西塞尔·帕克 (1897) Cecil Parker
演员
An air of almost smug disdain would hang over his characters like a
grey cloud. Yet he could end up being a ray of sunshine with that
cloud. Stage or screen, comedy or drama, playing butler or Lord
Commander, Englishman Cecil Parker was born in 1897 and took an avid
interest in performing following his discharge from World War I
military service. Making his professional stage bow in 1922, he
appeared in London's West End three years later and by the advent of
sound could be found on film. Not surprisingly he fitted the support
mold perfectly with his raspy, well-bred tones and stuffed-shirt
personality, but by the late 40s he was actually toying with post-war
character stardom with top-billed roles. Such films as Captain Boycott (1947), The Weaker Sex (1948)
and The Chiltern Hundreds (1949), Tony Draws a Horse (1950) and I Believe in You (1952) demonstrated his talent and command.
However, soon he started gaining in the stomach area and losing in the
hair department, so he fell away again to the secondary ranks. His
assisting men of power, position and influence are probably most
recognized in the droll, classic films of Sir Alec Guiness, which
include The Man in the White Suit (1951), Father Brown (1954), The Ladykillers (1955). Parker could be humorously
beleaguered or remotely pernicious and as the years wore on, found
himself more and more in film comedy than anything else, often giving
lift to such dry fare as Indiscreet (1958) and the farce-like slapstick of
The Pure Hell of St. Trinian's (1960) and Carry on Jack (1964). Parker died in 1971.