Monty Woolley
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Monty Woolley (August 17, 1888 - May 6, 1963) was an American actor. Born Edgar Montillion Woolley in New York City, Woolley was a professor and lecturer at Yale University (one of his students was Thornton Wilder) who began acting on Broadway in 1936.
He was typecast as the wasp-tongued, supercilious sophisticate. His most famous role is that of the cranky radio wag forced to stay immobile because of a seemingly-injured hip 1942's The Man Who Came to Dinner, which he had performed onstage before taking it to Hollywood, a caricature of radio and press celebrity of the 1930s and 1940s Alexander Woollcott.
He was a intimate friend of Cole Porter while a student at Yale and in later years. They enjoyed many amusing disreputable adventures together in New York and on foreign travels. He played himself in Warner Bros.' pseudo-biopic about Cole Porter's life, "Night and Day" (1946), a highly fictionalized account of Porter's very unorthodox professional and personal life.
[edit] Academy Awards and Nominations
- 1945 - Nominated - Best Actor in a Supporting Role - Since You Went Away
- 1943 - Nominated - Best Actor in a Leading Role - The Pied Piper
Woolley has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6542 Hollywood Blvd.