Stamboom Willems Hoogeloon-Best » George Henri SANDERS (1906-1972)

Persoonlijke gegevens George Henri SANDERS 

  • Hij is geboren op 3 juli 1906.
  • Beroep: Actor, Singer-Songwriter, Composer, and Author..
  • Hij is overleden op 25 april 1972, hij was toen 65 jaar oud.

Gezin van George Henri SANDERS

(1) Hij is getrouwd met Zsa Zsa GÁBOR.

Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1949, hij was toen 42 jaar oud.

Het echtpaar is in 1954 gescheiden.


(2) Hij is getrouwd met Magda GÁBOR.

Zij zijn getrouwd op 5 december 1970, hij was toen 64 jaar oud.

Het huwelijk is 6 januari 1971 nietig verklaard.


Notities over George Henri SANDERS

George Henry Sanders (3 July 1906 – 25 April 1972) was an English film and television actor, singer-songwriter, music composer, and author. His career as an actor spanned more than 40 years. His upper-class English accent and bass voice often led him to be cast as sophisticated but villainous characters. He is perhaps best known as Jack Favell in Rebecca (1940), Scott ffolliott in Foreign Correspondent (1940) (a rare heroic part), Addison DeWitt in All About Eve (1950), for which he won an Academy Award, King Richard the Lionheart in King Richard and the Crusaders (1954), Mr. Freeze in a two-parter episode of Batman (1966), the voice of the malevolent man-hating tiger Shere Khan in Disney's The Jungle Book (1967), and as Simon Templar, "The Saint", in five films made in the 1930s and 1940s.
Contents [show]
Early life[edit]
Sanders was born in Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire, at number 6 Petrovski Ostrov. His parents were Henry Peter Ernest Sanders[1] (1868–1960),[2] and Margarethe Jenny Bertha Sanders (née Kolbe; 1883–1967), who was born in Saint Petersburg, of mostly German, but also Estonian and Scottish, ancestry.[3][4] A biography published in 1990 claimed that Sanders's father was the illegitimate son of a Russian noblewoman of the Czar’s court and a prince of the House of Oldenburg, married to a sister of the Czar.[5]a[›] The actor Tom Conway (1904–1967) was George Sanders's elder brother. Their younger sister, Margaret Sanders, was born in 1912.
George Sanders was 11 when, in 1917, at the outbreak of the Russian Revolution, the family moved to England.[6] Like his brother, he attended Bedales School and Brighton College, a boys' independent school in Brighton, then went on to Manchester Technical College.[7] After graduating he worked at an advertising agency, where the company secretary, the aspiring actress Greer Garson, suggested that he take up a career in acting.[8]

In the trailer for Alfred Hitchcock's
Foreign Correspondent (1940)
Sanders made his British film debut in 1929. Seven years later, after a series of British films, he took his first role in an American production in Lloyd's of London (1936) as Lord Everett Stacy. His smooth upper-class English accent, his sleek manner and his suave, superior and somewhat threatening air made him in demand for American films for years to come.[9] He gravitated to supporting roles in A-pictures, often with all-British casts, such as Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca (1940), in which he and Judith Anderson played cruel foils to Joan Fontaine's character, and in the same director's Foreign Correspondent, later that year, where he played one of his few heroic parts in a Europe threatened by Fascism.
His early leading roles were in B-pictures and adventure serials; in his first American job as a leading man, the rarely-seen International Settlement, (1938) with Dolores Del Rio he rose above material to play a sophisticated British man of danger; it did so well that it led to the title role in two popular wartime film series with similar characters, one based on The Falcon and the other on The Saint.[10] He played a smooth American Nazi in Confessions of a Nazi Spy (1939) with Edward G. Robinson. Rage in Heaven (1941), an early film noir, cast him as the trustworthy good guy whose best friend, Robert Montgomery, goes murderously insane and sets him up for the rap, but such forays were seldom. By 1942, Sanders handed the role of the Falcon to his brother Tom, in The Falcon's Brother. The only other film in which the two acting siblings appeared together was Death of a Scoundrel (1956), in which they also played brothers.
Sanders played Lord Henry Wotton in the film version of The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945) and was the third lead in the elegiacThe Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947) with Gene Tierney and Rex Harrison in the leads. Sanders starred with Angela Lansbury in Albert Lewin's The Private Affairs of Bel Ami (also 1947), based on the novel by Guy de Maupassant. Sanders and Lansbury also featured in Cecil B. deMille's biblical epic Samson and Delilah (1949).

As Addison DeWitt in the trailer for
All About Eve (1950)
For his role as the acerbic, cold-blooded theatre critic Addison DeWitt in All About Eve (1950) Sanders won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.[11] He then starred as Sir Brian de Bois-Guilbert in Ivanhoe (1952), dying in a duel with Robert Taylor after professing his love for the Jewish maiden Rebecca, played by Elizabeth Taylor. Sanders starred as King Richard the Lionheart in King Richard and the Crusaders (1954).
Peter Sellers and Sanders appeared together in the Pink Panther sequel A Shot in the Dark (1964). Sanders had earlier inspired Sellers's character Hercules Grytpype-Thynne in the BBC radio comedy series The Goon Show (1951–60).[12]
Sanders went into television with the series The George Sanders Mystery Theater (1957). He played an upper-crust English villain, G. Emory Partridge, in two episodes of The Man From U.N.C.L.E. in 1965, "The Gazebo in the Maze Affair" and "The Yukon Affair". He also portrayed Mr. Freeze in two episodes of the live-action TV series Batman, both shown in February 1966. Sanders voiced the malevolent Shere Khan in the Walt Disney production of The Jungle Book (1967). He had a supporting role in John Huston's The Kremlin Letter (1969), in which his first scene showed him dressed in drag and playing piano in a gay bar in San Francisco. One of his last screen roles was in Doomwatch (1972), a feature film version of a contemporary BBC television series.
Novels[edit]
Two ghostwritten crime novels were published under his name to cash in on his fame at the height of his wartime film series. The first was Crime on My Hands (1944), written in the first person, and mentioning his Saint and Falcon films. This was followed by Stranger at Home in 1946. Both were actually written by female authors: the former was by Craig Rice, and the latter by Leigh Brackett.
Singing[edit]

As Lord Henry Wotton in the trailer for The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945)
In 1958 Sanders recorded an album called The George Sanders Touch: Songs for the Lovely Lady. The album, released by ABC-Paramount Records, featured lush string arrangements of romantic ballads, crooned by Sanders in a fit baritone/bass (spanning from low to middle C), including "Such is My Love", a song he had himself composed. After going to great lengths to get the role he appeared in the Broadway cast of South Pacific, but was overwhelmed with anxiety over the singing and quickly dropped out. His singing voice can be heard in Call Me Madam (1953). He also signed on for the role of Sheridan Whiteside in the stage musical Sherry! (1967), based on Kaufman and Hart's play The Man Who Came to Dinner, but he found the stage production demanding and quit after his wife Benita Hume discovered that she had terminal bone cancer.
During the production of The Jungle Book Sanders refused to provide the singing voice for his character Shere Khan during the final recording of the song, "That's What Friends Are For". According to Richard Sherman, Bill Lee, a member of The Mellomen, was called in to substitute for Sanders.[13]
Personal life[edit]
On 27 October 1940 Sanders married Susan Larson (real name Elsie Poole). The couple divorced in 1949. From later that year until 1954 Sanders was married to Zsa Zsa Gabor, with whom he starred in the film Death of a Scoundrel (1956) after their divorce. On 10 February 1959 Sanders married Benita Hume, widow of Ronald Colman. She died in 1967, the same year Sanders's brother Tom Conway died of liver failure. Sanders had become distant from his brother because of Conway's drinking problem.[14] Sanders endured a further blow in the same year with the death of their mother, Margarethe.
Sanders's autobiography, Memoirs of a Professional Cad, was published in 1960 and gathered critical praise for its wit. Sanders suggested the title A Dreadful Man for his biography, which was later written by his friend Brian Aherne and published in 1979.[15]
Sanders's last marriage, on 4 December 1970, was to Magda Gabor, the elder sister of his second wife. This marriage lasted only 32 days, after which he began drinking heavily.[16]
Later years and suicide[edit]

Sanders as Captain Billy Leech in The Black Swan (1942)
Sanders suffered from dementia, worsened by waning health, and visibly teetered in his last films, owing to a loss of balance. According to Aherne's biography, he also had a minor stroke. Sanders could not bear the prospect of losing his health or needing help to carry out everyday tasks, and became deeply depressed. At about this time he found that he could no longer play his grand piano, so he dragged it outside and smashed it with an axe. His last girlfriend persuaded him to sell his beloved house in Majorca, Spain, which he later bitterly regretted. From then on he drifted.[17]
On 23 April 1972, Sanders checked into a hotel in Castelldefels, a coastal town near Barcelona. He was found dead two days later, having gone into cardiac arrest after swallowing the contents of five bottles of the barbiturate Nembutal.[18][19] He left behind three suicide notes, one of which read:
Dear World, I am leaving because I am bored. I feel I have lived long enough. I am leaving you with your worries in this sweet cesspool. Good luck.[20][21][22]
His signature appeared under the message.
Sanders's body was returned to Britain for funeral services, after which it was cremated and the ashes were scattered in the English Channel.
David Niven wrote in Bring on the Empty Horses (1975), the second volume of his memoirs, that in 1937 his friend George Sanders had predicted that he would commit suicide when he was 65, and that in his 50s he had appeared to be depressed since his marriages had failed and several tragedies had befallen him.[23]
Honours and references in popular culture[edit]
Sanders has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, for films at 1636 Vine Street and for television at 7007 Hollywood Boulevard.
He is mentioned in the song "Celluloid Heroes" by the Kinks: "If you covered him with garbage/George Sanders would still have style."[citation needed]
Sanders' ghost makes an appearance in Clive Barker's novel Coldheart Canyon (2001), as well as in the animated feature film Dante's Inferno (2007). In 2005, Charles Dennis played Sanders in his own play High Class Heel at the National Arts Club in New York City.[citation needed]
In the "House Arrest" episode of The Sopranos, Tony tells Doctor Melfi of his boredom and states "I'm ready for the George Sanders long walk here".
In the 2000 film Wonder Boys, George Sanders is one of the people Tobey Maguire's character mentions when he is naming high-profile suicides that have taken place in distant memory.

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Historische gebeurtenissen

  • De temperatuur op 3 juli 1906 lag tussen 10,1 °C en 22,1 °C en was gemiddeld 16,8 °C. Er was 7,3 uur zonneschijn (44%). De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 3 Bft (matige wind) en kwam overheersend uit het noord-oosten. Bron: KNMI
  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 1890 tot 1948 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van 17 augustus 1905 tot 11 februari 1908 was er in Nederland het kabinet De Meester met als eerste minister Mr. Th. de Meester (unie-liberaal).
  • In het jaar 1906: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 5,5 miljoen inwoners.
    • 1 februari » In Rotterdam wordt de korfbalclub RSC Velox opgericht.
    • 7 april » Uitbarsting van de Vesuvius.
    • 4 juli » Goedkeuring van de Priestercongregatie van het Heilig Hart van Jezus door paus Pius X.
    • 3 september » De Vereniging Natuurmonumenten doet haar eerste aankoop, het Naardermeer.
    • 6 december » De Britse overheid verleent zelfbestuur aan de vroegere boerenrepubliek Transvaal.
    • 21 december » De Nederlandse marine neemt haar eerste onderzeeboot in dienst: Hr. Ms. O 1.
  • De temperatuur op 25 april 1972 lag tussen -0.3 °C en 9,6 °C en was gemiddeld 4,6 °C. Er was 13,5 uur zonneschijn (93%). Het was vrijwel onbewolkt. De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 3 Bft (matige wind) en kwam overheersend uit het noord-noord-oosten. Bron: KNMI
  • Koningin Juliana (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 4 september 1948 tot 30 april 1980 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van 5 april 1967 tot dinsdag 6 juli 1971 was er in Nederland het kabinet Biesheuvel I met als eerste minister Mr. B.W. Biesheuvel (ARP).
  • Van donderdag 20 juli 1972 tot vrijdag 11 mei 1973 was er in Nederland het kabinet Biesheuvel II met als eerste minister Mr. B.W. Biesheuvel (ARP).
  • In het jaar 1972: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 13,3 miljoen inwoners.
    • 8 januari » Zwemster Shane Gould uit Australië brengt in Sydney het wereldrecord op de 100 meter vrije slag op 58,5. De mondiale toptijd was sinds 1964 met 58,9 in handen van haar landgenote Dawn Fraser.
    • 21 februari » President Richard Nixon bezoekt de volksrepubliek China.
    • 19 maart » India en Bangladesh tekenen een vriendschapsovereenkomst.
    • 18 april » Een New Yorkse rechter beslist dat Vera de Vries, alias Xaviera Hollander, de Verenigde Staten moet verlaten.
    • 29 april » Koning Ntare V van Burundi komt om het leven wanneer opstandelingen proberen hem te bevrijden uit zijn paleis.
    • 3 mei » Verdediger Dick Schneider maakt zijn debuut voor het Nederlands voetbalelftal in de vriendschappelijke wedstrijd in Rotterdam tegen Peru (3-0). Doelpuntenmaker Jan Klijnjan (1-0) speelt zijn elfde en laatste interland voor Oranje.


Dezelfde geboorte/sterftedag

Bron: Wikipedia

Bron: Wikipedia


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Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Kees Willems, "Stamboom Willems Hoogeloon-Best", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-willems-hoogeloon-best/I145238.php : benaderd 4 juni 2024), "George Henri SANDERS (1906-1972)".