Barnett Parker
Biography
Within the British colony of expatriate actors in Hollywood during the 1930's, Barnett Parker, born 11 September 1886, in Batley, Yorkshire, England, was among the most stereotypical. Harrowgate College-educated, straight-backed, balding and well-intoned, Parker caricatured a multitude of unctuous, stiff-upper-lip butlers, man-servants or waiters, though his performances could, at times, verge on the brink of being camp. When driven to frustration his characters commonly resorted to incoherent twitter or wild gesticulation. Parker was trained under Marie Tempest and George Alexander in England. He first acted on Broadway at the Lyceum Theatre as Wilfred Tavish in Arthur Wing Pinero's "The "Mind the Paint" Girl" in 1912. He was well served with further roles in hit plays like "Hobson's Choice" (1915), "Artists and Models" (1924) and "The Red Robe" (1928). He was at first prone to reject film offers, professing to favor acting on stage. Nonetheless, the celluloid medium eventually beckoned, enticing him to sign with the East Coast-based studio Thanhouser in 1915. He worked in films during the daytime (while treading the boards at night) and quickly landed a plum role as a weak socialite, rescuing Gladys Hulette in Prudence, the Pirate (1916). He was seldom thereafter afforded the opportunity for heroic acts. During the 1930's, he was primarily in demand for small roles as dandified or 'silly ass' Britishers, giving value for money in films like Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936), Personal Property (1937), Live, Love and Learn (1937) and Broadway Melody of 1938 (1937). Looking rather older than his years, Barnett Parker died at the Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles after multiple heart attacks on August 5, 1941.
Known For

The Reluctant Dragon

Mr. Deeds Goes to Town

Marie Antoinette

Libeled Lady

At the Circus

Born to Dance

Babes in Arms

Navy Blue and Gold
All Movies (47)
- Walt Disney's Fables - Vol.62004 · as Dragon (voice) (archive sound) (uncredited)
- The Big Parade of Comedy1964 · as Arthur Trevelyan in 'Personal Property' (arch. foot.) (uncred.)
- New Wine1941 · as The Duke
- Kisses for Breakfast1941 · as Phillips
- The Reluctant Dragon1941 · as Dragon (segment "The Reluctant Dragon") (voice)
- A Man Betrayed1941 · as George
- Tall, Dark and Handsome1941 · as Quentin
- Love Thy Neighbor1940 · as George - Fred's Chauffeur
- One Night in the Tropics1940 · as Thompson, Steve's Butler (uncredited)
- Hullabaloo1940 · as Samuel Stephens
- La Conga Nights1940 · as Hammond
- He Married His Wife1940 · as Huggins
- At the Circus1939 · as Whitcomb
- Babes in Arms1939 · as William
- Hotel for Women1939 · as Photographer
- She Married a Cop1939 · as Bekins, the Butler
- The Girl Downstairs1938 · as Hugo
- Listen, Darling1938 · as Abercrombie
- Marie Antoinette1938 · as Prince de Rohan
- Hold That Kiss1938 · as Maurice
- Sally, Irene and Mary1938 · as Oscar
- Love Is a Headache1938 · as Hotchkiss, Carlotta's Butler
- Navy Blue and Gold1937 · as Graves
- Live, Love and Learn1937 · as Alfredo
- Double Wedding1937 · as Mr. Flint, Margit's Bookkeeper
- Wake Up and Live1937 · as Foster
- Broadway Melody of 19381937 · as Jerry Jason
- The Emperor's Candlesticks1937 · as Albert, Stephan's Butler
- Married Before Breakfast1937 · as Tweed
- Personal Property1937 · as Arthur Trevelyan
- Ready, Willing and Able1937 · as Waiter
- Espionage1937 · as Bill Cordell
- The Last of Mrs. Cheyney1937 · as Purser
- Dangerous Number1937 · as Minehardi
- We Who Are About to Die1937 · as John Barkley
- A Girl's Best Years1936 · as Primrose
- Born to Dance1936 · as Floorwalker
- The General Died at Dawn1936 · as Dining Car Man (uncredited)
- Libeled Lady1936 · as Butler (uncredited)
- The President's Mystery1936 · as Roger
- Roaming Lady1936 · as Waters
- Mr. Deeds Goes to Town1936 · as Butler (uncredited)
- The Misleading Lady1920 · as Steve
- Prudence the Pirate1916 · as John Astorbilt
- The Traffic Cop1916 · as Book Agent
- The Flight of the Duchess1916 · as The Duke
- Bill Bunks the Bandit1915 · as Bill - a Gentleman from the East