Ian Keith(1899-1960)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Ian Keith became a well regarded fixture on the Broadway stage during
the 1920s, but from 1924 through the remainder of the decade he
expanded his acting into a string of silent movies as well. To begin
the next decade, he appeared in the cast of Abraham Lincoln (1930), one of the later
movies of D.W. Griffith. His forte was perhaps already becoming obvious --
his role was that of John Wilkes Booth. Keith had a sly look, and there
was an irritated but deadpan demeanor and a side-of-the-mouth delivery
to his speech that marked him as a great villain. And he played many --
including a surprising number in historic costume. There was never any
emotional nuance, but his straight delivery was always completely
effective. He figured prominently in some of the most ambitious of the
early sound epics: The Sign of the Cross (1932), Cleopatra (1934), and The Crusades (1935) of Cecil B. DeMille, and in the
latter Keith was -- a sort of good guy -- the great Sultan Saladin
(surely a strange miscast but DeMille obviously liked him -- he showed
up in the much later The Ten Commandments (1956) as well). He was the nemesis of John Gilbert in
Queen Christina (1933) and of a similar cast in Mary of Scotland (1936), the early John Ford classic
with Katharine Hepburn. He also portrayed an odd twist in the first sound
The Three Musketeers (1935). Counter to the book, his Rochefort is the plotting genius, not
Cardinal Richelieu, as it should be. Incidentally, he reprised
Rochefort, but more in keeping with the original character, in The Three Musketeers (1948)
version for Gene Kelly. In between those years were a lot of B level
movies of everything from the comics to murder mysteries to mark a
downturn said to be the result of too much nightlife. He still did
Broadway intermittently throughout his career amid early TV theater and
episodic fare from the late 1940s through the 1950s. The stage remained
his first choice. At the time of his death he was appearing in "The
Andersonville Trial" (1960) on Broadway.