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{{about|the actor|other people with the name George Sanders|George Sanders (disambiguation)}}
<noinclude>
{{Infobox actor
{{topic|Albums}}
| bgcolour = silver
{{topic|Songs}}
| name = George Sanders
{{deletionlist|Albums and songs}}
| image = George Sanders in Ghost and Mrs Muir trailer headcrop.jpg
;Related deletion sorting:
| imagesize = 200px
*[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Deletion sorting/Music|Music]]
| caption = as ''Miles Fairley'' in the trailer for<br>''[[The Ghost and Mrs. Muir]]'' (1947)
*[[Wikipedia:WikiProject Deletion sorting/Bands and musicians|Bands and musicians]]
| birthdate = {{birth date|1906|7|3|mf=y}}
</noinclude>
| birthname = George Henry Sanders
| location = [[Saint Petersburg]], [[Russia]]
| deathdate = {{death date and age|1972|4|25|1906|7|3|mf=y}}
| deathplace =[[Castelldefels]], [[Barcelona]], [[Spain]]
| yearsactive = {{fy|1929}}&ndash;{{fy|1972}}
| spouse = [[Susan Larson]]<br/>''(m. October 27, 1940, div. December 10, 1946)''<br>[[Zsa Zsa Gabor]]<br/>''(m. April 2, 1949, div. April 2, 1954)''<br>[[Benita Hume]]<br/>''(m. February 10, 1959, died November 1, 1967)''<br>[[Magda Gabor]]<br/>''(m. December 4, 1970, div. January 16, 1971)''
|domesticpartner =Lorraine Chanel<br/>''(1968-1972)''
| academyawards = '''[[Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor|Best Supporting Actor]]'''<br>1950 ''[[All About Eve]]''
}}
'''George Henry Sanders''' (July 3, {{fy|1906}}&ndash;April 25, {{fy|1972}}) was an [[Academy Award]]-winning [[British people|English]] film and television [[actor]].


<!--spacing, please do not remove-->
==Albums and songs==
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{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Återförödelse (album)}}
{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Zajdi, zajdi, jasno sonce}}
{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Roll On (Kid Rock song) (2nd nomination)}}
{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Lost Boys: The Tribe (soundtrack)}}
{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Winnie the Pooh (song)}}
{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Slipknot Demo}}
{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Supa Ugly}}
{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Children In Pieces}}
{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/My Dearest Love}}
{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Aeveron}}
{{Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Midnight Life (album)}}


==Early life==
==Album and Song Proposed deletions==
Sanders was born in [[Saint Petersburg]], [[Russia]], of [[English people|English]] parents. In 1917, at the outbreak of the [[Russian Revolution of 1917|Russian Revolution]], when Sanders was 11, the family returned to [[England]] and, like his brother, he attended [[Brighton College]], a boys' [[independent school]] in [[Brighton]]. He then attended [[University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology|Manchester Technical College]] in [[Manchester]], [[England]]. After graduation he worked in an advertising agency. It was there that the company secretary, an aspiring actress named [[Greer Garson]], suggested to him a career in acting. Sanders' look-alike older brother, [[Tom Conway]], was also a movie actor, to whom Sanders later handed over the role of [[The Falcon (literary character)|The Falcon]] in ''[[The Falcon's Brother]]'' (1942). The only other film in which the two real-life brothers appeared together was ''[[Death of a Scoundrel]]'' (1956). In both films they played brothers.
*{{prodded|I Looked At You|2008-04-19}}
<!--''no articles [[WP:PROD|proposed for deletion]] at this time''-->
*{{prodded|Moby songs in other media|2007-12-25|}}


==Career==
*{{prodded|A06 Vs. AIDS EP|2007-12-21|}}
Sanders made his British film debut in 1929 and, after a series of British films, made his American debut in 1936, in the film ''[[Lloyd's of London (movie)|Lloyd's of London]]'' as Lord Everett Stacy. In his films, he was known for his smooth, upper-crust English accent. His British accent and sensibilities, combined with his suave, snobbish, and somewhat menacing air, were utilised in American films throughout the next decade. He played supporting roles in prestige productions such as ''[[Rebecca (film)|Rebecca]]'', in which he joined forces with [[Judith Anderson]] in her persecution of [[Joan Fontaine]]. He also played leading roles in less high-profile pictures such as ''[[Rage in Heaven]].'' During this time he was also the lead in both [[The Falcon (literary character)|The Falcon]] and [[Simon Templar|The Saint]] film series, and also played [[Lord Henry Wotton]] in a film version of ''[[The Picture of Dorian Gray]].'' In 1947 he co-starred with [[Gene Tierney]] and [[Rex Harrison]] in ''[[The Ghost and Mrs. Muir]].'' That same year he gave one of his best performances as the lead in the little-known [[Albert Lewin]] directed film ''[[The Private Affairs of Bel Ami]]'', based on a De Maupassant short story, opposite [[Angela Lansbury]].
*{{prodded|B. Darvill's Wild West Show|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Breed 77 (album)|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Composition No. 1|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Breakin' Up|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Demonstration (EP)|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Dying to Say This to You EP|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Euromix 7|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Fire It Up ! (EP)|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Futile (EP)|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Her Name was Alex (Robbi McMillen EP)|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Live at the Loft|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Lawn Funeral EP|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Morbid Angel's eighth studio album|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|MilkinSorgin EP|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Promo 2003|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Promo CD|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Raindrops Rainbow EP|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Really Something EP|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Selections (Shaye EP)|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Showbread Promotional EP|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Something Wicked This Way Comes EP|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Snails (The Format album)|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Something to Lust About|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Statement of Intent|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|The Classic (112 album)|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|This Is Me- EP|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|Wake Up, O Sleeper|2007-12-21|}}
*{{prodded|The Mystery|2007-12-21|}}


[[Image:Foreign Correspondent trailer 12.jpg|thumb|250px|left|in the trailer for [[Alfred Hitchcock]]'s<br>''[[Foreign Correspondent]]'' ({{fy|1940}})]]
*{{prodded|Yakusoku wa Iranai|2007-12-19|}}
In 1950 Sanders gave his most widely recognised performance, and achieved his greatest success, as the acerbic, cold-blooded theatre critic Addison DeWitt in ''[[All About Eve]],'' winning an [[Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor]].
*{{prodded|Yubiwa|2007-12-19|}}


He moved into the field of [[television]] and was responsible for the successful series ''George Sanders Mystery Theatre.'' Sanders played an upper crust English villain, G. Emory Partridge, in a 1965 ''[[The Man From U.N.C.L.E.]]'' episode, "The Gazebo in the Maze Affair" and reprised the role later that year in "The Yukon Affair." He also portrayed [[Mr. Freeze]] in two episodes of the 1960s live-action ''[[Batman (TV series)|Batman]]'' TV series.
*{{prodded|Crank dat homeless man|2007-12-15|}}


Later, he provided the voice for the malevolent [[Shere Khan]] in the [[Walt Disney]] production of ''[[The Jungle Book (1967 film)|The Jungle Book]].'' One of Sanders's final screen roles was in the 1972 feature film version of the popular television series ''[[Doomwatch]].''
*{{prodded|A Little Piece of Heaven|2007-12-14|}}

*{{prodded|Bolga Zohdoomah|2007-12-14|}}
Sanders' smooth voice, urbane manner, and upper-class British accent were the inspiration for the [[Peter Sellers]]' character "[[Hercules Grytpype-Thynne]]" in the famous [[BBC]] radio comedy series ''[[The Goon Show]].'' Sellers and Sanders appeared together in the [[Pink Panther]] sequel, ''[[A Shot in the Dark]].''
*{{prodded|Bordel ambiant|2007-12-14|}}

*{{prodded|Happy Is a Yuppie Word|2007-12-14|}}
[[Image:George sanders black swan 1.jpg|thumb|225px|right|as ''Captain Billy Leech'' in the trailer for ''[[The Black Swan (film)|The Black Swan]]'' ({{fy|1942}})]]
*{{prodded|Kryptonite (Mario song)|2007-12-14|}}
He was honoured with two stars on the [[Hollywood Walk of Fame]]: for motion pictures at 1636 Vine St, and for television at 7007 Hollywood Blvd. In popular culture, he is mentioned in [[The Kinks]]' song "[[Celluloid Heroes]]" and his ghost makes an appearance in [[Clive Barker]]'s 2001 novel ''[[Coldheart Canyon]]''.
----

<div class="references-small">
==Writing and music==
''for occasional archiving''
Sanders has two crime novels to his credit: ''[[Crime on My Hands]]'' (1944, written in the first person and mentioning his "Saint" and "Falcon" movies) and ''[[Stranger at Home]]'' (1946). These were published simply to cash in on his screen success, and both were ghostwritten: the former by [[Craig Rice]], the latter by [[Leigh Brackett]].
*{{prodded|Ammunition (album)|2007-12-12|Deleted}}

*{{prodded|Babylon (album 2003)|2007-12-15|Deleted}}
[[Image:George Sanders in The Picture of Dorian Gray trailer.jpg|thumb|left|215px|as ''Lord Henry Wotton'' in the trailer for ''[[The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945 film)|The Picture of Dorian Gray]]'' ({{fy|1945}})]]
*{{prodded|Eeyore (song)|2007-12-15|Kept; subsequently taken to AFD}}
In 1958 Sanders recorded an album entitled ''[[The George Sanders Touch: Songs for the Lovely Lady]]''. Released by [[ABC-Paramount Records]], the album offered lush string arrangements of romantic ballads, crooned by Sanders in a persuasive baritone. He went to great lengths to get himself signed to sing in ''[[South Pacific (musical)|South Pacific]]'', but was overwhelmed with anxiety over the role and quickly dropped out. Sanders' singing voice can be heard in ''[[Call Me Madam]]'' and Disney's ''The Jungle Book'' as [[Shere Khan]]. He signed for the role of Sheridan Whiteside in the stage musical ''[[Sherry!]]'' (1967) based on the [[George S. Kaufman|Kaufman]] - [[Moss Hart|Hart]] play ''[[The Man Who Came to Dinner]]'', but felt overwhelmed by the demands of the production and resigned when his wife, actress [[Benita Hume]], found she had terminal bone cancer.
*{{prodded|I'm Still At It|2007-12-01|Kept}}

*{{prodded|Night (song)|2007-12-15|Deleted}}
===Personal life===
*{{prodded|Stephanie McIntosh's second studio album|2007-12-15|Deleted}}
On [[27 October]] [[1940]], Sanders married Susan Larson. The marriage ended in divorce in 1949. From 1949 until 1954, Sanders was married to the Hungarian actress [[Zsa Zsa Gabor]]. (In 1956 he and Gabor starred together in the film ''[[Death of a Scoundrel]]''.) On [[10 February]] [[1959]] Sanders married actress [[Benita Hume]], the widow of actor [[Ronald Colman]]. Benita Hume died in 1967. Sanders' final marriage, on [[4 December]] [[1970]], was to Magda Gabor, the older sister of his second wife; the marriage lasted only 6 weeks. Following this he began to drink heavily.
</div>

His autobiography, ''Memoirs of a Professional Cad,'' was published in 1960 and received critical praise for its [[wit]]. Sanders, himself, suggested the title ''A Dreadful Man'' for the biography of him later written by [[Brian Aherne]] and published in 1979.

[[Image:George Sanders in All About Eve trailer.jpg|thumb|215px|as ''Addison DeWitt'' in the trailer for<br>''[[All About Eve]]'' ({{fy|1950}})]]
In his later years, Sanders suffered from bewilderment and bouts of anger, both made worse by health problems. He was losing his balance, among other things, and can actually be seen visibly teetering in his very last films. He also had a minor [[stroke]], according to correspondence quoted in the book of his friend and biographer [[Brian Aherne]]. His latest girlfriend, a Mexican woman, much younger than himself, induced him to sell his beloved house in [[Majorca]], [[Spain]] - an act which he regretted bitterly afterwards. From then on, he drifted. But house or no house, what stands out is that he couldn't bear the idea of losing his [[health]], of being dependent on someone else's care. By this time Sanders was fed up with life anyway. It was around this time that he dragged his [[grand piano]] out onto the lawn and smashed it to pieces with an axe because he couldn't play it anymore.

===Death===
On [[April 23]], [[1972]], he checked into a hotel in [[Castelldefels]], a coastal town near [[Barcelona, Spain]]. He was found dead two days later, along with five empty bottles of [[Nembutal]]. Sanders was 65 years old. He left behind a [[suicide note]] that read:

{{quote|''Dear World, I am leaving because I am bored. I feel I have lived long enough. I am leaving you with your worries in this sweet cesspool. Good luck.''}}

His friend [[David Niven]] recorded in his autobiography ''Bring On The Empty Horses'' that Sanders had predicted, many years earlier, in 1937 at age 31, that he would commit [[suicide]] at the age of 65. In 1972, he fulfilled this prediction.

Sanders' body was [[cremation|cremated]] and the ashes were scattered in the [[English Channel]].

==Filmography==
{{col-begin}}
{{col-break}}
* ''[[Strange Cargo (1929 film)|Strange Cargo]]'' ([[1929 in film|1929]])
* ''[[Love, Life and Laughter]]'' ([[1934 in film|1934]])
* ''[[Dishonor Bright]]'' ([[1936 in film|1936]])
* ''[[Dishonour Bright]]'' (1936)
* ''[[Find the Lady]]'' (1936)
* ''[[Lloyd's of London (film)|Lloyd's of London]]'' (1936)
* ''[[Strange Cargo (1936 film)|Strange Cargo]] (1936)
* ''[[The Man Who Could Work Miracles]]'' (1936)
* ''[[Things to Come]]'' (1936) (extra)
* ''[[Lancer Spy]]'' ([[1937 in film|1937]])
* ''[[Love is News]]'' (1937)
* ''[[Slave Ship (1937 film)|Slave Ship]]'' (1937)
* ''[[The Lady Escapes]]'' (1937)
* ''[[Four Men and a Prayer]]'' ([[1938 in film|1938]])
* ''[[International Settlement]]'' (1938)
* ''[[Allegheny Uprising]]'' ([[1939 in film|1939]])
* ''[[Confessions of a Nazi Spy]]'' (1939)
* ''[[Mr. Moto's Last Warning]]'' (1939)
* ''[[Nurse Edith Cavell]]'' (1939)
* ''[[So This is London]]'' (1939)
* ''[[The Outsider]]'' (1939)
* ''[[The Saint Strikes Back]]'' (1939)
* ''[[The Saint in London]]'' (1939)
* ''[[Bitter Sweet]]'' ([[1940 in film|1940]])
* ''[[Foreign Correspondent (film)|Foreign Correspondent]]'' (1940)
* ''[[Green Hell]]'' (1940)
* ''[[Rebecca (film)|Rebecca]]'' (1940)
* ''[[The House of Seven Gables]]'' (1940)
* ''[[The Saint Takes Over]]'' (1940)
* ''[[The Saint's Double Trouble]]'' (1940)
* ''[[A Date with the Falcon]]'' ([[1941 in film|1941]])
* ''[[Man Hunt]]'' (1941)
* ''[[Rage in Heaven]]'' (1941)
* ''[[Sundown]]'' (1941)
* ''[[The Gay Falcon]]'' (1941)
* ''[[The Saint in Palm Springs]]'' (1941)
* ''[[The Son of Monte Cristo]]'' (1941)
* ''[[Her Cardboard Lover]]'' ([[1942 in film|1942]])
* ''[[Quiet Please, Murder]]'' (1942)
* ''[[Son of Fury: The Story of Benjamin Blake]] (1942)
* ''[[Tales of Manhattan]]'' (1942)
* ''[[The Black Swan]]'' (1942)
* ''[[The Falcon Takes Over]]'' (1942)
* ''[[The Falcon's Brother]]'' (1942)
* ''[[Appointment in Berlin]]'' ([[1943 in film|1943]])
* ''[[Paris After Dark]]'' (1943)
* ''[[The Moon and Sixpence]]'' (1943)
* ''[[They Came to Blow Up America]]'' (1943)
* ''[[This Land Is Mine]]'' (1943)
* ''[[Action in Arabia]]'' ([[1944 in film|1944]])
* ''[[Summer Storm]]'' (1944)
* ''[[The Lodger (1944 film)|The Lodger]]'' (1944)
* ''[[Hangover Square]]'' ([[1945 in film|1945]])
* ''[[The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945 film)|The Picture of Dorian Gray]]'' (1945)
* ''[[The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry]]'' (1945)
* ''[[A Scandal in Paris]]'' ([[1946 in film|1946]])
* ''[[The Strange Woman]]'' (1946)
* ''[[Forever Amber (film)|Forever Amber]]'' ([[1947 in film|1947]])
* ''[[Lured]]'' (1947)
* ''[[The Ghost and Mrs. Muir]]'' (1947)
* ''[[The Private Affairs of Bel Ami]]'' (1947)
* ''[[Blackjack(1949 film)|Blackjack]]'' ([[1949 in film|1949]])
* ''[[Samson and Delilah (1949 film)|Samson and Delilah]]'' (1949)
* ''[[The Fan (1949 film)|The Fan]]'' (1949)
* ''[[All About Eve]]'' ([[1950 in film|1950]])
* ''[[Jack, el Negro]]'' (1950)
* ''[[I Can Get It for You Wholesale (film)|I Can Get It for You Wholesale]]'' ({{fy|1951}})
{{col-break}}
* ''[[Kentucky Jubilee]]'' (1951)
* ''[[The Light Touch]]'' (1951)
* ''[[Assignment-Paris]]'' ([[1952 in film|1952]])
* ''[[Hold That Line]]'' (1952)
* ''[[Ivanhoe]]'' (1952)
* ''[[Call Me Madam]]'' ([[1953 in film|1953]])
* ''[[Run for the Hills]]'' (1953)
* ''[[Journey to Italy]]'' (''Viaggio in Italia'') (1953)
* ''[[King Richard and the Crusaders]]'' ([[1954 in film|1954]])
* ''[[Witness to Murder]]'' (1954)
* ''[[Jupiter's Darling (film)|Jupiter's Darling]]'' ([[1955 in film|1955]])
* ''[[Moonfleet (1955 film)|Moonfleet]]'' (1955)
* ''[[Portrait for Murder]]'' (1955)
* ''[[The Big Tip Off]]'' (1955)
* ''[[The King's Thief]]'' (1955)
* ''[[The Scarlet Coat]]'' (1955)
* ''[[Death of a Scoundrel]]'' ([[1956 in film|1956]])
* ''[[Ford Star Jubilee: You're the Top]]'' (1956)
* ''[[Never Say Goodbye (film)|Never Say Goodbye]]'' (1956)
* ''[[That Certain Feeling]]'' (1956)
* ''[[While the City Sleeps (1956 film)|While the City Sleeps]]'' (1956)
* ''[[The Seventh Sin]]'' ([[1957 in film|1957]])
* ''[[That Kind of Woman]]'' ([[1958 in film|1958]])
* ''[[From the Earth to the Moon (film)|From the Earth to the Moon]]'' (1958)
* ''[[Outcasts of the City]]'' (1958)
* ''[[The Whole Truth (1958 film)|The Whole Truth]]'' (1958)
* ''[[Solomon and Sheba (1959 film)|Solomon and Sheba]]'' ([[1959 in film|1959]])
* ''[[That Kind of Woman]]'' (1959)
* ''[[A Touch of Larceny]]'' ([[1960 in film|1960]])
* ''[[Bluebeard's Ten Honeymoons]]'' (1960)
* ''[[Cone of Silence (1960 film)|Cone of Silence]]'' (1960)
* ''[[The Last Voyage]]'' (1960)
* ''[[Village of the Damned (1960 film)|Village of the Damned]]'' (1960)
* ''[[Five Golden Hours]] ([[1961 in film|1961]])
* ''[[Gli Invasori]] (1961)
* ''[[Le Rendez-Vous]] (1961)
* ''[[The Rebel (1961 film)|The Rebel]]'' (aka ''[[The Rebel (1961 film)|Call Me Genius]]'' (1961))
* ''[[In Search of the Castaways]]'' ([[1962 in film|1962]])
* ''[[Operation Snatch]]'' (1962)
* ''[[Cairo]]'' ([[1963 in film|1963]])
* ''[[The Cracksman]]'' (1963)
* ''[[A Shot in the Dark]]'' ([[1964 in film|1964]])
* ''[[Dark Purpose]]'' (1964)
* ''[[Last Plane to Baalbeck]]'' ([[1965 in film|1965]])
* ''[[The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders]]'' (1965)
* ''[[The Billionaire]]'' (1965)
* ''[[The Golden Head]]'' (1965)
* ''[[Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea: The Traitor]]'' (1965)
* ''[[The Quiller Memorandum]]'' ([[1966 in film|1966]])
* ''[[Trunk to Cairo]]'' (1966)
* ''[[Good Times (film)|Good Times]]'' ([[1967 in film|1967]])
* ''[[Rey de Africa]]'' (1967)
* ''[[The Jungle Book (1967 film)|The Jungle Book]]'' (1967) (voice)
* ''[[Warning Shot]]'' (1967)
* ''[[The Girl from Rio]]'' aka ''[[The Seven Secrets of Sumuru]]'',''[[La Ciudad sin Hombres]]'' ({{fy|1968}})
* ''[[One Step to Hell]]'' aka ''[[Caccia ai violenti]]'' ({{fy|1969}})
* ''[[The Best House In London]]'' (1969)
* ''[[The Body Stealers]]'' (1969)
* ''[[The Candy Man]]'' (1969)
* ''[[Thin Air]]'' (1969)
* ''[[The Night of the Assassins]]'' (1970)
* ''[[The Kremlin Letter]]'' ([[1970 in film|1970]])
* ''[[Endless Night (film)|Endless Night]]'' ([[1971 in film|1971]])
* ''[[Mission: Impossible: The Merchant]]'' (1971)
* ''[[Psychomania]]'' (1971)
* ''[[Doomwatch]]'' ([[1972 in film|1972]])
{{col-end}}

[[Image:George Sanders in Rage in Heaven trailer.jpg|thumb|225px|as ''Ward Andrews'' in the trailer for ''[[Rage in Heaven]]'' (1941)]]

== Television ==
* ''[[Screen Directors Playhouse]]'' ({{ytv|1956}})
* ''[[The George Sanders Mystery Theater]]'' ({{ytv|1957}})
* ''[[Voyage To The The Bottom Of The Sea]]'' ({{ytv|1965}})
* ''[[The Rogues]]'' (1965)
* ''[[The Man From U.N.C.L.E.]]'' "The Gazebo in the Maze Affair" and "The Yukon Affair" (1965)
* ''[[Daniel Boone]]''({{fy|1966}})
* ''[[Batman (TV series)]]'' "[[Mr. Freeze]]" (1966)
* ''[[Mission Impossible]]'' ({{ytv|1971}})

== Broadway ==
* ''[[Conversation Piece (musical)|Conversation Piece]]'', at the 44th Street Theatre, 1934

==References==
===Notes===
{{reflist}}

===Bibliography===
*{{Citation
| last =Aherne
| first =Brian
| author-link =
| title =A Dreadful Man
| place =
| publisher =Simon & Schuster
| year =1979
| isbn =0671247972
}}
*{{Citation
| last =Sanders
| first =George
| author-link =
| title =Memoirs of a Professional Cad
| place =
| publisher =G.P. Putnam's Sons
| year =1960
| isbn =0810825791
}}
*{{Citation
| last =Vanderbeets
| first =Richard
| author-link =
| title =George Sanders: An Exhausted Life
| place =
| publisher =Madison Books
| year =1990
| isbn =0819178063
}}

==External links==
{{Commons|George Sanders}}
{{wikiquote|George Sanders}}
* {{imdb name|0001695|George Sanders}}
* {{ibdb name|59023|George Sanders}}
* {{tcmdb name|169430|George Sanders}}
* {{findagrave|6924295|George Sanders}}
* [http://www.freewebs.com/georgesanders/ George Sanders :: Official Website]

{{start box}}{{s-ach}}
{{succession box
| title=[[Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor]]
| before=[[Dean Jagger]]<br>for ''[[Twelve O'Clock High]]''
| years=1950<br>'''for ''[[All About Eve]]'' '''
| after=[[Karl Malden]]<br>for ''[[A Streetcar Named Desire (film)|A Streetcar Named Desire]]''
}}
{{end box}}

{{1966-1968 Batman television series}}

{{Persondata
|NAME= Sanders, George
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
|SHORT DESCRIPTION=actor
|DATE OF BIRTH= [[July 3]] [[1906]]
|PLACE OF BIRTH= [[St. Petersburg]], [[Russia]]
|DATE OF DEATH= [[April 25]] [[1972]]
|PLACE OF DEATH= [[Castelldefels]], [[Barcelona]], [[Spain]]
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sanders, George}}
[[Category:1906 births]]
[[Category:1972 deaths]]
[[Category:Actors who committed suicide]]
[[Category:Best Supporting Actor Academy Award winners]]
[[Category:Drug-related deaths in Spain]]
[[Category:Drug-related suicides]]
[[Category:English actors]]
[[Category:English film actors]]
[[Category:English television actors]]
[[Category:English voice actors]]
[[Category:English actor-singers]]
[[Category:People from Saint Petersburg]]
[[Category:People from Brighton]]
[[Category:Old Brightonians]]
[[Category:Suicides in Spain]]

[[de:George Sanders (Schauspieler)]]
[[es:George Sanders]]
[[fr:George Sanders]]
[[id:George Sanders (pemeran)]]
[[it:George Sanders]]
[[nl:George Sanders]]
[[ja:ジョージ・サンダース]]
[[no:George Sanders]]
[[pl:George Sanders]]
[[pt:George Sanders]]
[[ro:George Sanders]]
[[fi:George Sanders]]
[[sv:George Sanders]]

Revision as of 09:02, 11 October 2008

George Sanders
as Miles Fairley in the trailer for
The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947)
Born
George Henry Sanders
Years activeTemplate:FyTemplate:Fy
Spouse(s)Susan Larson
(m. October 27, 1940, div. December 10, 1946)
Zsa Zsa Gabor
(m. April 2, 1949, div. April 2, 1954)
Benita Hume
(m. February 10, 1959, died November 1, 1967)
Magda Gabor
(m. December 4, 1970, div. January 16, 1971)
Partner(s)Lorraine Chanel
(1968-1972)

George Henry Sanders (July 3, Template:Fy–April 25, Template:Fy) was an Academy Award-winning English film and television actor.


Early life

Sanders was born in Saint Petersburg, Russia, of English parents. In 1917, at the outbreak of the Russian Revolution, when Sanders was 11, the family returned to England and, like his brother, he attended Brighton College, a boys' independent school in Brighton. He then attended Manchester Technical College in Manchester, England. After graduation he worked in an advertising agency. It was there that the company secretary, an aspiring actress named Greer Garson, suggested to him a career in acting. Sanders' look-alike older brother, Tom Conway, was also a movie actor, to whom Sanders later handed over the role of The Falcon in The Falcon's Brother (1942). The only other film in which the two real-life brothers appeared together was Death of a Scoundrel (1956). In both films they played brothers.

Career

Sanders made his British film debut in 1929 and, after a series of British films, made his American debut in 1936, in the film Lloyd's of London as Lord Everett Stacy. In his films, he was known for his smooth, upper-crust English accent. His British accent and sensibilities, combined with his suave, snobbish, and somewhat menacing air, were utilised in American films throughout the next decade. He played supporting roles in prestige productions such as Rebecca, in which he joined forces with Judith Anderson in her persecution of Joan Fontaine. He also played leading roles in less high-profile pictures such as Rage in Heaven. During this time he was also the lead in both The Falcon and The Saint film series, and also played Lord Henry Wotton in a film version of The Picture of Dorian Gray. In 1947 he co-starred with Gene Tierney and Rex Harrison in The Ghost and Mrs. Muir. That same year he gave one of his best performances as the lead in the little-known Albert Lewin directed film The Private Affairs of Bel Ami, based on a De Maupassant short story, opposite Angela Lansbury.

in the trailer for Alfred Hitchcock's
Foreign Correspondent (Template:Fy)

In 1950 Sanders gave his most widely recognised performance, and achieved his greatest success, as the acerbic, cold-blooded theatre critic Addison DeWitt in All About Eve, winning an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.

He moved into the field of television and was responsible for the successful series George Sanders Mystery Theatre. Sanders played an upper crust English villain, G. Emory Partridge, in a 1965 The Man From U.N.C.L.E. episode, "The Gazebo in the Maze Affair" and reprised the role later that year in "The Yukon Affair." He also portrayed Mr. Freeze in two episodes of the 1960s live-action Batman TV series.

Later, he provided the voice for the malevolent Shere Khan in the Walt Disney production of The Jungle Book. One of Sanders's final screen roles was in the 1972 feature film version of the popular television series Doomwatch.

Sanders' smooth voice, urbane manner, and upper-class British accent were the inspiration for the Peter Sellers' character "Hercules Grytpype-Thynne" in the famous BBC radio comedy series The Goon Show. Sellers and Sanders appeared together in the Pink Panther sequel, A Shot in the Dark.

as Captain Billy Leech in the trailer for The Black Swan (Template:Fy)

He was honoured with two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: for motion pictures at 1636 Vine St, and for television at 7007 Hollywood Blvd. In popular culture, he is mentioned in The Kinks' song "Celluloid Heroes" and his ghost makes an appearance in Clive Barker's 2001 novel Coldheart Canyon.

Writing and music

Sanders has two crime novels to his credit: Crime on My Hands (1944, written in the first person and mentioning his "Saint" and "Falcon" movies) and Stranger at Home (1946). These were published simply to cash in on his screen success, and both were ghostwritten: the former by Craig Rice, the latter by Leigh Brackett.

as Lord Henry Wotton in the trailer for The Picture of Dorian Gray (Template:Fy)

In 1958 Sanders recorded an album entitled The George Sanders Touch: Songs for the Lovely Lady. Released by ABC-Paramount Records, the album offered lush string arrangements of romantic ballads, crooned by Sanders in a persuasive baritone. He went to great lengths to get himself signed to sing in South Pacific, but was overwhelmed with anxiety over the role and quickly dropped out. Sanders' singing voice can be heard in Call Me Madam and Disney's The Jungle Book as Shere Khan. He signed for the role of Sheridan Whiteside in the stage musical Sherry! (1967) based on the Kaufman - Hart play The Man Who Came to Dinner, but felt overwhelmed by the demands of the production and resigned when his wife, actress Benita Hume, found she had terminal bone cancer.

Personal life

On 27 October 1940, Sanders married Susan Larson. The marriage ended in divorce in 1949. From 1949 until 1954, Sanders was married to the Hungarian actress Zsa Zsa Gabor. (In 1956 he and Gabor starred together in the film Death of a Scoundrel.) On 10 February 1959 Sanders married actress Benita Hume, the widow of actor Ronald Colman. Benita Hume died in 1967. Sanders' final marriage, on 4 December 1970, was to Magda Gabor, the older sister of his second wife; the marriage lasted only 6 weeks. Following this he began to drink heavily.

His autobiography, Memoirs of a Professional Cad, was published in 1960 and received critical praise for its wit. Sanders, himself, suggested the title A Dreadful Man for the biography of him later written by Brian Aherne and published in 1979.

as Addison DeWitt in the trailer for
All About Eve (Template:Fy)

In his later years, Sanders suffered from bewilderment and bouts of anger, both made worse by health problems. He was losing his balance, among other things, and can actually be seen visibly teetering in his very last films. He also had a minor stroke, according to correspondence quoted in the book of his friend and biographer Brian Aherne. His latest girlfriend, a Mexican woman, much younger than himself, induced him to sell his beloved house in Majorca, Spain - an act which he regretted bitterly afterwards. From then on, he drifted. But house or no house, what stands out is that he couldn't bear the idea of losing his health, of being dependent on someone else's care. By this time Sanders was fed up with life anyway. It was around this time that he dragged his grand piano out onto the lawn and smashed it to pieces with an axe because he couldn't play it anymore.

Death

On April 23, 1972, he checked into a hotel in Castelldefels, a coastal town near Barcelona, Spain. He was found dead two days later, along with five empty bottles of Nembutal. Sanders was 65 years old. He left behind a suicide note that read:

Dear World, I am leaving because I am bored. I feel I have lived long enough. I am leaving you with your worries in this sweet cesspool. Good luck.

His friend David Niven recorded in his autobiography Bring On The Empty Horses that Sanders had predicted, many years earlier, in 1937 at age 31, that he would commit suicide at the age of 65. In 1972, he fulfilled this prediction.

Sanders' body was cremated and the ashes were scattered in the English Channel.

Filmography

as Ward Andrews in the trailer for Rage in Heaven (1941)

Television

Broadway

References

Notes

Bibliography

  • Aherne, Brian (1979), A Dreadful Man, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0671247972
  • Sanders, George (1960), Memoirs of a Professional Cad, G.P. Putnam's Sons, ISBN 0810825791
  • Vanderbeets, Richard (1990), George Sanders: An Exhausted Life, Madison Books, ISBN 0819178063

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
1950
for All About Eve
Succeeded by

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