Herbert Mundin
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Herbert Mundin (1898 – 1939) was an English-born Hollywood character actor. He was frequently typecast in films as older cheeky eccentrics, a type helped by his jowelled features and cheerful Cockney disposition.
He was born Herbert Thomas Mundin in St Helens, then in Lancashire (now part of Merseyside), on 21 August, 1898. His father was a nomadic, Primitive Methodist home missionary. His family moved within a short time of his birth to St Albans in Hertfordshire (the 1901 census data reveals that the family lived at St Helens Villa, Paxton Road, St Albans; his parents William and Jane apparently naming their house after the town where they first met and where Herbert was born).
Mundin was educated at St Albans School, and joined the Royal Navy during World War I. He began his acting career on the London stage during the 1920s. Mundin first traveled to America on December 18th, 1923 for a series of theatrical engagements in New York. He sailed from Southampton on the RMS Aquitania and described himself in ship’s passenger manifest as 5'7" tall with a fair complexion, brown hair, blue eyes and a scar over his left eye. His big break as an actor was arguably with Gertrude Lawrence and Beatrice Lillie in Charlot's Revue when it appeared on Broadway in 1925.
In 1931, after working in Australia and London, he permanently moved to the US, where he received a contract with Twentieth Century Fox Studios and enjoyed a successful career as a character actor in over 50 films.
Perhaps his most celebrated role was as Much in The Adventures of Robin Hood, alongside Errol Flynn (1938), but other film appearances included Sherlock Holmes with Clive Brook (1932), Adorable with Janet Gaynor (1933), Mutiny on the Bounty with Charles Laughton and Clark Gable (1935), MGM's David Copperfield (1935), Tarzan Escapes with Johnny Weismuller and Maureen O'Sullivan (1936), and Charlie Chan's Secret, also in 1935.
He died in Van Nuys, California in 1939 following a car crash. He was 40 years old.
[edit] External links & sources
- The Herbert Mundin Connection
- Tragic End for Herbert the Great - 1998 article from the Lancashire Evening Telegraph
- Entry on IMDb - the Internet Movie Database