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Leslie Howard Steiner

Hebrew: לסלי הווארד
Birthdate:
Birthplace: London, England, United Kingdom
Death: June 01, 1943 (50)
Forest Hill, England, United Kingdom (Shot down with his plane)
Immediate Family:

Son of Ferdinand Raphael Steiner and Lilian Steiner
Husband of Ruth Steiner
Father of Ronald M Howard and Leslie Ruth Howard
Brother of Irene Mary Howard; Doris Howard; Arthur John Steiner; Alfred Howard; Jimmy Howard and 2 others

Occupation: Actor, theatre director, writer
Managed by: Randy Schoenberg
Last Updated:
view all

Immediate Family

About Leslie Howard

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_Howard_(actor)

Leslie Howard (3 April 1893 – 1 June 1943) was an English stage and film actor, director, and producer.[1] Probably best remembered for playing Ashley Wilkes in Gone with the Wind (1939), he also appeared in Berkeley Square (1933), Of Human Bondage (1934), The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934), The Petrified Forest (1936), Pygmalion (1938), Intermezzo (1939), "Pimpernel" Smith (1941) and The First of the Few (1942).

Howard's Second World War activities included acting and filmmaking. He was active in anti-German propaganda and reputedly involved with British or Allied Intelligence, which may have led to his death in 1943 when an airliner on which he was a passenger was shot down over the Bay of Biscay, sparking conspiracy theories regarding his death.

Contents [show] Early life[edit] Howard was born Leslie Howard Steiner to a British mother, Lilian (née Blumberg), and a Hungarian father, Ferdinand Steiner, in Forest Hill, London, England. His father was Jewish and his mother was raised a Christian; her own grandfather was a Jewish immigrant from East Prussia who had married into the English upper middle classes.[2][3] He was educated at Alleyn's School, London. Like many others around the time of the First World War, the family changed their name, using "Stainer" as less German-sounding. He worked as a bank clerk before enlisting at the outbreak of the First World War. He served in the British Army as a subaltern in the Northamptonshire Yeomanry, but suffered shell shock, which led to his relinquishing his commission in May 1916.

Theatre career[edit] Howard began acting on the London stage in 1917 but had his greatest theatrical success in the United States on Broadway, in plays such as Aren't We All? (1923), Outward Bound (1924), and The Green Hat (1925). He became an undisputed Broadway star in Her Cardboard Lover (1927). After his success as time traveller Peter Standish in Berkeley Square (1929), he launched his Hollywood career by repeating the Standish role in the 1933 film version.

The stage, however, continued to be an important part of his career. Howard frequently juggled acting, producing, and directing duties in the Broadway productions in which he starred.[4] Howard was also a dramatist, starring in the Broadway productions of his plays, Murray Hill (1927) and Out of a Blue Sky (1930). He played Matt Denant in John Galsworthy's 1927 Broadway production Escape. (He also wrote, but did not act in Elizabeth Sleeps Out (1936).) His stage triumphs continued with The Animal Kingdom (1932) and The Petrified Forest (1935).[5] He later repeated both roles in the film versions.

In the same period, he had the misfortune to open on Broadway in William Shakespeare's Hamlet (1936) just a few weeks after John Gielgud launched a rival production of the same play that was far more successful[6] with both critics and audiences. Howard's production, his final stage role, lasted for only 39 performances before closing.

Howard was inducted into the American Theatre Hall of Fame in 1981.[7]

Film career[edit]

Bette Davis and Howard in Of Human Bondage (1934). In 1920 Howard and his friend Adrian Brunel founded the short-lived company British Comedy Films (later Minerva Films) in London; Howard was producer and actor, and Brunel the story editor.[8][9] Early films include four written by A. A. Milne, including The Bump, starring C. Aubrey Smith; Twice Two; Five Pound Reward; and Bookworms. Some of these films survive in the archives of the British Film Institute.

Following his move to Hollywood, Howard often played stiff-upper-lipped Englishmen. He appeared in the film version of Outward Bound (1930), though in a different role than the one he portrayed on Broadway. He starred in the film version of Berkeley Square (1933), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor. He played the title character in The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934).

with Myrna Loy in The Animal Kingdom (1932) Howard co-starred with Bette Davis in The Petrified Forest (1936) and reportedly insisted that Humphrey Bogart play gangster Duke Mantee, repeating his role in the stage production. It re-launched Bogart's screen career, and the two men became lifelong friends; Bogart and Lauren Bacall later named their daughter "Leslie Howard Bogart" after him.[10]

Howard had earlier co-starred with Davis in the film adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's book Of Human Bondage (1934) and later in the romantic comedy It's Love I'm After (1937) (also co-starring Olivia de Havilland). He played Professor Henry Higgins in the film version of George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion (1938), with Wendy Hiller as Eliza, which earned Howard another Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. Howard starred with Ingrid Bergman in Intermezzo (1939) and Norma Shearer in a film version of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet (1936).

Howard is perhaps best remembered for his role as Ashley Wilkes in Gone With the Wind (1939), his last American film, but he was uncomfortable with Hollywood and returned to England to help with the Second World War effort. He starred in a number of Second World War films including 49th Parallel (1941), "Pimpernel" Smith (1941), and The First of the Few (1942, known in the U.S. as Spitfire), the latter two of which he also directed and co-produced.[11] His friend and The First of the Few co-star, David Niven said Howard was "...not what he seemed. He had the kind of distraught air that would make people want to mother him. Actually, he was about as naïve as General Motors. Busy little brain, always going."[12]

In 1944, after his death, British exhibitors voted him the second most popular local star at the box office.[13]

Personal life[edit] Howard married Ruth Evelyn Martin in 1916[14] and they had two children. His son Ronald Howard (1918–1996)[15] became an actor and portrayed the title character in the television series Sherlock Holmes (1954).

Arthur, Howard's younger brother, was also an actor, primarily in British comedies. A sister, Irene, was a costume designer. Another sister, Doris Stainer, founded a small school, Hurst Lodge, in Sunningdale, Berkshire, UK, and remained its headmistress for some years.

Widely known as a ladies' man[16] (he himself once said that he "didn't chase women but … couldn't always be bothered to run away"),[17] Howard is reported to have had an affair with Tallulah Bankhead when they appeared on stage (in the UK) in Her Cardboard Lover (1927); Merle Oberon, while filming The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934) and Conchita Montenegro, with whom he had appeared in the film Never the Twain Shall Meet (1931)[citation needed]. However, towards the end of his life, with the full knowledge of his wife, he did take a mistress, Violette Cunnington. The actress, who appeared under the stage name of Suzanne Clair, in "Pimpernel" Smith and First of the Few in minor roles, acted as his secretary, but died in 1942 of pneumonia in her early 30s, six months before Howard's death. In his will, Howard had left her his Beverly Hills house.[18][19] His home in England was Stowe Maries, a 16th-century six-bedroom farmhouse on the edge of Westcott village near Dorking, Surrey.[17]

Howard's will revealed an estate of $251,000, or £62,761 (the equivalent of £2.52 million as of 2015).[20][21]

There were also rumours of affairs with Norma Shearer and Myrna Loy (during filming of The Animal Kingdom).[22]

An English Heritage blue plaque commemorating Howard was placed at 45 Farquhar Road, Upper Norwood, London in 2013.[23]

Death[edit] Further information: BOAC Flight 777

BOAC Flight 777 was shot down over the Bay of Biscay. Howard died in 1943 when flying to Bristol, UK, from Lisbon, Portugal, on KLM Royal Dutch Airlines/BOAC Flight 777. The aircraft, "G-AGBB" a Douglas DC-3, was shot down by Luftwaffe Junkers Ju 88C6 maritime fighter aircraft over the Bay of Biscay.[24] Howard was among the 17 fatalities, including four ex-KLM flight crew.[25][26]

The BOAC DC-3 Ibis had been operating on a scheduled Lisbon–Whitchurch route throughout 1942–1943 that did not pass over what would commonly be referred to as a war zone. By 1942, however, the Germans considered the region an "extremely sensitive war zone."[27] On two occasions, 15 November 1942, and 19 April 1943, the camouflaged airliner had been attacked by Messerschmitt Bf 110 fighters (a single aircraft and six Bf 110s, respectively) while en route; each time, the pilots escaped via evasive tactics.[28] On 1 June 1943, "G-AGBB" again came under attack by a schwarm of eight V/KG40 Ju 88C6 maritime fighters. The DC-3's last radio message indicated it was being fired upon at longitude 09.37 West, latitude 46.54 North.[25]

According to German documents, the DC-3 was shot down at longitude 10.15 West, latitude 46.07 North, some 500 miles (800 km) from Bordeaux, France, and 200 miles (320 km) northwest of A Coruña, Spain. Luftwaffe records indicate that the Ju 88 maritime fighters were operating beyond their normal patrol area to intercept and shoot down the aircraft.[16] Bloody Biscay: The Story of the Luftwaffe's Only Long Range Maritime Fighter Unit, V Gruppe/Kampfgeschwader 40, and Its Adversaries 1942–1944 (Chris Goss, 2001) quotes First Oberleutnant Herbert Hintze, Staffel Führer of 14 Staffeln and based in Bordeaux, that his Staffel shot down the DC-3 because it was recognised as an enemy aircraft. Hintze further states that his pilots were angry that the Luftwaffe leaders had not informed them of a scheduled flight between Lisbon and the UK, and that had they known, they could easily have escorted the DC-3 to Bordeaux and captured it and all aboard. The German pilots photographed the wreckage floating in the Bay of Biscay, and after the war copies of these captured photographs were sent to Howard's family.[24]

In the book Soldaten, the pilot of the German fighter plane discusses the event:

Dock: Whatever crossed our path was shot down. Once we even shot down – there were all sorts of bigwigs in it: seventeen people, a crew of four and fourteen passengers; they came from LONDON. There was a famous English film-star in it too, HOWARD. The English radio announced it in the evening. Those civil aircraft pilots know something about flying! We stood the aircraft on its head, with the fourteen passengers. They must all have hung on the ceiling! (Laughs) It flew at about 3200m. Such a silly dog, instead of flying straight ahead when he saw us, he started to take evasive action. Then we got him. Then we let him have it all right! He wanted to get away from us by putting on speed. Then he started to bank. Then first one of us was after him, and then another. All we had to do was to press the button, quietly and calmly. (laughs) Heil: Did it crash? Dock: Of course it did. Heil: And did any of them get out? Dock: No. They were all dead. Those fools don't try to make a forced landing, even if they can see that it's all up with them.[29] — Harald Welzer, Soldaten The following day, a search of the Bay of Biscay was undertaken by "N/461", a Short Sunderland flying boat from No. 461 RAAF Squadron. Near the same coordinates where the DC-3 was shot down, the Sunderland was attacked by eight Ju 88s and after a furious battle, managed to shoot down three of the attackers, scoring an additional three "possibles", before crash-landing at Praa Sands, near Penzance. In the aftermath of these two actions, all BOAC flights from Lisbon were subsequently re-routed and operated only under the cover of darkness.[30]

The news of Howard's death was published in the same issue of The Times that reported the "death" of Major William Martin, the red herring used for the ruse involved in Operation Mincemeat.[31]

The tragedy rendered Howard the first cast member from Gone With The Wind to die.

Theories regarding the air attack[edit] A long-standing hypothesis states that the Germans believed that UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill, was on board the flight.[32] Churchill, in his autobiography, expressed sorrow that a mistake about his activities might have cost Howard his life.[33] The BBC television series "Churchill‘s Bodyguard" (original broadcast 2006) suggested that (Abwehr) German intelligence agents had learned of Churchill's proposed departure and route. Churchill's bodyguard, Detective Inspector Walter H. Thompson later wrote that Churchill, at times, seemed clairvoyant about threats to his safety, and, acting on a premonition, changed his departure to the following day.

Speculation by historians also centred on whether British code breakers had decrypted top secret Enigma messages outlining the assassination plan, and Churchill may have wanted to protect the code breaking operation so the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht would not suspect that their Enigma machines were compromised. German spies (who commonly watched the airfields of neutral countries), may then have mistaken Howard and his manager, as they boarded their aircraft, for Churchill and his bodyguard, as Howard's manager Alfred Chenhalls physically resembled Churchill, while Howard was tall and thin, like Thompson. Although the overwhelming majority of published documentation of the case repudiates this theory, it remains a possibility. The timing of Howard's takeoff and the flight path were similar to Churchill's flight, making it easy for the Germans to have mistaken the two flights.[34]

Two books focusing on the final flight, Flight 777 (Ian Colvin, 1957), and In Search of My Father: A Portrait of Leslie Howard (Ronald Howard, 1984), concluded that the Germans deliberately shot down Howard's DC-3 to assassinate him, and demoralize Britain.[16][35] Howard had been travelling through Spain and Portugal lecturing on film, but also meeting with local propagandists and shoring up support for the Allies. The British Film Yearbook for 1945 described Leslie Howard's work as "one of the most valuable facets of British propaganda".[36]

The Germans could have suspected even more surreptitious activities, since Portugal, like Switzerland, was a crossroads for internationals, and spies, from both sides. British historian James Oglethorpe, investigated Howard's connection to the secret services.[37] Ronald Howard's book explores the written German orders to the Ju 88 squadron, in great detail, as well as British communiqués that verify intelligence reports indicating a deliberate attack on Howard. These accounts indicate that the Germans were aware of Churchill's real whereabouts at the time and were not so naive as to believe he would be travelling alone on board an unescorted, unarmed civilian aircraft, which Churchill also acknowledged as improbable. Ronald Howard was convinced the order to shoot down Howard's airliner came directly from Joseph Goebbels, Minister of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda in Nazi Germany, who had been ridiculed in one of Leslie Howard's films, and believed Howard to be the most dangerous British propagandist.[16]

Most of the 13 passengers were either British executives with corporate ties to Portugal, or lower-ranking British government civil servants. There were also two or three children of British military personnel.[16] The bumped passengers were the teenage sons of Cornelia Stuyvesant Vanderbilt: George and William Cecil, who had been recalled to London from their Swiss boarding school. Being bumped by Howard saved their lives. William Cecil is best associated with his ownership and preservation of his grandfather George Washington Vanderbilt's Biltmore estate in North Carolina. William Cecil described a story in which he met a woman, several months after his return to London, who said she had secret war information, and used his mother's phone to put in a call to the British Air Ministry. She told them that she had a message from Leslie Howard.[38]

A 2008 book by Spanish writer José Rey Ximena[39] claims that Howard was on a top-secret mission for Churchill to dissuade Francisco Franco, Spain's authoritarian dictator and head of state, from joining the Axis powers.[40] Via an old girlfriend, Conchita Montenegro,[40] Howard had contacts with Ricardo Giménez Arnau, a young diplomat in the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Further circumstantial background evidence is revealed in Jimmy Burns's 2009 biography of his father, spymaster Tom Burns.[41] According to author William Stevenson in A Man called Intrepid, his biography of Sir William Samuel Stephenson (no relation), the senior representative of British Intelligence for the western hemisphere during the Second World War,[42] Stephenson postulated that the Germans knew about Howard's mission and ordered the aircraft shot down. Stephenson further claimed that Churchill knew in advance of the German intention to shoot down the aircraft, but allowed it to proceed to protect the fact that the British had broken the German Enigma code.[43] Former CIA agent Joseph B. Smith recalled that, in 1957, he was briefed by the National Security Agency on the need for secrecy and that Leslie Howard's death had been brought up. The NSA claimed that Howard knew his aircraft was to be attacked by German fighters and sacrificed himself to protect the British code-breakers.[44]

The 2010 biography by Estel Eforgan, Leslie Howard: The Lost Actor, examines currently available evidence and concludes that Howard was not a specific target,[45] corroborating the claims by German sources that the shootdown was "an error in judgement".[30] There is a monument in San Andrés de Teixido, Spain, dedicated to the victims of the crash. Howard's aircraft was shot down over the sea north of this village.[46]

Biographies[edit] Howard did not publish an autobiography, although a compilation of his writings, Trivial Fond Records, edited and with occasional comments by his son Ronald, was published in 1982. This book includes insights on his family life, first impressions of America and Americans when he first moved to the United States to act on Broadway, and his views on democracy in the years prior to and during the Second World War.

Howard's son and daughter each published memoirs of their father: In Search of My Father: A Portrait of Leslie Howard (1984) by Ronald Howard, and A Quite Remarkable Father: A Biography of Leslie Howard (1959) by Leslie Ruth Howard.

Estel Eforgan's Leslie Howard: The Lost Actor is a full-length book biography published in 2010.

Leslie Howard: A Quite Remarkable Life, a film documentary biography produced by Thomas Hamilton of Repo Films, was shown privately at the NFB Mediatheque, Toronto, Canada in September 2009 for contributors and supporters of the film. Subsequently re-edited and retitled "Leslie Howard: The Man Who Gave a Damn", the documentary was officially launched on 2 September 2011 in an event held at Leslie Howard's former home "Stowe Maries" in Dorking, and reported on BBC South News the same day.[47] Lengthy rights negotiations with Warners then delayed further screenings until May 2012, although the situation now appears to have been resolved and Repo Films now intends to enter the film into various International Film Festivals.

Filmography[edit] Year Country Title Credited as Director Producer Actor Role 1914 UK The Heroine of Mons Yes cast member 1917 UK The Happy Warrior Yes Rollo 1919 UK The Lackey and the Lady Yes Tony Dunciman 1920 UK Twice Two Yes UK The Temporary Lady Yes UK The Bump Yes UK Bookworms Yes Yes Richard UK Reward Yes Yes Tony Marchmont 1921 UK Too Many Crooks Yes 1930 US Outward Bound Yes Tom Prior 1931 US Five and Ten Yes Bertram "Berry" Rhodes US Devotion Yes David Trent US A Free Soul Yes Dwight Winthrop US Never the Twain Shall Meet Yes Dan Pritchard 1932 UK Service for Ladies Yes Max Tracey US Smilin' Through Yes Sir John Carteret US The Animal Kingdom Yes Tom Collier 1933 US Berkeley Square Yes Peter Standish US Captured! Yes Captain Fred Allison US Secrets Yes John Carlton 1934 US British Agent Yes Stephen "Steve" Locke UK The Lady Is Willing Yes Albert Latour US Of Human Bondage Yes Philip Carey 1935 UK The Scarlet Pimpernel Yes Sir Percy Blakeney 1936 US The Petrified Forest Yes Alan Squier US Romeo and Juliet Yes Romeo 1937 US Stand-In Yes Atterbury Dodd US It's Love I'm After Yes Basil Underwood 1938 UK Pygmalion Yes Yes Yes Professor Henry Higgins 1939 US Intermezzo Yes Yes Holger Brandt US Gone with the Wind Yes Ashley Wilkes 1941 UK "Pimpernel" Smith Yes Yes Yes Professor Horatio Smith UK Common Heritage Yes Himself UK 49th Parallel Yes Philip Armstrong Scott UK From the Four Corners Yes A passer-by UK The White Eagle Yes narrator 1942 UK In Which We Serve Yes voice UK The First of the Few Yes Yes Yes R.J.Mitchell UK National Savings Trailer: Noel Coward and Leslie Howard Yes on-screen participant UK Mr. Leslie Howard "by request" Yes presenter 1943 UK War in the Mediterranean Yes voice UK The Gentle Sex Yes Yes Yes "Observations of a mere man" (voice) UK The Lamp Still Burns Yes See also[edit]

About Leslie Howard (עברית)

לסלי הווארד

' (באנגלית: Leslie Howard;‏ 3 באפריל 1893 - 1 ביוני 1943) היה שחקן תיאטרון וקולנוע בריטי. בנוסף כתב הווארד סיפורים ומאמרים לניו יורק טיימס, הניו יורקר וואניטי פייר. הוא היה אחד השחקנים המצליחים בשנות ה-30 של המאה ה-20, והתפרסם במיוחד בתפקידו בסרט חלף עם הרוח.

ביוגרפיה הווארד נולד בלונדון למשפחה יהודית (Steiner). לאחר סיום לימודיו בקולג' עבד כפקיד בבנק. במלחמת העולם הראשונה התגייס לצבא הבריטי ובשנת 1917, בעקבות הלם קרב, הוחזר לאנגליה.

הוא החל להופיע על הבמה אך עד מהרה עבר לעולם הסרטים. בשנת 1933 קיבל מועמדות לפרס אוסקר לשחקן הטוב ביותר על משחקו בסרט "כיכר ברקלי". בשנת 1941 שיחק בסרט המפורסם פימפרנל סמית וב-1938 היה מועמד בשנית לאוסקר על משחקו כפרופסור היגינס בסרט "פיגמליון" שאותו גם ביים.

בשנת 1936 הופיע עם המפרי בוגרט ובטי דייוויס בסרט היער המאובן. עם בטי דייוויס הופיע גם ב-1934 בסרט בכבלי אנוש לפי ספרו של סומרסט מוהם.

ב-1939 שיחק עם אינגריד ברגמן בסרט אינטרמצו שהיה סרטה הראשון בהוליווד. באותה שנה הופיע בתפקידו המפורסם כאשלי וילקס בסרט חלף עם הרוח.

עם התקדרות העננים באירופה שב הווארד לאנגליה על מנת לעזור במאמץ המלחמה, וסייע בתעמולה נגד הגרמנים. הוא שיחק במספר סרטי מלחמה. סרטו האחרון היה הראשון בין המעטים (1942) הנקרא גם ספיטפייר בו גילם את רג'ינלד ג'וזף מיצ'ל - המהנדס שתכנן את מטוס הספיטפייר.

ב-1 ביוני 1943 הווארד נהרג עת טס במטוס DC-3 דקוטה בטיסה 777 של BOAC מליסבון לבריסטול. המטוס הופל על ידי מטוס קרב גרמני מעל מפרץ ביסקיה, ובהקשר לכך רווחו שמועות רבות שלא הוכחו עד היום. בין היתר היו שמועות על היותו פעיל בשירות המודיעין של בריטניה או של בעלות הברית, או שבמטוס נסע גם אמרגנו של הווארד שהיה דומה לצ'רצ'יל. על סיפון המטוס היה גם הפעיל הציוני וילפריד ישראל.

לקריאה נוספת Colvin Ian. Flight 777: The Mystery Of Leslie Howard. London: Evans Brothers, 1957. Eforgan, Estel. Leslie Howard : The Lost Actor. London: Vallentine Mitchell Publishers, 2010 . Howard, Leslie Ruth. A Quite Remarkable Father: A Biography of Leslie Howard. New York: Harcourt Brace and Co., 1959. Howard, Ronald. In Search of My Father: A Portrait of Leslie Howard. London: St. Martin's Press, 1984. ISBN 0-312-41161-8. קישורים חיצוניים מיזמי קרן ויקימדיה ויקישיתוף תמונות ומדיה בוויקישיתוף: לסלי הווארד IMDB Logo 2016.svg לסלי הווארד , במסד הנתונים הקולנועיים IMDb (באנגלית) Allmovie Logo.png לסלי הווארד , באתר AllMovie (באנגלית) לסלי הווארד , באתר "Find a Grave" (באנגלית) https://he.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D7%9C%D7%A1%D7%9C%D7%99_%D7%94%D7%95...

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_Howard_(actor)

Leslie Howard (3 April 1893 – 1 June 1943) was an English stage and film actor, director, and producer.[1] Probably best remembered for playing Ashley Wilkes in Gone with the Wind (1939), he also appeared in Berkeley Square (1933), Of Human Bondage (1934), The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934), The Petrified Forest (1936), Pygmalion (1938), Intermezzo (1939), "Pimpernel" Smith (1941) and The First of the Few (1942).

Howard's Second World War activities included acting and filmmaking. He was active in anti-German propaganda and reputedly involved with British or Allied Intelligence, which may have led to his death in 1943 when an airliner on which he was a passenger was shot down over the Bay of Biscay, sparking conspiracy theories regarding his death.

Contents [show] Early life[edit] Howard was born Leslie Howard Steiner to a British mother, Lilian (née Blumberg), and a Hungarian father, Ferdinand Steiner, in Forest Hill, London, England. His father was Jewish and his mother was raised a Christian; her own grandfather was a Jewish immigrant from East Prussia who had married into the English upper middle classes.[2][3] He was educated at Alleyn's School, London. Like many others around the time of the First World War, the family changed their name, using "Stainer" as less German-sounding. He worked as a bank clerk before enlisting at the outbreak of the First World War. He served in the British Army as a subaltern in the Northamptonshire Yeomanry, but suffered shell shock, which led to his relinquishing his commission in May 1916.

Theatre career[edit] Howard began acting on the London stage in 1917 but had his greatest theatrical success in the United States on Broadway, in plays such as Aren't We All? (1923), Outward Bound (1924), and The Green Hat (1925). He became an undisputed Broadway star in Her Cardboard Lover (1927). After his success as time traveller Peter Standish in Berkeley Square (1929), he launched his Hollywood career by repeating the Standish role in the 1933 film version.

The stage, however, continued to be an important part of his career. Howard frequently juggled acting, producing, and directing duties in the Broadway productions in which he starred.[4] Howard was also a dramatist, starring in the Broadway productions of his plays, Murray Hill (1927) and Out of a Blue Sky (1930). He played Matt Denant in John Galsworthy's 1927 Broadway production Escape. (He also wrote, but did not act in Elizabeth Sleeps Out (1936).) His stage triumphs continued with The Animal Kingdom (1932) and The Petrified Forest (1935).[5] He later repeated both roles in the film versions.

In the same period, he had the misfortune to open on Broadway in William Shakespeare's Hamlet (1936) just a few weeks after John Gielgud launched a rival production of the same play that was far more successful[6] with both critics and audiences. Howard's production, his final stage role, lasted for only 39 performances before closing.

Howard was inducted into the American Theatre Hall of Fame in 1981.[7]

Film career[edit]

Bette Davis and Howard in Of Human Bondage (1934). In 1920 Howard and his friend Adrian Brunel founded the short-lived company British Comedy Films (later Minerva Films) in London; Howard was producer and actor, and Brunel the story editor.[8][9] Early films include four written by A. A. Milne, including The Bump, starring C. Aubrey Smith; Twice Two; Five Pound Reward; and Bookworms. Some of these films survive in the archives of the British Film Institute.

Following his move to Hollywood, Howard often played stiff-upper-lipped Englishmen. He appeared in the film version of Outward Bound (1930), though in a different role than the one he portrayed on Broadway. He starred in the film version of Berkeley Square (1933), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor. He played the title character in The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934).

with Myrna Loy in The Animal Kingdom (1932) Howard co-starred with Bette Davis in The Petrified Forest (1936) and reportedly insisted that Humphrey Bogart play gangster Duke Mantee, repeating his role in the stage production. It re-launched Bogart's screen career, and the two men became lifelong friends; Bogart and Lauren Bacall later named their daughter "Leslie Howard Bogart" after him.[10]

Howard had earlier co-starred with Davis in the film adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's book Of Human Bondage (1934) and later in the romantic comedy It's Love I'm After (1937) (also co-starring Olivia de Havilland). He played Professor Henry Higgins in the film version of George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion (1938), with Wendy Hiller as Eliza, which earned Howard another Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. Howard starred with Ingrid Bergman in Intermezzo (1939) and Norma Shearer in a film version of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet (1936).

Howard is perhaps best remembered for his role as Ashley Wilkes in Gone With the Wind (1939), his last American film, but he was uncomfortable with Hollywood and returned to England to help with the Second World War effort. He starred in a number of Second World War films including 49th Parallel (1941), "Pimpernel" Smith (1941), and The First of the Few (1942, known in the U.S. as Spitfire), the latter two of which he also directed and co-produced.[11] His friend and The First of the Few co-star, David Niven said Howard was "...not what he seemed. He had the kind of distraught air that would make people want to mother him. Actually, he was about as naïve as General Motors. Busy little brain, always going."[12]

In 1944, after his death, British exhibitors voted him the second most popular local star at the box office.[13]

Personal life[edit] Howard married Ruth Evelyn Martin in 1916[14] and they had two children. His son Ronald Howard (1918–1996)[15] became an actor and portrayed the title character in the television series Sherlock Holmes (1954).

Arthur, Howard's younger brother, was also an actor, primarily in British comedies. A sister, Irene, was a costume designer. Another sister, Doris Stainer, founded a small school, Hurst Lodge, in Sunningdale, Berkshire, UK, and remained its headmistress for some years.

Widely known as a ladies' man[16] (he himself once said that he "didn't chase women but … couldn't always be bothered to run away"),[17] Howard is reported to have had an affair with Tallulah Bankhead when they appeared on stage (in the UK) in Her Cardboard Lover (1927); Merle Oberon, while filming The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934) and Conchita Montenegro, with whom he had appeared in the film Never the Twain Shall Meet (1931)[citation needed]. However, towards the end of his life, with the full knowledge of his wife, he did take a mistress, Violette Cunnington. The actress, who appeared under the stage name of Suzanne Clair, in "Pimpernel" Smith and First of the Few in minor roles, acted as his secretary, but died in 1942 of pneumonia in her early 30s, six months before Howard's death. In his will, Howard had left her his Beverly Hills house.[18][19] His home in England was Stowe Maries, a 16th-century six-bedroom farmhouse on the edge of Westcott village near Dorking, Surrey.[17]

Howard's will revealed an estate of $251,000, or £62,761 (the equivalent of £2.52 million as of 2015).[20][21]

There were also rumours of affairs with Norma Shearer and Myrna Loy (during filming of The Animal Kingdom).[22]

An English Heritage blue plaque commemorating Howard was placed at 45 Farquhar Road, Upper Norwood, London in 2013.[23]

Death[edit] Further information: BOAC Flight 777

BOAC Flight 777 was shot down over the Bay of Biscay. Howard died in 1943 when flying to Bristol, UK, from Lisbon, Portugal, on KLM Royal Dutch Airlines/BOAC Flight 777. The aircraft, "G-AGBB" a Douglas DC-3, was shot down by Luftwaffe Junkers Ju 88C6 maritime fighter aircraft over the Bay of Biscay.[24] Howard was among the 17 fatalities, including four ex-KLM flight crew.[25][26]

The BOAC DC-3 Ibis had been operating on a scheduled Lisbon–Whitchurch route throughout 1942–1943 that did not pass over what would commonly be referred to as a war zone. By 1942, however, the Germans considered the region an "extremely sensitive war zone."[27] On two occasions, 15 November 1942, and 19 April 1943, the camouflaged airliner had been attacked by Messerschmitt Bf 110 fighters (a single aircraft and six Bf 110s, respectively) while en route; each time, the pilots escaped via evasive tactics.[28] On 1 June 1943, "G-AGBB" again came under attack by a schwarm of eight V/KG40 Ju 88C6 maritime fighters. The DC-3's last radio message indicated it was being fired upon at longitude 09.37 West, latitude 46.54 North.[25]

According to German documents, the DC-3 was shot down at longitude 10.15 West, latitude 46.07 North, some 500 miles (800 km) from Bordeaux, France, and 200 miles (320 km) northwest of A Coruña, Spain. Luftwaffe records indicate that the Ju 88 maritime fighters were operating beyond their normal patrol area to intercept and shoot down the aircraft.[16] Bloody Biscay: The Story of the Luftwaffe's Only Long Range Maritime Fighter Unit, V Gruppe/Kampfgeschwader 40, and Its Adversaries 1942–1944 (Chris Goss, 2001) quotes First Oberleutnant Herbert Hintze, Staffel Führer of 14 Staffeln and based in Bordeaux, that his Staffel shot down the DC-3 because it was recognised as an enemy aircraft. Hintze further states that his pilots were angry that the Luftwaffe leaders had not informed them of a scheduled flight between Lisbon and the UK, and that had they known, they could easily have escorted the DC-3 to Bordeaux and captured it and all aboard. The German pilots photographed the wreckage floating in the Bay of Biscay, and after the war copies of these captured photographs were sent to Howard's family.[24]

In the book Soldaten, the pilot of the German fighter plane discusses the event:

Dock: Whatever crossed our path was shot down. Once we even shot down – there were all sorts of bigwigs in it: seventeen people, a crew of four and fourteen passengers; they came from LONDON. There was a famous English film-star in it too, HOWARD. The English radio announced it in the evening. Those civil aircraft pilots know something about flying! We stood the aircraft on its head, with the fourteen passengers. They must all have hung on the ceiling! (Laughs) It flew at about 3200m. Such a silly dog, instead of flying straight ahead when he saw us, he started to take evasive action. Then we got him. Then we let him have it all right! He wanted to get away from us by putting on speed. Then he started to bank. Then first one of us was after him, and then another. All we had to do was to press the button, quietly and calmly. (laughs) Heil: Did it crash? Dock: Of course it did. Heil: And did any of them get out? Dock: No. They were all dead. Those fools don't try to make a forced landing, even if they can see that it's all up with them.[29] — Harald Welzer, Soldaten The following day, a search of the Bay of Biscay was undertaken by "N/461", a Short Sunderland flying boat from No. 461 RAAF Squadron. Near the same coordinates where the DC-3 was shot down, the Sunderland was attacked by eight Ju 88s and after a furious battle, managed to shoot down three of the attackers, scoring an additional three "possibles", before crash-landing at Praa Sands, near Penzance. In the aftermath of these two actions, all BOAC flights from Lisbon were subsequently re-routed and operated only under the cover of darkness.[30]

The news of Howard's death was published in the same issue of The Times that reported the "death" of Major William Martin, the red herring used for the ruse involved in Operation Mincemeat.[31]

The tragedy rendered Howard the first cast member from Gone With The Wind to die.

Theories regarding the air attack[edit] A long-standing hypothesis states that the Germans believed that UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill, was on board the flight.[32] Churchill, in his autobiography, expressed sorrow that a mistake about his activities might have cost Howard his life.[33] The BBC television series "Churchill‘s Bodyguard" (original broadcast 2006) suggested that (Abwehr) German intelligence agents had learned of Churchill's proposed departure and route. Churchill's bodyguard, Detective Inspector Walter H. Thompson later wrote that Churchill, at times, seemed clairvoyant about threats to his safety, and, acting on a premonition, changed his departure to the following day.

Speculation by historians also centred on whether British code breakers had decrypted top secret Enigma messages outlining the assassination plan, and Churchill may have wanted to protect the code breaking operation so the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht would not suspect that their Enigma machines were compromised. German spies (who commonly watched the airfields of neutral countries), may then have mistaken Howard and his manager, as they boarded their aircraft, for Churchill and his bodyguard, as Howard's manager Alfred Chenhalls physically resembled Churchill, while Howard was tall and thin, like Thompson. Although the overwhelming majority of published documentation of the case repudiates this theory, it remains a possibility. The timing of Howard's takeoff and the flight path were similar to Churchill's flight, making it easy for the Germans to have mistaken the two flights.[34]

Two books focusing on the final flight, Flight 777 (Ian Colvin, 1957), and In Search of My Father: A Portrait of Leslie Howard (Ronald Howard, 1984), concluded that the Germans deliberately shot down Howard's DC-3 to assassinate him, and demoralize Britain.[16][35] Howard had been travelling through Spain and Portugal lecturing on film, but also meeting with local propagandists and shoring up support for the Allies. The British Film Yearbook for 1945 described Leslie Howard's work as "one of the most valuable facets of British propaganda".[36]

The Germans could have suspected even more surreptitious activities, since Portugal, like Switzerland, was a crossroads for internationals, and spies, from both sides. British historian James Oglethorpe, investigated Howard's connection to the secret services.[37] Ronald Howard's book explores the written German orders to the Ju 88 squadron, in great detail, as well as British communiqués that verify intelligence reports indicating a deliberate attack on Howard. These accounts indicate that the Germans were aware of Churchill's real whereabouts at the time and were not so naive as to believe he would be travelling alone on board an unescorted, unarmed civilian aircraft, which Churchill also acknowledged as improbable. Ronald Howard was convinced the order to shoot down Howard's airliner came directly from Joseph Goebbels, Minister of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda in Nazi Germany, who had been ridiculed in one of Leslie Howard's films, and believed Howard to be the most dangerous British propagandist.[16]

Most of the 13 passengers were either British executives with corporate ties to Portugal, or lower-ranking British government civil servants. There were also two or three children of British military personnel.[16] The bumped passengers were the teenage sons of Cornelia Stuyvesant Vanderbilt: George and William Cecil, who had been recalled to London from their Swiss boarding school. Being bumped by Howard saved their lives. William Cecil is best associated with his ownership and preservation of his grandfather George Washington Vanderbilt's Biltmore estate in North Carolina. William Cecil described a story in which he met a woman, several months after his return to London, who said she had secret war information, and used his mother's phone to put in a call to the British Air Ministry. She told them that she had a message from Leslie Howard.[38]

A 2008 book by Spanish writer José Rey Ximena[39] claims that Howard was on a top-secret mission for Churchill to dissuade Francisco Franco, Spain's authoritarian dictator and head of state, from joining the Axis powers.[40] Via an old girlfriend, Conchita Montenegro,[40] Howard had contacts with Ricardo Giménez Arnau, a young diplomat in the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Further circumstantial background evidence is revealed in Jimmy Burns's 2009 biography of his father, spymaster Tom Burns.[41] According to author William Stevenson in A Man called Intrepid, his biography of Sir William Samuel Stephenson (no relation), the senior representative of British Intelligence for the western hemisphere during the Second World War,[42] Stephenson postulated that the Germans knew about Howard's mission and ordered the aircraft shot down. Stephenson further claimed that Churchill knew in advance of the German intention to shoot down the aircraft, but allowed it to proceed to protect the fact that the British had broken the German Enigma code.[43] Former CIA agent Joseph B. Smith recalled that, in 1957, he was briefed by the National Security Agency on the need for secrecy and that Leslie Howard's death had been brought up. The NSA claimed that Howard knew his aircraft was to be attacked by German fighters and sacrificed himself to protect the British code-breakers.[44]

The 2010 biography by Estel Eforgan, Leslie Howard: The Lost Actor, examines currently available evidence and concludes that Howard was not a specific target,[45] corroborating the claims by German sources that the shootdown was "an error in judgement".[30] There is a monument in San Andrés de Teixido, Spain, dedicated to the victims of the crash. Howard's aircraft was shot down over the sea north of this village.[46]

Biographies[edit] Howard did not publish an autobiography, although a compilation of his writings, Trivial Fond Records, edited and with occasional comments by his son Ronald, was published in 1982. This book includes insights on his family life, first impressions of America and Americans when he first moved to the United States to act on Broadway, and his views on democracy in the years prior to and during the Second World War.

Howard's son and daughter each published memoirs of their father: In Search of My Father: A Portrait of Leslie Howard (1984) by Ronald Howard, and A Quite Remarkable Father: A Biography of Leslie Howard (1959) by Leslie Ruth Howard.

Estel Eforgan's Leslie Howard: The Lost Actor is a full-length book biography published in 2010.

Leslie Howard: A Quite Remarkable Life, a film documentary biography produced by Thomas Hamilton of Repo Films, was shown privately at the NFB Mediatheque, Toronto, Canada in September 2009 for contributors and supporters of the film. Subsequently re-edited and retitled "Leslie Howard: The Man Who Gave a Damn", the documentary was officially launched on 2 September 2011 in an event held at Leslie Howard's former home "Stowe Maries" in Dorking, and reported on BBC South News the same day.[47] Lengthy rights negotiations with Warners then delayed further screenings until May 2012, although the situation now appears to have been resolved and Repo Films now intends to enter the film into various International Film Festivals.

Filmography[edit] Year Country Title Credited as Director Producer Actor Role 1914 UK The Heroine of Mons Yes cast member 1917 UK The Happy Warrior Yes Rollo 1919 UK The Lackey and the Lady Yes Tony Dunciman 1920 UK Twice Two Yes UK The Temporary Lady Yes UK The Bump Yes UK Bookworms Yes Yes Richard UK Reward Yes Yes Tony Marchmont 1921 UK Too Many Crooks Yes 1930 US Outward Bound Yes Tom Prior 1931 US Five and Ten Yes Bertram "Berry" Rhodes US Devotion Yes David Trent US A Free Soul Yes Dwight Winthrop US Never the Twain Shall Meet Yes Dan Pritchard 1932 UK Service for Ladies Yes Max Tracey US Smilin' Through Yes Sir John Carteret US The Animal Kingdom Yes Tom Collier 1933 US Berkeley Square Yes Peter Standish US Captured! Yes Captain Fred Allison US Secrets Yes John Carlton 1934 US British Agent Yes Stephen "Steve" Locke UK The Lady Is Willing Yes Albert Latour US Of Human Bondage Yes Philip Carey 1935 UK The Scarlet Pimpernel Yes Sir Percy Blakeney 1936 US The Petrified Forest Yes Alan Squier US Romeo and Juliet Yes Romeo 1937 US Stand-In Yes Atterbury Dodd US It's Love I'm After Yes Basil Underwood 1938 UK Pygmalion Yes Yes Yes Professor Henry Higgins 1939 US Intermezzo Yes Yes Holger Brandt US Gone with the Wind Yes Ashley Wilkes 1941 UK "Pimpernel" Smith Yes Yes Yes Professor Horatio Smith UK Common Heritage Yes Himself UK 49th Parallel Yes Philip Armstrong Scott UK From the Four Corners Yes A passer-by UK The White Eagle Yes narrator 1942 UK In Which We Serve Yes voice UK The First of the Few Yes Yes Yes R.J.Mitchell UK National Savings Trailer: Noel Coward and Leslie Howard Yes on-screen participant UK Mr. Leslie Howard "by request" Yes presenter 1943 UK War in the Mediterranean Yes voice UK The Gentle Sex Yes Yes Yes "Observations of a mere man" (voice) UK The Lamp Still Burns Yes See also[edit]

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Leslie Howard's Timeline

1893
April 3, 1893
London, England, United Kingdom
1918
1918
Norwood, London, Greater London, England, United Kingdom
1924
October 18, 1924
New York, New York, United States
1943
June 1, 1943
Age 50
Forest Hill, England, United Kingdom