Gordon Harker(1885-1967)
- Actor
- Writer
Gordon Harker born in 1885 in London into a well-known family of
theatrical artists, he first appeared on stage in 1903. Lugubrious,
shifty cockney character who starred and supported in over 60 films his
first film role as Major Kent in Harold M. Shaw 'General John Regan'
starring Milton Rosmer for the Stoll Film Company in 1921 he was often
cast as a comical cockney crook or cop in many comedy and thrillers, he
appeared in three silent films directed by Alfred Hitchcock 'The Ring'
in 1927 'The Farmer's Wife' in 1928 and Champagne' in 1929 busy
throughout the 1930's with some of his best, including 'Rome Express'
in 1932, Boys Will Be Boys' in 1935 with Will Hay, and Michael Powell's
'The Phantom Light' in 1935, and also the 'The Frog' in 1937, he was
noted for his performances as 'Inspector Hornleigh' in a trilogy of
films made between 1938-40, his last appearance as Hardy in 'Left Right
and Centre' in 1959 starring Ian Carmichael and Alastair Sim, also
popular on radio and t.v. he died in 1967 in London age 82.