
Donald Calthrop
Acting
Born 1888-04-11 · London, England, UK · Died 1940-07-15
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Donald Esme Clayton Calthrop (11 April 1888 – 15 July 1940) was an English stage and film actor. Calthrop made his first stage appearance at eighteen years of age. His first film was The Gay Lord Quex released in 1917. He starred as the title character in the successful musical The Boy in the same year. He then appeared in 63 films between 1916 and 1940, including five films directed by Alfred Hitchcock. He died in Eton, Berkshire from a heart attack while he was filming Major Barbara (1941).
Acting

Major Barbara
Peter Shirley

Charley's (Big-Hearted) Aunt
Guide

Let George Do It!
Frederick Strickland

Band Waggon
Hobday

Thunder in the City
Dr. Plumet

Love from a Stranger
Hobson

Fire Over England
Don Escobal

Café Colette
Nick

The Man Who Changed His Mind
Clayton

The Man Behind the Mask
Dr. Harold E. Walpole

Broken Blossoms
Old Chinaman

Scrooge
Bob Cratchit

Man of the Moment
Godfrey

The Phantom Light
David Owen

Me and Marlborough
Drunken Yokel

The Clairvoyant
Derelict (uncredited)
The Divine Spark
Judge Fumaroli

Red Ensign
Macleod

Sorrell and Son
Dr. Richard Orange
It's a Cop
Charles Murray
This Acting Business
Milton Stafford

Friday the Thirteenth
Hugh Nicholls

I Was a Spy
Cnockhaert
Early to Bed
Potsdam Guide

F.P.1
Sunshine, the Photographer

Rome Express
Poole
Fires of Fate
Sir William Royden

Number Seventeen
Nora's Escort Brant

Money for Nothing
Hotel Manager

Industrial Britain
Self - Commentator (uncredited)