Arnold Lucy
Arnold Lucy (born Walter George Campbell, 8 August 1865 – 15 December 1945) was a British theatre and film actor, best known as Professor Kantorek in All Quiet on the Western Front (1930). Life and careerBorn in Tottenham on 8 August 1865,,[1] Lucy was the youngest of the six sons of architect and surveyor Donald Campbell and his wife Lucy Elizabeth (née Speak) of Church Lane, Hornfield Lodge, Tottenham. His parents got married in 1853. Their youngest child and only daughter, Rose Lucy, was born in 1871. Arnold Lucy started his acting career in the late 19th century at the theatre.[citation needed] Lucy worked for an accounting firm in London for five years before going to Australia in 1887. There he gained recognition for reciting prose monologues and humorous and dramatic poetry. He returned to England and studied under Hermann Vezin. He went on to recite at a number of venues thereafter. In 1895 he began acting as an understudy in The Passport at Terry's Theatre.[1] He said that he performed on the London West End stage over 1,200 times before making his film debut in the silent film The Devil's Toy (1916).[2] Lucy played in over 40 British and American movies between 1916 and 1938, mostly in small roles. He often portrayed authoritarian and dignified roles, most notable as Professor Kantorek, the nationalistic school teacher in All Quiet on the Western Front, who persuades his students to go into a horrible and deadly war.[citation needed] Beside his film career, he also performed in 15 plays on Broadway between 1912 and 1927. Lucy died on December 15, 1945, in Los Angeles, California, aged 80.[3] Filmography
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