to Star Mary Martin and Charles Boyer Logan Is Sole Sponsor By SAM ZOLOTOW New York Times 4 November 1953 28 What s My Line James C Hagerty Charles Boyer James Michener panel Mar 10 1957 HALLMARK HALL OF FAME THERE SHALL BE NO NIGHT ACT 1 TV The Paley Center for Media Retrieved 18 May 2010 Dick Bernard F 2008 Claudette Colbert She Walked in Beauty University Press of Mississippi Charles Boyer Finance Chief of Handsome Four Star Board RICH DU BROW Chicago Daily Tribune 10 April 1960 s a4 Charles Boyer Shines in Lord Pengo Comedy Los Angeles Times 22 November 1962 B10 Man amp Boy The Actors Company Theatre Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 19 May 2010 Accent Is On Guess Who Charles Boyer Los Angeles Times 4 Feb 1962 A32 Clambake United Artists 1967 For Elvis Fans Only EPE Archived from the original on 28 August 2008 Retrieved 24 September 2008 Charles Boyer Awards Hollywood com Retrieved 24 September 2008 Boyer Returns PDF Broadcasting 15 December 1939 p 82 Retrieved 13 July 2015 permanent dead link Jergens Summer Plans PDF Broadcast inf 15 May 1940 p 36 Retrieved 13 July 2015 permanent dead link British Film Institute 1995 Ginette Vincendeau ed Encyclopedia of European Cinema Cassell FilmStudies London Continuum International Publishing Group formerly Cassell Academic a b Celebrity Sightings B Bankruptcy amp Debt Information from Doney amp Associates Retrieved 24 September 2008 Entry for Michael C Boyer California Department of Health Services Office of Health Information and Research Rootsweb Archived from the original on 22 March 2016 Retrieved 28 April 2012 Donnelley Paul Fade To Black A Book of Movie Obituaries 2nd Edition London Omnibus Press 2005 First edition 2003 ISBN 978 1 84449 430 9 Hollywood Walk of Fame Charles Boyer walkoffame com Hollywood Chamber of Commerce Retrieved 29 November 2017 Only the motion pictures star is listed Hollywood Star Walk Charles Boyer Los Angeles Times Retrieved 29 November 2017 Both stars are listed Bibliography edit TCM Film Guide 2006 The 50 Most Unforgettable Actors of the Studio Era Leading Men San Francisco California Chronicle Books Swindell Larry 1983 Charles Boyer The Reluctant Lover Garden City New York Doubleday amp Company Inc ISBN 0 385 17052 1 External links edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp France portal nbsp Film portal nbsp Theater portal nbsp Television portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles Boyer Charles Boyer at IMDb Charles Boyer at the TCM Movie Database nbsp Charles Boyer at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Sur le site Quercy net A propos de Charles Boyer et de Figeac Photographs and literature Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Boyer amp oldid 1205681685, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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