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Louis Hayward

Louis Charles Hayward (19 March 1909 – 21 February 1985) was a South African-born, British-American actor.

Louis Hayward
Louis Hayward in Anthony Adverse (1936)
Born
Louis Charles Hayward

(1909-03-19)19 March 1909
Died21 February 1985(1985-02-21) (aged 75)
OccupationActor
Years active1930–1974
Spouses
(m. 1938; div. 1945)
Peggy Morrow Field
(m. 1946; div. 1950)
June Hanson
(m. 1953)
Children1
AwardsBronze Star Medal

Louis Hayward and June Duprez in And Then There Were None (1945)

Biography Edit

Born in Johannesburg, Louis Hayward lived in South Africa and was educated in France and England, including Latymer Upper School in Hammersmith, London.[1] He spent some time managing a night club but wanted to act and bought into a stock company.

English career Edit

He became a protégé of Noël Coward and began appearing in London in plays such as Dracula and Another Language.[2] He was in the Sir Gerald du Maurier stage play, The Church Mouse.[3]

He started being cast in some British films of the early 1930s, such as Self Made Lady (1932) and The Man Outside (1933). He had the lead role in Chelsea Life (1933) and supporting parts in Sorrell and Son (1933), The Thirteenth Candle (1933) and I'll Stick to You (1933).

He appeared in a Coward musical Conversation Piece (1934) and had the lead in The Love Test (1935), directed by Michael Powell.

Move to United States Edit

Hayward went to Broadway in 1935 with a production of Coward's Point Valaine working with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne.[4] The play, described as one of Coward's worst and poorly received critically and popularly, only ran for six weeks and was considered a failure, but Hayward won the Donaldson award, a precursor to the Tonys and as a consequence signed a four-picture contract with MGM.

U.S. movie career Edit

After the stage debacle, however, Hayward received an offer from MGM to play a supporting role in The Flame Within (1935), written and directed by Edmund Goulding and starring Ann Harding.[5][6]

Hayward followed that film with A Feather in Her Hat for Columbia, billed after Basil Rathbone.[7] Back at MGM he had support parts in Absolute Quiet (1935) and Trouble for Two (1936).

Hayward's career started to gain momentum when he was cast in the prologue of Warner Bros' expensive blockbuster Anthony Adverse (1936), playing the father of the title character. His profile also was raised by marriage to Ida Lupino.[8]

At Universal, he was the male lead in The Luckiest Girl in the World (1936) with Jane Wyatt, then he went to RKO to support Paul Muni and Miriam Hopkins in The Woman I Love (1937).

Universal cast him in the lead of Midnight Intruder (1938), directed by Arthur Lubin. He also was the male lead in RKO's Condemned Women (1938).

Hayward was cast as the first screen incarnation of Simon Templar in Leslie Charteris' The Saint in New York (1938) at RKO.[citation needed] The film was a hit and would eventually lead to a long-running series. However, the next five films in the series starred George Sanders as Templar. Hayward would eventually reprise the role in The Saint's Return in 1953.

Hayward supported Danielle Darrieux and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. in The Rage of Paris (1938) at Universal.

Edward Small Edit

In 1938 Hayward starred in The Duke of West Point (1938) for producer Edward Small, who signed him to make three films over the next five years, meaning he was unable to reprise his part as the Saint.

However, Small started building Hayward into a star, casting him in a dual role in The Man in the Iron Mask (1939) under the direction of James Whale, co-starring with Joan Bennett. The film was a notable success.[9]

Small put Hayward into My Son, My Son! (1940) with Madeleine Carroll and Brian Aherne.[10] RKO borrowed him for Dance, Girl, Dance (1940) where he appeared with Maureen O'Hara and Lucille Ball. Small then put him in The Son of Monte Cristo (1940), another swashbuckler with Bennett and a sequel to the 1934 The Count of Monte Cristo.

Hayward was loaned to Columbia to co-star with his wife Ida Lupino in Ladies in Retirement (1941).

War service Edit

During World War II, Hayward enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in July 1942.[11] He commanded a photographic unit that filmed the Battle of Tarawa in the documentary With the Marines at Tarawa—winner of the 1944 Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject). Hayward was awarded the Bronze Star Medal.[12]

While off-duty in New Zealand he "went under the name of 'Captain Richards' to avoid the rush of the ladies" as recalled by a waiter at the Green Parrot, a Wellington restaurant.[13]

Return to Hollywood Edit

Returning to Hollywood, he played Philip Lombard in the 1945 film version of And Then There Were None (1945) for René Clair.

For Hunt Stromberg, he co-starred with Jane Russell in Young Widow (1946) and supported Hedy Lamarr in The Strange Woman (1946). He returned to the swashbuckler genre for Edward Small with Monte Cristo's Revenge (1947).

Hayward made a thriller for Eagle Lion, Repeat Performance (1947), then did The Black Arrow Strikes (1948), another swashbuckler. Eagle Lion used him in Ruthless (1948) with Zachary Scott, then he did Walk a Crooked Mile (1948) for Small.

Hayward went to Italy to make The Masked Pirate (1949) for United Artists. After Fritz Lang cast him in the lead of House by the River (1950) for Republic Pictures, he did some adventure films for Columbia: Fortunes of Captain Blood (1950) and Dick Turpin's Ride the title for US release was The Lady and the Bandit (1951). For the latter studio, he also starred in The Son of Dr. Jekyll (1951).

Walter Wanger cast him in Lady in the Iron Mask (1951), then he did Captain Blood, Fugitive (1952), a sequel to Fortunes of Captain Blood.[citation needed]

Television Edit

Hayward began appearing on TV in "Crossed and Double Crossed" for The Ford Television Theatre (1952). For Allied Artists, he starred in and helped produce Storm Over Africa (1953), then he reprised his role as Simon Templar in The Saint's Return (1954), shot in Britain. He starred in Men Behind Bars (1954) for Warner Bros.

Hayward starred in the 1954 syndicated television series The Lone Wolf, which ran for 39 episodes. He did episodes of Matinee Theatre ("Beginning Now"), Climax! ("A Promise to Murder"), TV Reader's Digest ("The Voyage of Captain Tom Jones, Pirate"), Lux Video Theatre ("So Evil My Love", "Suspicion"), The O Henry Playhouse ("Hearts and Hands"), Studio One in Hollywood ("Balance of Terror"), Schlitz Playhouse ("A Contest of Ladies"), The Highwayman, and Decision ("Stand and Deliver").

In films, he was in The Search for Bridey Murphy (1956). He guest starred on series such as Riverboat and was in a TV production of The Picture of Dorian Gray (1961) with George C. Scott.

Hayward's work onstage included Noël Coward's Conversation Piece and, in the early 1960s, the national tour of Camelot in which he appeared as King Arthur.[14]

Hayward starred in the 1961 British television series The Pursuers (1961–62). Hayward's other television work includes the Alfred Hitchcock Hour ("Day of Reckoning"), Kraft Television Theatre ("Dead on Nine"), Rawhide, and Burke's Law.

Later career Edit

Hayward's last films included Chuka (1967) and The Christmas Kid (1967). He had roles in Harold Robbins' The Survivors (1969), The Phynx (1970), Night Gallery (1971), The Last of the Powerseekers (1973) and Terror in the Wax Museum (1973). His last appearance was in an episode of The Magician, titled "The Illusion of the Lethal Playthings" (1974).

For his contributions to the motion picture and television industries, Hayward was honored in 1960 with two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1500 and 1680 Vine Street, respectively.[15][16]

Personal life Edit

Hayward married actress/director Ida Lupino on 17 November 1938 in a quiet civil ceremony held in the Santa Barbara courthouse. After he returned from the war, he was drastically different, which caused a strain in the marriage. They were divorced in 1945. He then met Peggy Morrow, and after dating for a while, they married on 29 May 1946. They divorced four years later on 13 March 1950.

Hayward had one son, Dana (died 2007),[17] with his third wife, June Hanson (died 1998).[18][19]

Death Edit

Louis Hayward died on 21 February 1985 at the age of 75 in Palm Springs, California from lung cancer.[20]

Hayward publicly stated that his more than five-decade-long habit of smoking three packs of cigarettes daily was the likely cause of his cancer.[21][22]

Selected filmography Edit

Sources Edit

  • Wise, James E.; Anne Collier Rehill (1999). "LouisHayward". Stars in the Corps: Movie actors in the United States Marines (2nd ed.). Naval Institute Press. pp. 27–34. ISBN 978-1-55750-949-9. Retrieved 21 March 2009.

References Edit

  1. ^ Latymer Upper School; A History of the School and Its Foundation, Nigel Watson
  2. ^ "Louis Hayward". Theatricalia.com.
  3. ^ "Louis Hayward's lucky day". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 7, no. 16. 23 September 1939. p. 4 (The Movie World). Retrieved 14 October 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ "Point Valaine – Broadway Play – Original". The Broadway League. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  5. ^ "Louis Hayward Role". Wall Street Journal. 14 June 1935. p. 11.
  6. ^ "Film Gossip From London". The Telegraph. Queensland, Australia. 19 September 1939. p. 15. Retrieved 14 October 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  7. ^ Kingsley, Grace (6 March 1939). "Louis Hayward Longs for Adventurous Life". Los Angeles Times. p. 20.
  8. ^ "What Fate Does to Mortals Who Go Against Her Decrees". The Mirror. Vol. 14, no. 762. Western Australia. 5 December 1936. p. 18. Retrieved 14 October 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  9. ^ "Overnight Fame for Louis Hayward? Hollywood Producer Thinks So". Daily News. Vol. 1, no. 248. New South Wales, Australia. 16 September 1939. p. 7. Retrieved 14 October 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ "Enter Villain Lois Hayward!". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 7, no. 50. 18 May 1940. p. 4 (The Movie World). Retrieved 14 October 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  11. ^ "Louis Hayward Joins Marines". The New York Times. 12 July 1942. p. 11.
  12. ^ Tarawa documentary won Academy Award – Marine Corps Community for USMC Veterans, leatherneck.com; accessed 21 September 2014.
  13. ^ Bioletti, Harry The Yanks are Coming: the American Invasion of New Zealand 1942–1944 (1989, Century Hutchison); ISBN 1-86941-034-3, p. 69
  14. ^ Louis Hayward at the Internet Broadway Database
  15. ^ "Louis Hayward – Hollywood Walk of Fame". Walkoffame.com. 25 October 2019.
  16. ^ L.A. Times Hollywood Star Walk, Latimes.com; accessed 1 September 2017.
  17. ^ "Dana Keith Hayward (1950-2007) - Find A Grave..." Findagrave.com. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  18. ^ The Columbia Encyclopedia of Modern Drama. Columbia University Press. 2007. p. 296. ISBN 978-0-231-14032-4.
  19. ^ Hoare, Philip Hoare (1995). Noel Coward: A Biography. Simon & Schuster. p. 273. ISBN 0-684-80937-0.
  20. ^ Louis Hayward, South African–American Actor dies, sahistory.org.za; accessed 1 September 2017.
  21. ^ "Actor Louis Hayward dead at age 75". The Tuscaloosa News. 22 February 1985. p. 17. Retrieved 14 September 2010.
  22. ^ "From the Archives: Film, TV Actor Louis Hayward Dies". L.A. Times. 22 February 1985. Retrieved 19 November 2017.

External links Edit

louis, hayward, louis, charles, hayward, march, 1909, february, 1985, south, african, born, british, american, actor, anthony, adverse, 1936, bornlouis, charles, hayward, 1909, march, 1909johannesburg, south, africa, transvaal, colony, died21, february, 1985, . Louis Charles Hayward 19 March 1909 21 February 1985 was a South African born British American actor Louis HaywardLouis Hayward in Anthony Adverse 1936 BornLouis Charles Hayward 1909 03 19 19 March 1909Johannesburg South Africa Transvaal Colony Died21 February 1985 1985 02 21 aged 75 Palm Springs California U S OccupationActorYears active1930 1974SpousesIda Lupino m 1938 div 1945 wbr Peggy Morrow Field m 1946 div 1950 wbr June Hanson m 1953 wbr Children1AwardsBronze Star Medal Louis Hayward and June Duprez in And Then There Were None 1945 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 English career 1 2 Move to United States 1 3 U S movie career 1 4 Edward Small 1 5 War service 1 6 Return to Hollywood 1 7 Television 1 8 Later career 2 Personal life 3 Death 4 Selected filmography 5 Sources 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditBorn in Johannesburg Louis Hayward lived in South Africa and was educated in France and England including Latymer Upper School in Hammersmith London 1 He spent some time managing a night club but wanted to act and bought into a stock company English career Edit He became a protege of Noel Coward and began appearing in London in plays such as Dracula and Another Language 2 He was in the Sir Gerald du Maurier stage play The Church Mouse 3 He started being cast in some British films of the early 1930s such as Self Made Lady 1932 and The Man Outside 1933 He had the lead role in Chelsea Life 1933 and supporting parts in Sorrell and Son 1933 The Thirteenth Candle 1933 and I ll Stick to You 1933 He appeared in a Coward musical Conversation Piece 1934 and had the lead in The Love Test 1935 directed by Michael Powell Move to United States Edit Hayward went to Broadway in 1935 with a production of Coward s Point Valaine working with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne 4 The play described as one of Coward s worst and poorly received critically and popularly only ran for six weeks and was considered a failure but Hayward won the Donaldson award a precursor to the Tonys and as a consequence signed a four picture contract with MGM U S movie career Edit After the stage debacle however Hayward received an offer from MGM to play a supporting role in The Flame Within 1935 written and directed by Edmund Goulding and starring Ann Harding 5 6 Hayward followed that film with A Feather in Her Hat for Columbia billed after Basil Rathbone 7 Back at MGM he had support parts in Absolute Quiet 1935 and Trouble for Two 1936 Hayward s career started to gain momentum when he was cast in the prologue of Warner Bros expensive blockbuster Anthony Adverse 1936 playing the father of the title character His profile also was raised by marriage to Ida Lupino 8 At Universal he was the male lead in The Luckiest Girl in the World 1936 with Jane Wyatt then he went to RKO to support Paul Muni and Miriam Hopkins in The Woman I Love 1937 Universal cast him in the lead of Midnight Intruder 1938 directed by Arthur Lubin He also was the male lead in RKO s Condemned Women 1938 Hayward was cast as the first screen incarnation of Simon Templar in Leslie Charteris The Saint in New York 1938 at RKO citation needed The film was a hit and would eventually lead to a long running series However the next five films in the series starred George Sanders as Templar Hayward would eventually reprise the role in The Saint s Returnin 1953 Hayward supported Danielle Darrieux and Douglas Fairbanks Jr in The Rage of Paris 1938 at Universal Edward Small Edit In 1938 Hayward starred in The Duke of West Point 1938 for producer Edward Small who signed him to make three films over the next five years meaning he was unable to reprise his part as the Saint However Small started building Hayward into a star casting him in a dual role in The Man in the Iron Mask 1939 under the direction of James Whale co starring with Joan Bennett The film was a notable success 9 Small put Hayward into My Son My Son 1940 with Madeleine Carroll and Brian Aherne 10 RKO borrowed him for Dance Girl Dance 1940 where he appeared with Maureen O Hara and Lucille Ball Small then put him in The Son of Monte Cristo 1940 another swashbuckler with Bennett and a sequel to the 1934 The Count of Monte Cristo Hayward was loaned to Columbia to co star with his wife Ida Lupino in Ladies in Retirement 1941 War service Edit During World War II Hayward enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in July 1942 11 He commanded a photographic unit that filmed the Battle of Tarawa in the documentary With the Marines at Tarawa winner of the 1944 Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject Hayward was awarded the Bronze Star Medal 12 While off duty in New Zealand he went under the name of Captain Richards to avoid the rush of the ladies as recalled by a waiter at the Green Parrot a Wellington restaurant 13 Return to Hollywood Edit Returning to Hollywood he played Philip Lombard in the 1945 film version of And Then There Were None 1945 for Rene Clair For Hunt Stromberg he co starred with Jane Russell in Young Widow 1946 and supported Hedy Lamarr in The Strange Woman 1946 He returned to the swashbuckler genre for Edward Small with Monte Cristo s Revenge 1947 Hayward made a thriller for Eagle Lion Repeat Performance 1947 then did The Black Arrow Strikes 1948 another swashbuckler Eagle Lion used him in Ruthless 1948 with Zachary Scott then he did Walk a Crooked Mile 1948 for Small Hayward went to Italy to make The Masked Pirate 1949 for United Artists After Fritz Lang cast him in the lead of House by the River 1950 for Republic Pictures he did some adventure films for Columbia Fortunes of Captain Blood 1950 and Dick Turpin s Ride the title for US release was The Lady and the Bandit 1951 For the latter studio he also starred in The Son of Dr Jekyll 1951 Walter Wanger cast him in Lady in the Iron Mask 1951 then he did Captain Blood Fugitive 1952 a sequel to Fortunes of Captain Blood citation needed Television Edit Hayward began appearing on TV in Crossed and Double Crossed for The Ford Television Theatre 1952 For Allied Artists he starred in and helped produce Storm Over Africa 1953 then he reprised his role as Simon Templar in The Saint s Return 1954 shot in Britain He starred in Men Behind Bars 1954 for Warner Bros Hayward starred in the 1954 syndicated television series The Lone Wolf which ran for 39 episodes He did episodes of Matinee Theatre Beginning Now Climax A Promise to Murder TV Reader s Digest The Voyage of Captain Tom Jones Pirate Lux Video Theatre So Evil My Love Suspicion The O Henry Playhouse Hearts and Hands Studio One in Hollywood Balance of Terror Schlitz Playhouse A Contest of Ladies The Highwayman and Decision Stand and Deliver In films he was in The Search for Bridey Murphy 1956 He guest starred on series such as Riverboat and was in a TV production of The Picture of Dorian Gray 1961 with George C Scott Hayward s work onstage included Noel Coward s Conversation Piece and in the early 1960s the national tour of Camelot in which he appeared as King Arthur 14 Hayward starred in the 1961 British television series The Pursuers 1961 62 Hayward s other television work includes the Alfred Hitchcock Hour Day of Reckoning Kraft Television Theatre Dead on Nine Rawhide and Burke s Law Later career Edit Hayward s last films included Chuka 1967 and The Christmas Kid 1967 He had roles in Harold Robbins The Survivors 1969 The Phynx 1970 Night Gallery 1971 The Last of the Powerseekers 1973 and Terror in the Wax Museum 1973 His last appearance was in an episode of The Magician titled The Illusion of the Lethal Playthings 1974 For his contributions to the motion picture and television industries Hayward was honored in 1960 with two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1500 and 1680 Vine Street respectively 15 16 Personal life EditHayward married actress director Ida Lupino on 17 November 1938 in a quiet civil ceremony held in the Santa Barbara courthouse After he returned from the war he was drastically different which caused a strain in the marriage They were divorced in 1945 He then met Peggy Morrow and after dating for a while they married on 29 May 1946 They divorced four years later on 13 March 1950 Hayward had one son Dana died 2007 17 with his third wife June Hanson died 1998 18 19 Death EditLouis Hayward died on 21 February 1985 at the age of 75 in Palm Springs California from lung cancer 20 Hayward publicly stated that his more than five decade long habit of smoking three packs of cigarettes daily was the likely cause of his cancer 21 22 Selected filmography EditSelf Made Lady 1932 Paul Geneste Chelsea Life 1933 David Fenner The Thirteenth Candle 1933 Paul Marriott The Man Outside 1933 Frank Elford Sorrell and Son 1933 Duncan I ll Stick to You 1933 Ronnie Matthews A Feather in Her Hat 1935 Jack Kerry The Love Test 1935 John Gregg The Flame Within 1935 Richard Orland Absolute Quiet 1936 Gregory Bengard Trouble for Two 1936 Young Man With Cream Tarts Anthony Adverse 1936 Denis Moore The Luckiest Girl in the World 1936 Anthony McClellan The Woman I Love 1937 Lt Jean Herbillion Midnight Intruder 1938 Barry Gilbert Condemned Women 1938 Dr Philip Duncan The Saint in New York 1938 Simon Templar aka The Saint The Rage of Paris 1938 Bill Duncan The Duke of West Point 1938 Steven Earley The Man in the Iron Mask 1939 Louis XIV Philippe of Gascony My Son My Son 1940 Oliver Essex Dance Girl Dance 1940 Jimmy Harris The Son of Monte Cristo 1940 Edmund Dantes Jr Ladies in Retirement 1941 Albert Feather And Then There Were None 1945 Philip Lombard Young Widow 1946 Lt Jim Cameron The Strange Woman 1946 Ephraim Poster The Return of Monte Cristo 1946 Edmond Dantes Repeat Performance 1947 Barney Page The Black Arrow 1948 Sir Richard Shelton Ruthless 1948 Vic Lambdin Walk a Crooked Mile 1948 Philip Scotty Grayson The Pirates of Capri 1949 Count Amalfi alias Captain Sirocco House by the River 1950 Stephen Byrne Fortunes of Captain Blood 1950 Captain Peter Blood Dick Turpin s Ride 1951 Dick Turpin The Son of Dr Jekyll 1951 Edward Jekyll Dr Henry Jekyll Mr Hyde Lady in the Iron Mask 1952 D Artagnan Captain Blood Fugitive Captain Pirate 1952 Capt Peter Blood The Royal African Rifles 1953 Denham The Saint s Return 1953 Simon Templar aka The Saint Duffy of San Quentin 1954 Edward Romeo Harper The Search for Bridey Murphy 1956 Morey Bernstein Chuka 1967 Major Benson The Christmas Kid 1967 Mike Culligan The Phynx 1970 Louis Hayward Terror in the Wax Museum 1973 Tim FowleySources EditWise James E Anne Collier Rehill 1999 LouisHayward Stars in the Corps Movie actors in the United States Marines 2nd ed Naval Institute Press pp 27 34 ISBN 978 1 55750 949 9 Retrieved 21 March 2009 References Edit Latymer Upper School A History of the School and Its Foundation Nigel Watson Louis Hayward Theatricalia com Louis Hayward s lucky day The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 7 no 16 23 September 1939 p 4 The Movie World Retrieved 14 October 2017 via National Library of Australia Point Valaine Broadway Play Original The Broadway League Retrieved 13 November 2016 Louis Hayward Role Wall Street Journal 14 June 1935 p 11 Film Gossip From London The Telegraph Queensland Australia 19 September 1939 p 15 Retrieved 14 October 2017 via National Library of Australia Kingsley Grace 6 March 1939 Louis Hayward Longs for Adventurous Life Los Angeles Times p 20 What Fate Does to Mortals Who Go Against Her Decrees The Mirror Vol 14 no 762 Western Australia 5 December 1936 p 18 Retrieved 14 October 2017 via National Library of Australia Overnight Fame for Louis Hayward Hollywood Producer Thinks So Daily News Vol 1 no 248 New South Wales Australia 16 September 1939 p 7 Retrieved 14 October 2017 via National Library of Australia Enter Villain Lois Hayward The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 7 no 50 18 May 1940 p 4 The Movie World Retrieved 14 October 2017 via National Library of Australia Louis Hayward Joins Marines The New York Times 12 July 1942 p 11 Tarawa documentary won Academy Award Marine Corps Community for USMC Veterans leatherneck com accessed 21 September 2014 Bioletti Harry The Yanks are Coming the American Invasion of New Zealand 1942 1944 1989 Century Hutchison ISBN 1 86941 034 3 p 69 Louis Hayward at the Internet Broadway Database Louis Hayward Hollywood Walk of Fame Walkoffame com 25 October 2019 L A Times Hollywood Star Walk Latimes com accessed 1 September 2017 Dana Keith Hayward 1950 2007 Find A Grave Findagrave com Retrieved 20 August 2020 The Columbia Encyclopedia of Modern Drama Columbia University Press 2007 p 296 ISBN 978 0 231 14032 4 Hoare Philip Hoare 1995 Noel Coward A Biography Simon amp Schuster p 273 ISBN 0 684 80937 0 Louis Hayward South African American Actor dies sahistory org za accessed 1 September 2017 Actor Louis Hayward dead at age 75 The Tuscaloosa News 22 February 1985 p 17 Retrieved 14 September 2010 From the Archives Film TV Actor Louis Hayward Dies L A Times 22 February 1985 Retrieved 19 November 2017 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louis Hayward Louis Hayward at IMDb Louis Hayward at the Internet Broadway Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis Hayward amp oldid 1175191491, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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