Tom Conway
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Tom Conway | |
Tom Conway |
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Birth name | Thomas Sanders |
Born | September 15, 1904 St. Petersburg, Russia |
Died | April 22, 1967, age 62 Culver City, Los Angeles, USA |
Tom Conway (September 15, 1904 – April 22, 1967) was an English actor. He was born to English parents as Thomas Charles Sanders in St. Petersburg, Russia; his brother was the actor George Sanders. The family eventually moved back to England, where both brothers were educated at Brighton College. According to the IMDB, Tom lost a coin toss with George to decide which of the two of them would change his last name to avoid any confusion with each other.
Conway is remembered today for playing "The Falcon" in ten of that series' entries, taking over from his brother. He also starred in three of film producer Val Lewton's horror films while a contract actor for RKO Pictures, twice playing Dr. Louis Judd in two otherwise unrelated films—Cat People (1942) and The Seventh Victim a year later—even though the character was killed in the first film.
His screen career diminished in the 1950s, but he appeared in a number of English films, on radio, and on television. In 1951, Conway replaced Vincent Price as the star of the radio mystery series The Saint, coincidentally taking on a role that his brother, Sanders, had played on film a decade earlier. In October, 1957, Conway performed as ventriloquist Max Collodi in Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode "The Glass Eye" to critical praise.
Poor eyesight and bouts of alcoholism took a toll on Conway later in his life. His brother stopped all contact with him over his drinking problem.
Though he reportedly amassed a fortune in excess of one million dollars during his Hollywood years, in September of 1965 Conway was reported by newspaper tabloids to be living in a $2-a-day flophouse in Venice, California.
Conway died at the age of 62. His brother George Sanders committed suicide five years later.