Celebrities » Adolphe Menjou » Biography
Birthday:
Feb 18, 1890
Birthplace:
Not Available

Top Contributors for Adolphe Menjou

No contributors for Adolphe Menjou facts.

Adolphe Menjou Biography

Debonair and sophisticated, Adolphe Menjou was an impeccably-dressed lead actor with a waxed black mustache. At age 21 he moved to New York with no intention of becoming an actor; three years later he drifted into films as an extra, then got some larger roles before serving as a captain in the Ambulance Corps for three years in World War I. Back in the U.S. Menjou returned to acting, playing supporting roles in a number of major productions. He became a star after playing the lead role in Charlie Chaplin's A Woman of Paris (1923), which established his screen persona: a dapper, suave man of the world. He went on to play this role in more than 100 films, at first as a leading man and later as a character actor. He made the transition to sound easily and received a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his work in The Front Page (1931). He gained a reputation as one of the world's best-dressed men, a fact alluded to in the title of his autobiography, It Took Nine Tailors (1948). Active in politically conservative causes, in 1944 Menjou became a co-founder of the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals; later he was a "friendly" witness in the 1947 hearings of the House Un-American Activities Committee. From 1928-33 he was married to actress Kathryn Carver, and from 1934 on he was married to actress Verree Teasdale. ~ Rovi

Adolphe Menjou Trivia

No trivia approved yet.

Quotes from Adolphe Menjou's Characters

    1. Norman Maine: Do you think I'm slipping?
    2. Oliver Niles: Can you take it?
    3. Norman Maine: Yeah, go ahead.
    4. Oliver Niles: The tense is wrong. You're not slipping - you've slipped.
    From A Star Is Born. Submitted by Matthew Y (2 months ago)
Help | About | Jobs | Critics Submission | API | Licensing | Mobile