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IMDbPro

Moore Marriott(1885-1949)

  • Actor
  • Writer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Moore Marriott
Largely forgotten today, comic actor Moore Marriott reigned supreme for a time in the 1930s alongside Will Hay and Graham Moffatt in British film farce. The trio came about by happenstance, but it was their audiences who insisted they reappear together again and again.

Born in 1885, Marriott started off on the stage as a youngster with his theatrical family. The dark, curly-haired natural made his debut on film as an infant and reportedly made a number of silent films for the Hepworth Company, but credits are sketchy. By the 1920s he had churned out a number of pictures including By the Shortest of Heads (1915), The Monkey's Paw (1923) and The Gold Cure (1925), sometimes in a lead. By the advent of sound, however, he found his niche playing countrified character folk. He played much, much older than he really was (by at least 20-30 years), and audiences took to his doddering old fool act, and he essayed a host of assorted toothless, muttering coots. Marriott was unbilled in his first Hay comedy, Dandy Dick (1935), but received billing in his next film with Hay, Windbag the Sailor (1936), in which they were joined by the impish, heavyset foil Moffatt. With Marriott playing his famous bald geezer Jeremiah Harbottle, the popular trio continued to put out such wacky, nonsensical films as Oh, Mr. Porter! (1937), often deemed the best of the lot, and Convict 99 (1938). Eventually Hay severed the union, preferring to be thought of as a solo star. Marriott supported other comedians in the ensuing years, including Arthur Askey, but he never matched his earlier success. He died at age 64 without ever harvesting a strong core audience as a solo artist.
BornSeptember 14, 1885
DiedDecember 11, 1949(64)
BornSeptember 14, 1885
DiedDecember 11, 1949(64)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

Photos

Moore Marriott in Victory (1928)
Moore Marriott in Carry On! (1927)
Moore Marriott in Passion Island (1927)
Moore Marriott, Graham Moffatt, and Nova Pilbeam in Cheer Boys Cheer (1939)

Known for

Will Hay, Moore Marriott, and Graham Moffatt in Oh, Mr. Porter! (1937)
Oh, Mr. Porter!
7.4
  • Jeremiah Harbottle
  • 1937
Ask a Policeman (1939)
Ask a Policeman
7.4
  • Harbottle
  • 1939
Huntingtower (1927)
Huntingtower
6.7
  • Speidel
  • 1927
Sweeney Todd (1928)
Sweeney Todd
6.6
  • Sweeney Todd
  • 1928

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actor

  • High Jinks in Society (1949)
    High Jinks in Society
    • Grandpa
    • 1949
  • The History of Mr. Polly (1949)
    The History of Mr. Polly
    • Uncle Pentstemon
    • 1949
  • The Hills of Donegal (1947)
    The Hills of Donegal
    • Old Jake
    • 1947
  • Felix Aylmer, Robert Beatty, Nova Pilbeam, and Carol Raye in Green Fingers (1947)
    Green Fingers
    • Pickles
    • 1947
  • The Root of All Evil (1947)
    The Root of All Evil
    • William Scholes
    • 1947
  • Alastair Sim in Green for Danger (1946)
    Green for Danger
    • The Patients: Joseph Higgins
    • 1946
  • What's the Next Job? (1945)
    What's the Next Job?
    • Harold Wright
    • Short
    • 1945
  • The Agitator (1945)
    The Agitator
    • Ben Duckett
    • 1945
  • I'll Be Your Sweetheart (1945)
    I'll Be Your Sweetheart
    • George Le Brunn
    • 1945
  • A Place of One's Own (1945)
    A Place of One's Own
    • George
    • 1945
  • Richard Greene and Patricia Medina in Don't Take It to Heart! (1944)
    Don't Take It to Heart!
    • Granfer
    • 1944
  • Robert Beatty and Judy Kelly in It Happened One Sunday (1944)
    It Happened One Sunday
    • Hospital Porter (as George Moore Marriott)
    • 1944
  • Time Flies (1944)
    Time Flies
    • A Soothsayer
    • 1944
  • Millions Like Us (1943)
    Millions Like Us
    • Jim Crowson
    • 1943
  • Back-Room Boy (1942)
    Back-Room Boy
    • Jerry
    • 1942

Writer

  • A Maid of the Alps
    • play (as George Moore Marriott)
    • Short
    • 1912

Personal details

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  • Alternative names
    • G. Moore Marriott
  • Born
    • September 14, 1885
    • West Drayton, Hillingdon, Middlesex, England, UK
  • Died
    • December 11, 1949
    • London, England, UK(pneumonia and heart failure)
  • Publicity listings
    • 1 Print Biography
    • 1 Portrayal
    • 2 Articles

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    Toothless in real life, Marriott carried around four different sets of false teeth in order to achieve variety in his characters.
  • Trademark
      Often played characters older than what he was, most notably as "Harbottle" in the Will Hay comedies.

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