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David Manners

David Manners

Sadly, few of the actor's follow-up films called upon his talents to that extent. Hollywood saw him as an unthreatening "boyfriend" type and he was cast in a series of drawing-room melodramas and light comedies with various studios. Most of his films did fairly well at the box office, then promptly vanished from the public consciousness. Among the more notable were "The Right to Love" (1930), opposite Ruth Chatterton, "The Truth About Youth" (1930) with Loretta Young, "Crooner" (1932), "From Hell to Heaven" (1933), co-starring Carole Lombard, and "Hearts in Bondage" (1936). Manners was also cast in a series of successful horror films which today remain his chief legacy. He played innocent, stalwart young victims in such classics as "Dracula" (1931, as Jonathan Harker), "The Death Kiss" (1932), "The Mummy" (1932), "The Black Cat" (1934, with both Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi), and the atmospheric Dickens' tale "The Mystery of Edwin Drood" (1935). Manners also did his best in mostly unrewarding supporting roles in other superior films, as well. He was Barbara Stanwyck's idealistic admirer in Frank Capra's "The Miracle Woman" (1931) and Katharine Hepburn's fiance in her debut, "A Bill of Divorcement" (1932). He played colorless male ingenues in the gold-digger comedy "The Greeks Had a Word for Them" (1932), the Eddie Cantor musical "Roman Scandals" (1933) and the absurdist comedy "The Warrior's Husband" (also 1933). By 1936, Manners was getting increasingly disenchanted with his roles and, after supporting Hepburn again in the period drama "A Woman Rebels," he retired from films.Little more was heard from the reclusive Manners until he attempted a Broadway show, "Truckline Cafe" (with a young Marlon Brando) in 1946. Beginning in the 1950s, he commenced a successful second career as a novelist. The former actor always politely refused to discuss his slightly disappointing film career in later years.
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