Lionel Barrymore was an Academy award winning American actor of stage, screen, and radio
@Film & Theater Personalities, Birthday and Facts
Lionel Barrymore was an Academy award winning American actor of stage, screen, and radio
Lionel Barrymore born at
In 1904 Lionel Barrymore married Doris Rankin, the young sister of his uncle Sidney Drew's wife. They had two daughters but both their children died as infants. The couple, devastated by the deaths of their babies, drifted apart and ended their marriage in 1923.
His second marriage was to Irene Fenwick in 1923 which lasted till her death in 1936.
He suffered from arthritis during his later years. His health problems were aggravated by a hip injury which confined him to a wheelchair. Lionel Barrymore died on November 15, 1954 from a heart attack. He was 76.
He was born Lionel Herbert Blythe on April 28, 1878, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. into the prominent theatrical Barrymore family. His parents were actors Georgiana Drew Barrymore and Maurice Barrymore.
His parents planned to introduce all their children to show business at an early age. Lionel often appeared on stage as an infant along with his parents. He was forced to perform by them when he was a young child but he refused and stated crying on the stage instead.
He received his primary education from the Episcopal Academy in Philadelphia and attended the Art Students League of New York. From a young age he was adamant that he would not follow in his parents’ footsteps to become an actor. He was more interested in painting and spent three years studying the art.
Even though Lionel Barrymore was determined to make it big as a painter, he could not find the success he sought. Desperate to make a living, he reluctantly returned to acting. He started appearing on the Broadway with his uncle John Drew Jr. in such plays as ‘The Second in Command’ (1901) and ‘The Mummy and the Hummingbird’ when he was in his early twenties.
Throughout the early 1900s he performed in various stage productions, mostly with one or two of his more famous family members. Still dissatisfied with the acting profession, he travelled to Paris in 1906 to try his luck once again in painting. But, he was not able to establish himself as a successful painter and returned to the U.S. in 1909.
In the early 1910s, he began making movies such as ‘The Battle’ (1911), ‘The New York Hat’ (1912), and ‘Three Friends’ (1913). In the later part of the decade he established himself as a successful stage actor in New York City in plays such as ‘Peter Ibbetson’ (1917), ‘The Copperhead’ (1918), and ‘The Jest’ (1919).
In the 1920s, he focused more on film roles and reprised his stage role in the film adaptation of ‘The Copperhead’ (1920). His other notable films in the decade include ‘Fifty-Fifty’ (1925), ‘The Bells’ (1926), and ‘Drums of Love’ (1928).
In 1929, he directed the controversial film ‘His Glorious Night’, starring John Gilbert in his first released talkie. He also directed the films ‘Madame X’ starring Ruth Chatterton, and ‘The Rogue Song’ before returning to acting.
Lionel Barrymore is best remembered for his Academy Award winning performance in ‘A Free Soul’, in which he played the role of Stephen Ashe, an alcoholic defense attorney. He delivered a powerful monologue which made the film popular and earned him awards and accolades.
He played the role of Mr. Potter, a greedy and mean-spirited banker, in the Christmas fantasy drama film ‘It's a Wonderful Life’ which went on to be recognized by the American Film Institute as one of the 100 best American films ever made.