Howard, Leslie

views updated May 18 2018

HOWARD, Leslie



Nationality: British. Born: Leslie Howard Stainer (some sources say Laszlo Horvath) in London, 3 April 1893. Education: Dulwich College, London. Military Service: Discharged from service in World War I suffering from shell shock. Family: Married Ruth Evelyn Martin, son: Ronald; daughter: Leslie Ruth. Career: After working in a bank, became stage actor; 1914—film debut in short The Heroine of Mons; 1917—stage debut in Peg o' My Heart on tour; 1919—co-founded Minerva Productions; 1920—American stage debut in Just Suppose; 1930—American film debut in version of his stage success Outward Bound, then a series of films in the United States for Warner Brothers, MGM, and Selznick; 1938—returned to England to direct, produce, and act in his own films; co-directorial debut with Pygmalion; 1940—began series of broadcast talks Britain Speaks.Awards: Best Actor, Venice Festival, for Pygmalion, 1938. Died: Plane shot down by Nazis, 1 June 1943.

Films as Actor:

1914

The Heroine of Mons (Noy—short)

1917

The Happy Warrior (Thornton) (as Rollo)

1919

The Lackey and the Lady (Bentley) (as Tony Dunciman)

1920

Five Pound Reward (Brunel—short) (as Tony Marchmont); Bookworms (Brunel—short) (as Richard)

1930

Outward Bound (Milton) (as Tom Prior)

1931

Five and Ten (Daughter of Luxury) (Leonard) (as Berry); Never the Twain Shall Meet (Van Dyke) (as Dan Pritchard); Devotion (Milton) (as David Trent); A Free Soul (Brown) (as Dwight Winthrop)

1932

Service for the Ladies (Reserved for Ladies) (Korda) (as Max Tracey); Smilin' Through (Franklin) (as John Carteret); The Animal Kingdom (The Woman in His House) (Griffith) (as Tom Collier)

1933

Secrets (Borzage) (as John Carlton); Captured! (Del Ruth) (as Captain Fred Allison); Berkeley Square (Lloyd) (as Peter Standish)

1934

The Lady Is Willing (Miller) (as Albert Latour); Of Human Bondage (Cromwell) (as Philip Carey); British Agent (Curtiz) (as Stephen Locke)

1935

The Scarlet Pimpernel (Young) (as Sir Percy Blakeney); The Petrified Forest (Mayo) (as Alan Squier)

1936

Romeo and Juliet (Cukor) (as Romeo); Master Will Shakespeare (Tourneur—short) (includes footage from Romeo and Juliet)

1937

It's Love I'm After (Mayo) (as Basil Underwood); Stand-In (Garnett) (as Atterbury Dodd)

1939

Intermezzo: A Love Story (Escape to Happiness) (Ratoff) (as Holger Brand); Gone with the Wind (Fleming) (as Ashley Wilkes)

1940

Common Heritage (Hanau—short) (as narrator)

1941

From the Four Corners (Havelock-Allen—short); The White Eagle (Cekalski—short) (as narrator); 49th Parallel (The Invaders) (Powell) (as Philip Armstrong Scott)

1942

In Which We Serve (Coward and Lean) (as voice)

1943

War in the Mediterranean (Hanau—short) (as narrator)



Films as Producer:

1920

The Bump (Brunel—short); Twice Two (Brunel—short); Too Many Cooks (Brunel—short); The Temporary Lady (Brunel—short)

1943

The Lamp Still Burns (Elvey)



Films as Director:

1938

Pygmalion (co-d with Asquith, + ro as Professor Higgins)

1941

Pimpernel Smith (Mister V) (pr, + title role); publicity film for the Royal Institute for the Blind, title unknown

1942

The First of the Few (Spitfire) (pr, + ro as R. J. Mitchell)

1943

The Gentle Sex (narrator, + ro as silhouette)

Publications


By HOWARD: book—


Trivial Fond Records, edited by Ronald Howard, London, 1982.


By HOWARD: article—

"Where the Actor Ends," in Saturday Evening Post (Philadelphia), 28 June 1930.

On HOWARD: books—

Howard, Leslie Ruth, A Quite Remarkable Father, New York, 1959.

Memo from David O. Selznick, edited by Rudy Behlmer, New York, 1972.

Howard, Ronald, In Search of My Father: A Portrait of Leslie Howard, New York, 1982.

Richards, Jeffrey, The Age of the Dream Palace: Cinema and Society 1930–39, London, 1984.

On HOWARD: articles—

Dickens, Homer, "Leslie Howard," in Films in Review (New York), April 1959.

Shipman, David, in The Great Movie Stars: The Golden Years, New York, 1971.

Richards, Jeffrey, "Speaking for England," in Listener (London), 14 January 1982.

Braun, E., "Leslie Howard: Variations on an Enigma," in Films (London), July 1982.

Film Dope (Nottingham), November 1982.

Gill, Brendan, "Leslie Howard: Star of Intermezzo and Gone With the Wind in Beverly Hills," in Architectural Digest (Los Angeles), April 1992.

Norman, Barry, in Radio Times (London), 3 April 1993.


* * *

In an article he wrote for the Saturday Evening Post in 1930, Leslie Howard asserted that "what the actor is in private life, he is to a large extent on the stage, because he cannot conceal himself and his true personality from his audience." Indeed in his films, as well as in plays, Leslie Howard was Leslie Howard—an idealistic, dreamy, upright Englishman. His "natural" approach to acting created a new style in the late 1920s when he became established on Broadway. Rather than adopt the modish and overwrought declamatory style of, say, a John Barrymore, he spoke conversationally, underplaying and relaxing into his roles.

His approach was tailor-made for the screen. He became very popular in the 1930s, a time when Hollywood was a haven for "aristocratic" English actors—Herbert Marshall, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, and Charles Laughton, to name a few. While American actors such as James Cagney and John Garfield slugged their way out of predicaments, the British actors demonstrated the supremacy of brains over brawn. As the Scarlet Pimpernel, for example, Howard fought the French with trickery and daring disguises rather than fisticuffs and swordplay. Whether or not his characters were brave, Howard usually played men of superior intellect—Henry Higgins in Shaw's Pygmalion, a writer in The Petrified Forest, a violinist in Intermezzo, a professor in Pimpernel Smith, a well-read humanist in The 49th Parallel, and an aeronautical engineer in Spitfire. Unlike Marshall, Hardwicke, and Laughton, Howard was never a villain and frequently played characters who were unrelentingly noble. The effete Ashley Wilkes in Gone with the Wind notwithstanding, his nobility usually shone through acts of singular courage—sacrificing his life for Bette Davis in The Petrified Forest, risking his life to save others in The Scarlet Pimpernel and Pimpernel Smith, and fighting the Nazis (in a brains over brawn sort of way) in the aforementioned film and The 49th Parallel. Although he was popular with women, the basis of his appeal was asexual. His characters were charming, witty, honorable, and intelligent; they liked and seemed to understand women. They did not pose the threat of a domineeringly masculine Rhett Butler. According to Molly Haskell, "women's preference for the English gentleman—witty, under-refined, unsexual or apparently misogynous, paternal—is rooted in an instinct for self-preservation. . . . A woman wants a hero who will look into her eyes and embrace her soul and demand nothing sexually," thereby allowing her to retain her strength and selfhood. Howard's characters liked and respected women (as Howard did in real life) and, with the exception of Professor Higgins, let them be.

Howard appeared in 25 films in 13 years, giving his most acclaimed performances in Berkeley Square (nominated for the 1933 Academy Award), Of Human Bondage, The Scarlet Pimpernel, and Pygmalion (nominated for the 1938 Academy Award). Yet he viewed acting principally as a financial means for engaging in other pursuits—writing plays, directing plays and films (Pygmalion, Pimpernel Smith, and Spitfire), and producing (Intermezzo, Pimpernel Smith). He intended, after the war, to give up acting and to produce and direct both plays and films. But on 1 June 1943, returning from a trip to Lisbon (to lecture on the theater and indirectly on the war), he was shot down by the Nazis, who believed Churchill was on board his commercial airliner. Britain had lost a fine actor and a great patriot. According to David Shipman, "it is no exaggeration to say that no figure in British show business was so deeply mourned, or missed, during this century."

—Catherine Henry

Howard, Leslie (John)

views updated May 14 2018

Howard, Leslie (John)

Howard, Leslie (John), Australian pianist, organist, conductor, musicologist, and composer; b. Melbourne, April 29, 1948. He was educated at Monash Univ., Victoria (B.A., 1969; M.A., 1972), the Univ. of Melbourne (1966–71), and the Accademia Musicale Chi-giana in Siena (1972–75), and also received private instruction from Guido Agosti (piano), Donald Britton (organ and harpsichord), Fritz Rieger (conducting), and Franco Donatoni (composition). After making his formal debut as a pianist in Melbourne in 1967, he appeared as a soloist with orchs., as a recitalist, and as a chamber music artist in Australia, Europe, North and South America, and Asia. He also taught at Monash Univ. (1970–72) and was a prof, of piano at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London (1987–92). While Howard’s keyboard repertoire extends from classical masterpieces to contemporary scores, he has become particularly associated with the music of Liszt, both as a performer and a researcher. In 1988 he became president of the Liszt Soc. in England. Among his honors are the Liszt Medal of Honor of the Hungarian government (1986) and the Medal of Honor of the Liszt Soc. of America (1993). His writings have appeared in various publications.

Works

dramatic:Fruits of the Earth, ballet (1971); Hreidar the Fool, opera (1973–74).ORCH.: Canzona Sinfonica for Symphonic Wind Band (1977–78). CHAMBER: String Quartet (1966); Trio for Piano, Violin, and Cello (1968); Violin Sonata (1968); Sonata for Percussion and Piano (1968); Quattro Riflessioni for Violin, Clarinet, and Piano (1969); Pavane for Clarinet, 2 Violins, and Piano (1970); Horn Sonata (1970); Ramble on a Russian Theme for Domra or Mandolin or Violin and Piano (1972); Romance for Flute and Piano (1980); Cello Sonata (1983); Trio for Piano, Violin, and Viola or Clarinet (1987); Grand Galop drolatique for Organ and Piano (1993). keyboard: piano:Capriccio for 2 Pianos (1967); Sonata (1970); 2 Album- Leaves (1972); Variations on a Theme by Bartok for Piano Duet (1973); 24 Classical Preludes (1989). organ:Moto di gioiaPostludium (1993); Mr. Haydn’s ClockEin Orgelstück für einer Uhr? (1993). VOCAL: Choral Song for Solo Treble Voices, Chorus, and Orch. (1970); Recitation for Speaker, Guitar, Cello, and Double Bass (1972); A Festival Mass for Chorus and Organ (1973); Missa Sancti Petri for Double Chorus and Organ (1992–93); songs.

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire

Howard, Leslie

views updated May 23 2018

HOWARD, LESLIE

HOWARD, LESLIE (Leslie Steiner ; 1893–1943), British actor. Born in London of Hungarian Jewish parents, Howard started as a bank clerk and made his first appearance on the stage in 1918. He subsequently acted in many plays in London and New York and started film work in 1930. On the screen he came to typify British upper-class urbanity. His most famous role was in Gone With the Wind (1939), where he played Ashley Wilkes: few filmgoers unfamiliar with Howard's background could have guessed that this archetypal Southern gentleman was played by an actor of Hungarian Jewish background. Howard also starred in The Scarlet Pimpernel (1933), Pygmalion (1938), and Pimpernel Smith (1941). He was killed when the plane in which he was flying from Lisbon in 1943 was shot down by the Germans.

add. bibliography:

odnb online.

Howard, Leslie (John)

views updated May 23 2018

Howard, Leslie (John) (b Melbourne, Victoria, 1948). Australian pianist and composer. Début Melbourne 1967, London 1975. On teaching staff Monash Univ. 1970–3. Notable Liszt exponent. Composer of opera, hn. sonata, etc.

About this article

Leslie Howard

All Sources -
Updated Aug 13 2018 About encyclopedia.com content Print Topic