Montgomery, Robert
MONTGOMERY, Robert
Nationality: American. Born: Henry Montgomery, Jr. in Beacon, New York, 21 May 1904. Education: Attended Pawling School for Boys, New York. Military Service: Served in the U.S. Naval Reserve, 1941–45; Commander. Family: Married 1) Elizabeth Bryan-Allen, 1928 (divorced 1950), daughter: the actress Elizabeth, son: Robert Jr.; 2) Elizabeth Grant Harkness, 1950. Career: Worked as mechanic for New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad, and as an oiler on a Standard Oil tanker; 1924—stage debut in The Mask and the Face, New York; actor for Rochester repertory company; Broadway debut in Dawn; 1926—film debut in College Days; 1929—contract with MGM, and sound film debut in So This Is College; 1930s—influential in establishing Screen Actors Guild; 1942—founder with Elliott Nugent, Neptune Productions; 1945—helped with direction of film They Were Expendable, and solo director of film Lady in the Lake, 1946; 1948—contract with CBS radio for series of mystery dramas; 1949—on radio series Robert Montgomery Speaking, later called A Citizen Views the News; 1950–57—host, director, producer,
and sometime actor, Robert Montgomery Presents TV series; 1952–60—media consultant to President Eisenhower. Died: In New York City, 27 September 1981.
Films as Actor:
- 1926
College Days (Thorpe)
- 1929
So This Is College (Wood) (as Biff); Untamed (Conway) (as Andy McAllister); Their Own Desire (Hopper) (as Jack Marlett); Three Live Ghosts (Freeland) (as William Foster)
- 1930
Free and Easy (Sedgwick) (as Larry); The Divorcee (Leonard) (as Don); The Big House (Hill) (as Kent Marlowe); Sins of the Children (Wood) (as Nick Higginson); Our Blushing Brides (Beaumont) (as Tony); Love in the Rough (Reisner) (as Kelly); War Nurse (Selwyn) (as Wally)
- 1931
Inspiration (Brown) (as Andre Martel); The Easiest Way (Conway) (as Johnny Madison); Strangers May Kiss (Fitzmaurice) (as Steve); Shipmates (Pollard) (as Jonesy); The Man in Possession (Wood) (as Raymond Dabney); Private Lives (Franklin) (as Elyot Chase)
- 1932
Lovers Courageous (Leonard) (as Willie Smith); But the Flesh Is Weak (Conway) (as Max Clement); Letty Lynton (Brown) (as Hale Darrow); Blondie of the Follies (Goulding) (as Larry Belmont); Faithless (Beaumont) (as William Wade)
- 1933
Hell Below (Conway) (as Lt. Thomas Knowlton); When Ladies Meet (Beaumont) (as Jimmy Lee); Made on Broadway (The Girl I Made) (Beaumont) (as Jeff Bidwell); Another Language (Edward Griffith) (as Victor Hallam); Night Flight (Brown) (as Auguste Pellerin); Fugitive Lovers (Boleslawsky) (as Paul Porter)
- 1934
The Mystery of Mr. X (Selwyn) (as Nicholas Revel); Riptide (Goulding) (as Tommy Trent); Hide-Out (Van Dyke) (as Lucky Wilson); Forsaking All Others (Van Dyke) (as Dill Todd)
- 1935
Biography of a Bachelor Girl (Griffith) (as Kurt); Vanessa: Her Love Story (Howard) (as Benjie); No More Ladies (Griffith) (as Sherry Warren)
- 1936
Petticoat Fever (Fitzmaurice) (as Dascom Dinsmore); Trouble for Two (Rubin) (as Prince Florizel); Piccadilly Jim (Leonard) (as Jim Crocker)
- 1937
The Last of Mrs. Cheyney (Boleslawsky) (as Lord Arthur Dilling); Night Must Fall (Thorpe) (as Danny); Ever Since Eve (Bacon) (as Freddy Matthews); Live, Love, and Learn (Fitzmaurice) (as Bob Graham)
- 1938
The First 100 Years (Thorpe) (as David Conway); Yellow Jack (Seitz) (as John O'Hara); Three Loves Has Nancy (Thorpe) (as Malcolm Niles)
- 1939
Fast and Loose (Marin) (as Joel Sloane)
- 1940
The Earl of Chicago (Thorpe) (as Silky Kilmount); Haunted Honeymoon (Woods) (as Lord Peter Wimsey)
- 1941
Mr. and Mrs. Smith (Hitchcock) (as David Smith); Rage in Heaven (Van Dyke) (as Phillip Monrell); Here Comes Mr. Jordan (Hall) (as Joe Pendleton); Unfinished Business (La Cava) (as Tommy Duncan)
- 1948
The Saxon Charm (Binyon) (as Matt Saxon); The Secret Land (doc) (as narrator); June Bride (Windust) (as Carey Jackson)
Films as Director:
- 1945
They Were Expendable (co-d with Ford, + ro as Lt. John Brickley)
- 1946
Lady in the Lake (+ ro as Philip Marlowe)
- 1947
Ride the Pink Horse (+ ro as Blackie Gagin)
- 1949
Once More, My Darling (+ ro as Collier Laing)
- 1950
Your Witness (Eye Witness) (+ ro as Adam Heywood)
- 1960
The Gallant Hours (+ pr, narrator)
Publications
By MONTGOMERY: book—
Open Letter from a Television Viewer, New York, 1968.
On MONTGOMERY: articles—
Reynolds, Quentin, "Man with a Union Card," in Collier's (New York), 1 April 1939.
Current Biography 1948, New York, 1948.
Bodeen, DeWitt, "Robert Montgomery," in Films in Review (New York), February 1981.
Obituary, in New York Times, 28 September 1981.
The Annual Obituary 1981, New York, 1982.
Blake, J.C., "Robert Montgomery," in Film Dope (Nottingham), March 1990.
Mangravite, Andrew, "Republican Noir," in Film Comment (New York), January/February 1994.
* * *
Robert Montgomery's career is unique. He achieved success as actor and director in film, television, theater, and radio, and also gained considerable recognition in politics. In addition, he started what might be seen as a media dynasty by fathering a bona fide second generation star, his daughter, Elizabeth.
The arrival of sound to motion pictures brought many young men like Montgomery to Hollywood—men of good looks, polish, and enough stage experience to deliver dialogue well. After being placed under contract to MGM, Montgomery became a "tennis, anyone?" leading man for that studio's stable of beautiful actresses. His apprentice years found him supporting Norma Shearer (The Divorcee, Riptide), Joan Crawford (Our Blushing Brides, Letty Lynton), Marion Davies (Blondie of the Follies), and Greta Garbo (Inspiration), among others. Montgomery, however, was too intelligent and too versatile to be typecast with the limited range such roles afforded him. He undertook such parts as the frightened prison squealer in the key genre film, The Big House, as well as that of a homicidal maniac with a civilized veneer in Night Must Fall, a role which earned him an Oscar nomination. As a result of his own initiative, there were many Robert Montgomerys on screen—the arch comedian, the dapper cad, the crazy killer, the hard-boiled detective, the noble war hero. He was not one persona, but many.
Montgomery with also not content to be an idle screen actor in his private life. Always rebellious, he is said to have told Louis B. Mayer, when refused a deserved salary increase, "If you were a younger man, Mr. Mayer, I'd give you a beating." In 1933 he helped organize the Screen Actors Guild, and served four terms as its president. He proved an effective negotiator for better working conditions, higher pay, and steadier work for bit players. During World War II he saw action in PT boat service, an experience he used in John Ford's They Were Expendable, part of which he actually directed himself. He earned a Bronze Star for his destroyer service on D-Day.
After the war Montgomery turned to directing as well as acting. His most famous film is Lady in the Lake, in which he experimented with "first-person camera," allowing the camera to serve as the actual eyes of the leading character, Raymond Chandler's private-eye Philip Marlowe (played by Montgomery himself). This film, an experiment in the subjective point of view, stands as a landmark. Montgomery became executive producer-director-advisor to NBC, and created one of television's first anthology series, Robert Montgomery Presents. On stage, he directed The Desperate Hours, earning a Tony Award. Having been active in politics since his early days with SAG, he undertook the prestigious job as media adviser to President Eisenhower, a man he greatly admired. His book, Open Letter from a Television Viewer, denounced the networks as insisting on "fairy tales for grown-up children," and was ahead of its time in defining the media wasteland.
Montgomery was not only successful in four media, a capable director, an innovative producer, and a versatile actor, he was ahead of his own time in being an actor who understood that politicians would have to become masters of the media to win. He was in many ways a visionary and an experimentalist, but in all ways a man of intelligence.
—Jeanine Basinger