Reginald Purdell
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Reginald Purdell (4 November 1895 – 22 April 1953) was an English actor and screenwriter who appeared in over 40 films between 1930 and 1951. During the same period he also contributed to the screenplays of 15 feature films, and had a brief foray into directing with two films in 1937.
Purdell was born in Clapham, London. As a young man he served in the British Army with the South Wales Borderers regiment for the duration of the First World War. On returning to civilian life after the war, he decided to try his luck as an actor and gained experience on the stage through the 1920s. His move into films in 1930 coincided with the advent of the talkie era in British cinema.
Purdell's first screen appearance was in the 1930 comedy The Middle Watch, in a role he would later reprise in a 1940 remake. He next travelled to Germany to feature in historical drama Congress Dances, an ambitious and lavishly budgeted project by the UFA film company, involving the simultaneous filming of three versions of the same story in German, English and French in an attempt to prove that a European company could challenge the dominance of American studios in the new era of sound by delivering a continent-wide hit.
Purdell soon began to accumulate screen credits in a wide variety of films ranging from cheaply made quota quickies to more sophisticated productions. He showed a knack for playing comedy, and his 1930s films fell mainly into this genre, with occasional ventures into straight drama and thrillers. Purdell's screenwriting career began in 1932 and he was most productive in this field during the late 1930s, with only occasional ventures later in his career. He tried his hand at film directing in 1937 with two comedies Don't Get Me Wrong, a Max Miller vehicle co-directed with Arthur B. Woods, and Patricia Gets Her Man. Both films were reasonably well-received, but Purdell appears to have decided that directing was not for him, as there would be no more ventures in this area.
In the 1940s Purdell's acting career diversified, with fewer throwaway comedies and more appearances in high-quality dramatic vehicles. His credits included war dramas We Dive at Dawn and Two Thousand Women, Gainsborough melodrama Love Story, notorious box-office flop musical London Town and the classic Brighton Rock. Purdell's last screen appearance was in 1951 and he died on 22 April 1953, aged 57.
Acting
Movie
Stage Fright
as Police Car Driver (uncredited)
1950
Movie
Brighton Rock
as Frank
1948
Movie
Q Planes
as Pilot
1939
Movie
We Dive at Dawn
as Coxwain - C / P.O. Dabbs
1943
Movie
Busman's Honeymoon
as MacBride
1940
Movie
Holiday Camp
as Redcoat
1947
Movie
Crown v. Stevens
as Alf
1936
Movie
Two Thousand Women
as Alec Harvey
1944
Movie
Captain Boycott
as American reporter
1947
Movie
A Man About the House
as Higgs
1947
Movie
Love Story
as Albert
1944
It's in the Bag
as Joe
1944
Movie
The Root of All Evil
as Perkins
1947
Movie
Candles at Nine
as Charles Lacey
1944
Movie
The Old Curiosity Shop
as Dick Swiveller
1934
Movie
Bell-Bottom George
as Birdie Edwards
1944
Movie
Variety Jubilee
as Joe Swan
1943
Movie
Crime on the Hill
as Reporter
1933
Movie
A Night in Montmartre
as Tino
1931
The Middle Watch
as Cpl Duckett
1940
Movie
The Queen's Affair
as Guard
1934
Up to the Neck
as Jimmy Catlin
1933
The Missing People
as Harry Morgan
1939
My Lucky Star
as Portrait Painter
1933
Crew
Movie
The Dark Tower
Screenplay
1943
Movie
Dreaming
Writer
1944
Movie
Three Men in a Boat
Adaptation
1933
Movie
Here Comes the Sun
Screenplay
1945
My Lucky Star
Dialogue
1933
Love on the Spot
Writer
1932
Movie
Don't Get Me Wrong
Director
1937
The Vulture
Screenplay
1937
The Viper
Screenplay
1938
Quiet, Please
Writer
1938
Hail and Farewell
Script
1936
The Compulsory Wife
Script
1937