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IMDbPro

Ivor Novello(1893-1951)

  • Writer
  • Actor
  • Music Department
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Ivor Novello in The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1927)
While his special gifts seemed to lie in music and composing, the dapper, multi-talented Welsh actor Ivor Novello (ne David Ivor Davies), with his leading-man good looks, had a strong affinity for the camera.

Born in Cardiff, Wales, in 1893, he was the son of a tax-collector father and a well-known singing teacher mother. His prodigious musical skills were evident fairly early. Trained at the Magdalen College Choir School on a soprano scholarship, he soon began writing songs under the name Ivor Novello. In his overall career, Novello would write over 250 songs, a large percentage of them uplifting, touchingly sentimental and war-inspired morale boosters. He moved with his family to London in 1914, and became an overnight celebrity after composing the patriotic World War I standard "Keep the Home Fires Burning," which was introduced much later in the film The Lost Squadron (1932).

Novello then switched to pursue acting and debuted with a role in The Call of the Blood (1919) [The Call of the Blood], a French romantic melodrama which earned him promising notices. Other roles that ensured his status as a screen idol followed, including The Man Without Desire (1923), which he produced. He wrote and appeared in the successful 1924 play "The Rat," which transferred quite well to film the following year (The Rat (1925)). This also inspired two sequels -- The Triumph of the Rat (1926) and The Return of the Rat (1929).

The actor's film peak occurred headlining two of Alfred Hitchcock's early suspense thrillers, serving as the put-upon protagonist in both the silent classic The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1927) and the lesser-received Downhill (1927). Novello had a fine, well-modulated speaking voice that transferred easily to talkies. Into the 1930s, he wrote and starred in Symphony in Two Flats (1930) and went on to remake The Phantom Fiend (1932) successfully. During this time he also wrote the dialogue for Tarzan the Ape Man (1932), the first of the jungle series to star Johnny Weissmuller and Maureen O'Sullivan. Novello's last film was Autumn Crocus (1934), after which he decided to devote himself full time to music and theater.

He went on to earn rave reviews for his opulent, romantically melodramatic stagings of "Glamorous Night" (1935), "The Dancing Years" (1939) and "Perchance to Dream" (1945). He wrote eight musicals in all and appeared in six of them, all of them non-singing parts.

His longtime companion of 35 years, actor Robert Andrews, was with Novello when Novello died suddenly on March 6, 1951 of a coronary thrombosis only hours after performing in his own play "The King's Rhapsody." Hugely popular in his time (though virtually unknown in America), Novello's lasting influence on film, theater and especially music cannot be denied.
BornJanuary 15, 1893
DiedMarch 6, 1951(58)
BornJanuary 15, 1893
DiedMarch 6, 1951(58)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

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Known for

Downhill (1927)
Downhill
6.0
  • Writer(as David L'Estrange, uncredited)
  • 1927
The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1927)
The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog
7.3
  • The Lodger
  • 1927
Gosford Park (2001)
Gosford Park
7.2
  • Soundtrack("Waltz of My Heart", "Glamorous Night", "Nuts in May", "The Land of Might-Have-Been", "And Her Mother Came Too", "I Can Give You the Starlight", "What a Duke Should Be?", "Why Isn't It You", "Keep the Home Fires Burning")
  • 2001
Keira Knightley and James McAvoy in Atonement (2007)
Atonement
7.8
  • Soundtrack("Keep the Home Fires Burning")
  • 2007

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Writer



  • Anthony Valentine, Celia Gregory, and Susan Valentine in The Dancing Years (1976)
    The Dancing Years
    8.5
    TV Movie
    • play
    • 1976
  • June Laverick in Musical Playhouse (1959)
    Musical Playhouse
    8.1
    TV Series
    • original play
    • play
    • 1959
  • King's Rhapsody
    TV Movie
    • play
    • 1957
  • Errol Flynn and Anna Neagle in King's Rhapsody (1955)
    King's Rhapsody
    4.7
    • play
    • 1955
  • BBC Sunday-Night Theatre (1950)
    BBC Sunday-Night Theatre
    7.1
    TV Series
    • play
    • 1953
  • Gay's the Word
    TV Movie
    • play
    • 1952
  • The Dancing Years (1950)
    The Dancing Years
    6.0
    • based on the play devised by
    • based on the play written by
    • 1950
  • Kraft Theatre (1947)
    Kraft Theatre
    7.9
    TV Series
    • story
    • 1948
  • Nigel Bruce, Robert Cummings, Ruth Hussey, and Reginald Owen in Free and Easy (1941)
    Free and Easy
    5.9
    • play "The Truth Game"
    • 1941
  • Ruth Chatterton and Anton Walbrook in The Rat (1937)
    The Rat
    6.4
    • play
    • 1937
  • Mary Ellis, Victor Jory, and Otto Kruger in Glamorous Night (1937)
    Glamorous Night
    5.5
    • play
    • 1937
  • I Lived with You (1933)
    I Lived with You
    6.3
    • dialogue
    • play "I Lived with You"
    • story (uncredited)
    • 1933
  • The Phantom Fiend (1932)
    The Phantom Fiend
    5.5
    • Writer (uncredited)
    • 1932
  • Edward Everett Horton, Nora Gregor, and Robert Montgomery in -But the Flesh Is Weak (1932)
    -But the Flesh Is Weak
    5.5
    • dialogue
    • play "Truth Game"
    • 1932
  • Tarzan the Ape Man (1932)
    Tarzan the Ape Man
    6.9
    • dialogue
    • 1932

Actor



  • Autumn Crocus (1934)
    Autumn Crocus
    7.2
    • Andreas Steiner
    • 1934
  • Ivor Novello in Sleeping Car (1933)
    Sleeping Car
    6.5
    • Gaston Bray
    • 1933
  • I Lived with You (1933)
    I Lived with You
    6.3
    • Prince Felix Lenieff
    • 1933
  • The Phantom Fiend (1932)
    The Phantom Fiend
    5.5
    • Angeloff
    • 1932
  • Ruth Chatterton in Once a Lady (1931)
    Once a Lady
    5.9
    • Bennett Cloud
    • 1931
  • Symphony in Two Flats (1930)
    Symphony in Two Flats
    7.6
    • David Kennard
    • 1930
  • Gordon Harker, Ivor Novello, and Mabel Poulton in The Return of the Rat (1929)
    The Return of the Rat
    6.9
    • Pierre Boucheron
    • 1929
  • Der fesche Husar (1928)
    Der fesche Husar
    • Lieutenant Stephen Alrik
    • Feri von Noszty
    • 1928
  • A South Sea Bubble
    • Vernon Winslow
    • 1928
  • Ivor Novello in The Vortex (1928)
    The Vortex
    6.1
    • Nicky Lancaster
    • 1928
  • The Constant Nymph (1928)
    The Constant Nymph
    7.3
    • Lewis Dodd
    • 1928
  • Downhill (1927)
    Downhill
    6.0
    • Roddy Berwick
    • 1927
  • The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1927)
    The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog
    7.3
    • The Lodger
    • 1927
  • Ivor Novello in The Triumph of the Rat (1926)
    The Triumph of the Rat
    6.1
    • Pierre Boucheron
    • The Rat
    • 1926
  • Julius Kupfer-Sachs in The Rat (1925)
    The Rat
    7.0
    • Pierre Boucheron
    • 1925

Music Department



  • Denholm Elliott, Michael Palin, Maggie Smith, and Richard Griffiths in A Private Function (1984)
    A Private Function
    6.5
    • by: "Rose of England": by kind permission of the: Trustees of the Estate of the late Ivor Novello and Samuel French Ltd.
    • 1984
  • Song by Song (1977)
    Song by Song
    7.8
    TV Series
    • lyrics
    • 1980
  • June Laverick in Musical Playhouse (1959)
    Musical Playhouse
    8.1
    TV Series
    • lyrics
    • 1959
  • Alan Melville Takes You from A-Z
    TV Series
    • featuring the music of
    • 1957–1959
  • Errol Flynn and Anna Neagle in King's Rhapsody (1955)
    King's Rhapsody
    4.7
    • music and lyrics by (uncredited)
    • 1955
  • The Dancing Years (1950)
    The Dancing Years
    6.0
    • based on the play composed by
    • composer: songs and incidental music (uncredited)
    • 1950
  • Mary Ellis, Victor Jory, and Otto Kruger in Glamorous Night (1937)
    Glamorous Night
    5.5
    • music by
    • 1937
  • Elstree Calling (1930)
    Elstree Calling
    4.9
    • songwriter: music
    • 1930
  • The Man Without Desire (1923)
    The Man Without Desire
    5.6
    • composer: themes
    • 1923

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative name
    • David L'Estrange
  • Height
    • 5′ 11″ (1.81 m)
  • Born
    • January 15, 1893
    • Cardiff, Wales, UK
  • Died
    • March 6, 1951
    • Aldwych, London, England, UK(coronary thrombosis)
  • Other works
    Stage: Appeared in "Jack and Jill" on Broadway. Musical comedy.
  • Publicity listings
    • 8 Print Biographies
    • 3 Portrayals
    • 9 Articles
    • 2 Magazine Cover Photos

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    Laurence Olivier, Noël Coward and poet/writer Siegfried Sassoon were among his social circle.
  • Quotes
    The beautiful heroine might be thinking, How long must I bury my face in this wretched man's shoulder?

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