Donald Calthrop
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Donald Esme Clayton Calthrop (11 April 1888 – 15 July 1940) was an English stage and film actor. Calthrop made his first stage appearance at eighteen years of age. His first film was The Gay Lord Quex released in 1917. He starred as the title character in the successful musical The Boy in the same year. He then appeared in 63 films between 1916 and 1940, including five films directed by Alfred Hitchcock. He died in Eton, Berkshire from a heart attack while he was filming Major Barbara (1941).
Known For
All Movies (55)
- Major Barbara1941 · as Peter Shirley
- Charley's (Big-Hearted) Aunt1940 · as Guide
- Let George Do It!1940 · as Frederick Strickland
- Band Waggon1940 · as Hobday
- Thunder in the City1937 · as Dr. Plumet
- Love from a Stranger1937 · as Hobson
- Fire Over England1937 · as Don Escobal
- Café Colette1937 · as Nick
- The Man Who Changed His Mind1936 · as Clayton
- The Man Behind the Mask1936 · as Dr. Harold E. Walpole
- Broken Blossoms1936 · as Old Chinaman
- Scrooge1935 · as Bob Cratchit
- Man of the Moment1935 · as Godfrey
- The Phantom Light1935 · as David Owen
- Me and Marlborough1935 · as Drunken Yokel
- The Clairvoyant1935 · as Derelict (uncredited)
- The Divine Spark1935 · as Judge Fumaroli
- Red Ensign1934 · as Macleod
- Sorrell and Son1934 · as Dr. Richard Orange
- It's a Cop1934 · as Charles Murray
- This Acting Business1933 · as Milton Stafford
- Friday the Thirteenth1933 · as Hugh Nicholls
- I Was a Spy1933 · as Cnockhaert
- Early to Bed1933 · as Potsdam Guide
- F.P.11933 · as Sunshine, the Photographer
- Rome Express1932 · as Poole
- Fires of Fate1932 · as Sir William Royden
- Number Seventeen1932 · as Nora's Escort Brant
- Money for Nothing1932 · as Hotel Manager
- Industrial Britain1931 · as Self - Commentator (uncredited)
- Many Waters1931 · as Compton Hardcastle
- The Bells1931 · as Mathias
- The Ghost Train1931 · as Saul Hodgkin
- Potiphar's Wife1931 · as Counsel for Defense
- Uneasy Virtue1931 · as Burglar
- Cape Forlorn1931 · as Parson
- We Take Off Our Hats1930 · as 'erb
- Star Impersonations1930 · as George Arliss
- Almost a Honeymoon1930 · as Charles, the butler
- Spanish Eyes1930 · as Mascoso
- Murder!1930 · as Ion Stewart
- Two Worlds1930 · as Mendel
- Loose Ends1930 · as Winton Penner
- The Night Porter1930 · as George, the Night Porter
- Song of Soho1930 · as Nobby
- Elstree Calling1930 · as Himself / Petruchio in Taming of the Shrew
- All Riot on the Western Front1930
- Atlantic1929 · as Pointer
- Blackmail1929 · as Tracy
- Up the Poll1929 · as The Candidate
- The Clue of the New Pin1929 · as Yeh Ling
- Shooting Stars1928 · as Andy Wilkes
- Nelson1918 · as Horatio Nelson
- Nelson; The Story of England's Immortal Naval Hero1918 · as Horatio Nelson
- Masks and Faces1917 · as Lovell







