Reginald Denham

English actor

Moyna Macgill
(m. 1919⁠–⁠1924)

Lilian Oldland
Mary Orr
(m. 1947)
RelativesTamara Ustinov (granddaughter)

Reginald Denham (10 January 1894 – 4 February 1983) was an English writer, theatre and film director, actor and film producer.

Biography

Reginald H. F. Denham was born in London, England, in 1894.

He spent a good part of his career directing Broadway theatre, with a career spanning from the melodrama Rope's End (1929) by Patrick Hamilton, to the courtroom drama Hostile Witness (1966). In 1930 he produced the First World War drama Suspense in the West End.

He was married to Irish actress Moyna Macgill (1919–1924), English actress Lilian Oldland, and American actress and writer Mary Orr (from 1947 until his death). While they were married, Denham and Orr were writing partners. His daughter with Macgill, Isolde Denham, married actor Peter Ustinov when they were both 19.

He died following a stroke in Englewood, New Jersey.

Credits

Writer

  • Paradies der alten Damen (1971) (TV) (criminal play)
  • The Mad Room (1969) (earlier screenplay) (play Ladies in Retirement)
  • Lux Video Theatre (2 episodes, 1954–1957)
Dark Hammock (1957) TV episode (play, with Mary Orr)
Ladies in Retirement (1954) TV episode (play, with Mary Orr)
  • Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1 episode, 1956)
Help Wanted (1956) TV episode (adaptation, with Mary Orr)
A Dash of Bitters (1954) TV episode (teleplay, with Mary Orr)
  • Broadway Television Theatre (1 episode, 1952)
Suspect (1952) TV episode (play, with Mary Orr)
  • Mr. & Mrs. North (1952) TV series (unknown episodes)
  • Suspense (4 episodes, 1949–1950)
The Suicide Club (1950) TV episode
Help Wanted (1949) TV episode (with Mary Orr)
Murder Through the Looking Glass (1949) TV episode (teleplay)
Dead Ernest (1949) TV episode
  • Wallflower (1944) (play, with Mary Orr)[1]
  • Ladies in Retirement (1941) (play) (screenplay)
  • Suspect (1939) (TV)
  • Trunk Crime (1939) (play)
  • Calling the Tune (1936)
  • Ebb Tide (1932)
  • Hombre que asesinó, El (1931) (adaptation)
  • Stamboul (1931)

Director

a.k.a. Queen of Crime (USA)
a.k.a. The Vanishing Train (USA: TV title)
a.k.a. Lieutenant Daring R.N.
a.k.a. Death at a Broadcast (USA)
a.k.a. Death of a Broadcast
  • The Primrose Path (1934)
  • Brides to Be (1934)
  • Lucky Loser (1934)
  • Called Back (1933)
  • The Jewel (1933)

Producer

Actor

  • Nothing Else Matters as Flash Harry (1920)[2]

References

  1. ^ "Ohioana-authors.org". www.ohioana-authors.org.
  2. ^ "Reginald Denham". IMDb. Retrieved 17 May 2021.

External links

  • Reginald Denham at IMDb
  • Reginald Denham at the Internet Broadway Database
  • "Reginald Denham by Sasha (Alexander Stewart) bromide print, 1920s". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
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