
Laird Cregar
Known for department: Acting
Birthday: 1913-07-28 – 1944-12-09
Place of birth: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Biography
​From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  Laird Cregar (July 28, 1913 – December 9, 1944) was an American film actor. Samuel Laird Cregar was the youngest of six sons of Edward Matthews Cregar, a cricketer and member of a team called the Gentlemen of Philadelphia. They toured internationally in the late 1890s and early 1900s. Laird's mother was the former Elizabeth Smith. Laird Cregar was educated at Winchester College in England, spending his summers as a page boy and bit player with the Stratford-upon-Avon theatrical troupe. Upon completing his schooling, Cregar won a scholarship at California's Pasadena Playhouse, supporting himself as a nightclub bouncer when funds ran out. So broke that at times he had to sleep in his car, Cregar forced Hollywood to pay attention to him by staging his own one-man show, in which he portrayed Oscar Wilde. Description above from the Wikipedia article Laird Cregar, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known for

I Wake Up Screaming
1941Police Insp. Ed Cornell
The Lodger
1944Mr. Slade
Hangover Square
1945George Harvey Bone
The Black Swan
1942Captain Henry Morgan
Blood and Sand
1941Natalio Curro
Joan of Paris
1942Herr Funk
This Gun for Hire
1942Willard Gates
Heaven Can Wait
1943His Excellency
Rings on Her Fingers
1942Warren
Hudson's Bay
1940Gooseberry
Screen Snapshots Series 21 No. 1
1941Self
Holy Matrimony
1943Clive Oxford
Ten Gentlemen from West Point
1942Maj. Sam Carter
Hello, Frisco, Hello
1943Sam Weaver
Charley's Aunt
1941Sir Francis Chesney
The Tragic Mask: The Laird Cregar Story
2007Self (archive footage)Man In the Attic: The Making of "The Lodger"
2007Self (archive footage)