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John Mills

John Mills
John Mills
Born: Feb 22, 1908 in Felixstowe, Suffolk, England
Died: Apr 23, 2005 in Denham, England, UK
Occupation: Actor, Director,
Active: '30s-'90s
Major Genres: Drama, War
Career Highlights: The Thief of Bagdad, In Which We Serve, Goodbye, Mr. Chips
First Major Screen Credit: Nine Days a Queen (1934)
24 Videos for John Mills
Bright Young Things (2003) Night of the Fox (1989) The Thirty-Nine Steps (1978)
Cats (1998) Who's That Girl? (1987) Ryan's Daughter (1970)
Bean (1997) The Masks of Death (1984) King Rat (1965)
Bean (1997) Sahara (1983) The Chalk Garden (1964)
Hamlet (1996) Gandhi (1982) Around the World in 80 Days (1956)
Deadly Advice (1994) Quatermass (1979) The Colditz Story (1955)
Frankenstein (1993) Zulu Dawn (1979) In Which We Serve (1942)
A Tale of Two Cities (1989) Dr. Strange (1978) Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939)
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Biography:

Born in a British seaside resort town, John Mills was the son of a mathematics teacher father. Mills' mother worked as a theatrical box office manager, and it was this world, rather than his father's academic milieu, which most attracted young Mills. After brief employment as a clerk in a corn merchant's office, Mills moved to London, where he enrolled at Zelia Raye's Dancing School.

His first professional job was as a chorus dancer in {+The Five O'Clock Revue} in 1929. Making as many contacts as possible, Mills was able to secure work on the legitimate stage, and in 1932 appeared in his first film, the Jessie Matthews vehicle The Midshipmaid. Learning his craft in quota quickies, Mills rose to leading man in such prestige productions as Brown on Resolution (1935), Tudor Rose (1936), and The Green Cockatoo (1938).

In 1939, he appeared in his first American film, Goodbye Mr. Chips, playing student Peter Colley. He starred in a number of morale-boosting World War II films, usually playing the personification of the calm, resourceful young British military officer; any chance for a real life career in uniform, however, was scuttled by Mills' duodenal ulcer.

After the war, he starred in such international hits as Great Expectations (1946), Scott of the Antarctic (1949), Hobson's Choice (1954), and Above Us the Waves (1955). In 1970, Mills won a long overdue Oscar for his performance as the village idiot in Ryan's Daughter (1970), directed (as were several of Mills' earlier films) by David Lean.

His Broadway work has included {+Ross}, a 1961 dramatization of the life of T.E. Lawrence. In 1966, Mills directed Sky West and Crooked (aka Gypsy Girl), which starred his daughter, Hayley Mills, and was written by his wife, Mary Hayley Bell (Mills' other daughter, Juliet, is likewise an actress of note).

One year later, he made his American series-TV debut as British attorney Dundee in the weekly Western Dundee and the Culhane. In 1977, John Mills was made a knight of the British Empire; his very full life, both offscreen and on, was summed up three years later in his autobiography {-Up in the Clouds, Gentlemen, Please}.

~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide.