Stewart Granger

@Actors, Family and Life

Stewart Granger was a well-known English film actor

May 6, 1913

BritishFilm & Theater PersonalitiesActorsTaurus Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: May 6, 1913
  • Died on: August 16, 1993
  • Nationality: British
  • Famous: Film & Theater Personalities, Actors
  • Spouses: Jean Simmons
  • Birth Place: Kensington, London, United Kingdom
  • Height: 190cm

Stewart Granger born at

Kensington, London, United Kingdom

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Birth Place

Stewart Granger was married three times. His first wife was EIspeth March, whom he married in 1938. They had two children. The couple divorced after ten years.

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Personal Life

His next wife was Jean Simmons, with whom he had starred in a few films. They were married from 1950 to 1960. They had one daughter, Tracy.

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Personal Life

His third and last wife was Caroline LeCerf, with whom he got married in 1964. They had one daughter, Samantha. However, they too divorced after a few years.

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Personal Life

Stewart Granger was born as James Lablache Stewart on 6th May 1913, in Old Brompton Road, Kensington, in West London. His father was Major James Stewart and his mother was Frederica Eliza. He was an only child.

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Childhood & Early Life

Granger did his schooling from Epsom College, and later attended the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art. He changed his name to “Stewart Granger” after he began his acting career, in order to avoid being confused with the popular American actor James Stewart.

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Childhood & Early Life

Stewart Granger initially began his film career by doing minor uncredited roles. He appeared in several films such as ‘The Song You Gave Me’ (1933), ‘Over the Garden Wall’ (1934), ‘Convoy’ (1940), and ‘Secret Mission’ (1942). At the same time, he was also involved in theatre, appearing in plays, such as ‘The Sun Never Set’ (1938) and ‘The House in the Square’ (1940).

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Career

Granger rose to popularity after he starred in a main role in the 1943 British film ‘The Man in Grey’, which was made by Gainsborough pictures. In the film directed by Leslie Arliss, Granger played the role of a character named Rokeby. The film was a commercial success, and was also loved by the critics. It was voted the second best film during 1939-45 by readers of the ‘Daily Mail.’

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Career

He next appeared in Leslie Howard’s ‘The Lamp Still Burns’. The film revolved around a woman architect, who after much frustration with her career, chooses to become a nurse instead. Granger plays the role of Laurence Rains, her love interest.

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Career

In 1944, Granger appeared in the British drama film ‘Fanny by Gaslight’. Directed by Anthony Asquith, the film did quite well, and became the second most popular film of the year. The same year, he also played the main role in the romance film ‘Love Story’. The film became hugely popular in the UK.

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Career

Granger played his first antagonistic role in the 1945 film ‘Waterloo Road’. Directed by Sidney Gilliat, the film was a commercial success. The same year he played a supporting role in the film ‘Caesar and Cleopatra’, playing the role of Appolodorus, who was a loyal follower of Queen Cleopatra. The film was directed by Gabriel Pascal. Though the film was a commercial failure, it won the ‘Academy Award’ for Best Art Direction.

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Career

‘The Man in Grey’ a 1943 British melodrama was the first significant work in Stewart Granger’s career. Directed by Leslie Arliss, the film also starred Margaret Lockwood, Phyllis Calvert, and James Mason in lead roles. The film was a big commercial success.

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Major Works

Granger played an important supporting role in the 1945 movie ‘Caesar and Cleopatra’. Directed by Gabriel Pascal, the film was an adaptation of the play of the same name by famous Irish playwright and writer George Bernard Shaw. The film starred actors Claude Rains, Vivien Leigh, Flora Robson, and Francis L. Sullivan in addition to Granger. Though the film was a commercial failure, it earned a nomination for the Oscars.

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Major Works

Granger played one of the main roles in the 1950 adventure film ‘King Solomon’s Mines’. The film was an adaptation of a popular novel of the same name by Henry Rider Haggard. It was directed by Compton Bennett and Andrew Marton. Other actors who starred in the film were Deborah Kerr, Richard Carlson, Hugo Haas and Lowell Gilmoore. The film was a huge commercial success, and won multiple Oscars.

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Major Works

The 1952 film ‘The Prisoner of Zenda’, another one of Granger’s major works, was an adaptation of Anthony Hope’s popular novel of the same name. Directed by Richard Thorpe, the film starred Granger in the lead role, along with actors Deborah Kerr, Louis Calhern, Robert Douglas and James Mason. The film was a commercial success.

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Major Works

‘The Last Hunt’ is another one of Stewart Granger’s successful works. The film was based on novel of the same name by Milton Lott. Directed by Richard Brooks, the film starred Robert Taylor, Stewart Granger, Debra Paget, Lloyd Nolan, and Russ Tamblyn. The film was a commercial success.

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Major Works