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James Mason

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James Mason
Image:North by Northwest movie trailer screenshot (27).jpg
Mason in North by Northwest

<tr><td style="text-align:left;">Birth name</td><td>James Neville Mason</td></tr>

Born May 15, 1909
Image:Flag of England (bordered).svg Huddersfield, England, United Kingdom
Died July 27, 1984, age 75
Lausanne, Switzerland

James Neville Mason (May 15, 1909July 27, 1984) was a three-time Academy Award nominated English actor who attained stardom in both British and American films.

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[edit] Early life

Mason was born in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England to John and Mabel Mason; his father was a wealthy merchant. Mason had no formal training as an actor. He studied architecture at Peterhouse, Cambridge but got involved in the theatre in his spare time, before working at the Old Vic theatre in London and with the Gate Company in Dublin.

James Mason Court, a road in the Marsh area of Huddersfield, is named after him.

[edit] Career

From 1935 to 1948 he starred in many British quota quickies. A conscientious objector during World War II, he became immensely popular for his brooding anti-heroes in the Gainsborough series of melodramas of the 1940s, including The Man in Grey and The Wicked Lady. In 1949 he made his first Hollywood film, Caught, and then went on to star in many more feature films and early TV shows. Nominated three times for an Oscar, he never won one.

Mason's distinctive voice enabled him to play a menacing villain as greatly as his good looks assisted him as a leading man. His roles include the declining actor in the 1954 version of A Star Is Born, a mortally wounded terrorist in Odd Man Out (1946), Brutus in the 1953 film of Julius Caesar, General Erwin Rommel twice, once in The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel in 1951, and in The Desert Rats (1953), Captain Nemo in 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954), a suave masterspy in North by Northwest (1959), a determined explorer in Journey to the Center of the Earth (also 1959) and Humbert Humbert in Stanley Kubrick's Lolita (1962). One of his last roles, that of a corrupt lawyer in The Verdict (1982), earned him his third and final Oscar nomination.

[edit] Private life

He was married twice:

James Mason was a devoted lover of animals, particularly cats. He and Pamela Kellino co-authored the book The Cats in Our Lives, which was published in 1949. James Mason wrote most of the book and also illustrated it. In The Cats in Our Lives, he recounted humorous and sometimes touching tales of the cats (as well as a few dogs) he had known and loved.

In the late 1970s, Mason became a mentor to up-and-coming actor Sam Neill, who went on to have a successful career of his own.

James Mason's autobiography, Before I Forget, was published in 1981.

Mason survived a major heart attack in 1959 and died as a result of another on July 27, 1984 in Lausanne, Switzerland. He was cremated, and (after a delay of 16 years) his ashes were buried in Corsier-sur-Vevey, Vaud, Switzerland. His old friend Charlie Chaplin is in a tomb a few steps away.

His son Morgan Mason is married to Belinda Carlisle, the former lead singer of The Go-Go's.

[edit] Popular culture

Graham Kennedy would use an imitation of James' distinctive voice as the default voice for an educated or English person on the Australian game show Blankety Blanks. As a matter of fact, Kennedy used Mason's voice for the first question on the first show.

In 1991, Kelsey Grammer spoofed Mason as Captain Nemo in a skit while hosting Saturday Night Live. During the skit Nemo had to try to explain various units of nautical measurements while fighting off a giant squid.

For his audition for Saturday Night Live in 2005, Bill Hader gave an impersonation as Mason at a donut store trying to redeem an expired coupon.

[edit] Filmography

[edit] External links

de:James Mason es:James Mason fr:James Mason nl:James Mason ja:ジェームズ・メイソン sv:James Mason

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