Tom Walls
Biography
From Wikipedia
Tom Kirby Walls (18 February 1883 – 27 November 1949) was an English stage and film actor, producer and director, best known for presenting and co-starring in the Aldwych farces in the 1920s and for starring in and directing the film adaptations of those plays in the 1930s.
Walls spent his early years as an actor, from 1905, mostly in musical comedy, touring the British provinces, North America and Australia and in the West End. He specialised in comic character roles, typically flirtatious middle aged men. In 1922 he went into management in partnership with the comic actor Leslie Henson. They had an early success in the West End with a long-running farce, Tons of Money, after which Walls commissioned and staged a series of farces at the Aldwych Theatre that ran almost continuously over the next decade. He and his co-star Ralph Lynn were among the most popular British actors of their time.
In addition to his work in the theatre, Walls directed and acted in more than forty films between 1930 and 1949. Some of these were screen versions of the successful stage plays, others were specially-written comedies on similar lines, and there were also serious films, particularly later in Walls's career.
Filmography
The Halfway House
as Capt. Meadows 1944
The Interrupted Journey
as Mr. Clayton 1949
They Met in the Dark
as Christopher Child 1943
Undercover
as Kossan Petrovitch 1943
Spring in Park Lane
as Uncle Joshua Howard 1948
Love Story
as Tom Tanner 1944
While I Live
as Nehemiah 1947
Crackerjack
as Jack Drake 1938
Lady in Danger
as Richard Dexter 1934
Johnny Frenchman
as Net Pomeroy 1945
Me and Marlborough
as John Churchill - Duke of Marlborough 1935
A Cuckoo in the Nest
as Maj. George Bone 1933
Maytime in Mayfair
as Inspector 1949Second Best Bed
as Victor Garnett 1938
Dishonour Bright
as Stephen Champion 1936For Valour
as Doubleday 1937Fighting Stock
as Brig. Gen. Sir Donald Rowley 1935