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{{quote|''I am shocked -- ''shocked'' -- to find that gambling is going on in here!''|'''Louis Renault''' (Claude Rains), '''''[[Casablanca]]''''' <ref> A [[TV Tropes (Wiki)/Memes|much-loved]] piece of [[Hypocritical Humour]].</ref>}}
{{quote|''I am shocked -- ''shocked'' -- to find that gambling is going on in here!''
|'''Louis Renault''' (Claude Rains), '''''[[Casablanca]]''''' <ref> A [[TV Tropes/Memes|much-loved]] piece of [[Hypocritical Humour]].</ref>}}


'''William Claude Rains''' was a British character actor (1889-1967) and one of the most significant actors working in films in the middle of the twentieth century. Born in the Camberwell section of London, he overcame the handicaps of a [[British Accents|Cockney accent]] ''and'' a [[Speech Impediment|lisp]] to become a notable stage actor under the tutelage of the famous actor-manager, Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree, who helped him to pay for elocution lessons. Ironically, his beautiful voice and the flawless diction he had acquired landed him his [[Star-Making Role|breakout role]] as the title character of the 1933 film of ''[[The Invisible Man (film)|The Invisible Man]]'' -- a film in which [[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|his face does not appear]] until the closing scene. This part is referenced in a line from the opening number of ''[[The Rocky Horror Picture Show]]'', and in ''[[Heroes (TV series)|Heroes]]'', where another [[Invisibility|invisible man]] is named for him.
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A series of more or less macabre parts followed, such as the murderer John Jasper in the first sound film adaptation of [[Charles Dickens]]' ''[[The Mystery of Edwin Drood]]''. Rains's cool, [[Deadpan Snarker|sardonic]] delivery made him a natural for [[Hollywood History|costume]] [[Wicked Cultured|villainy]], and he appeared as the treacherous [[Historical Villain Upgrade|Earl of Hereford]] in the Warner Brothers’ adaptation of [[Mark Twain]]’s ''The Prince and the Pauper'', in which rising Warners star [[Errol Flynn]] also appeared as Sir Miles Hendon. Rains and Flynn would appear together again to even better effect in ''[[The Adventures of Robin Hood (film)|The Adventures of Robin Hood]]''; Rains would credit ''Hood'' director Michael Curtiz with teaching him to moderate his [[Large Ham|theatrical acting style]] for films.
'''William Claude Rains''' was a British character actor (1889-1967) and one of the most significant actors working in films in the middle of the twentieth century. Born in the Camberwell section of London, he overcame the handicaps of a [[British Accents|Cockney accent]] ''and'' a [[Speech Impediment|lisp]] to become a notable stage actor under the tutelage of the famous actor-manager, Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree, who helped him to pay for elocution lessons. Ironically, his beautiful voice and the flawless diction he had acquired landed him his [[Star Making Role|breakout role]] as the title character of the 1933 film of ''[[The Invisible Man (Film)|The Invisible Man]]'' -- a film in which [[Exactly What It Says On the Tin|his face does not appear]] until the closing scene. This part is referenced in a line from the opening number of ''[[The Rocky Horror Picture Show]]'', and in ''[[Heroes (TV)|Heroes]]'', where another [[Invisibility|invisible man]] is named for him.

A series of more or less macabre parts followed, such as the murderer John Jasper in the first sound film adaptation of [[Charles Dickens (Creator)|Charles Dickens]]' ''[[The Mystery of Edwin Drood (Literature)|The Mystery of Edwin Drood]]''. Rains's cool, [[Deadpan Snarker|sardonic]] delivery made him a natural for [[Hollywood History|costume]] [[Wicked Cultured|villainy]], and he appeared as the treacherous [[Historical Villain Upgrade|Earl of Hereford]] in the Warner Brothers’ adaptation of [[Mark Twain]]’s ''The Prince and the Pauper'', in which rising Warners star [[Errol Flynn]] also appeared as Sir Miles Hendon. Rains and Flynn would appear together again to even better effect in ''[[The Adventures of Robin Hood (Film)|The Adventures of Robin Hood]]''; Rains would credit ''Hood'' director Michael Curtiz with teaching him to moderate his [[Large Ham|theatrical acting style]] for films.


Later the same year Rains would play the musician Adam Lemp, father of the eponymous ''[[Chick Flick|Four Daughters]]'' ― ironically, this now largely forgotten film was one of his most popular, and spawned two sequels and an almost exact copy-cat variant. As Senator Paine, the corrupt “[[Ironic Nickname|Silver Knight]]” in [[Frank Capra]]’s ''[[Mr. Smith Goes to Washington]]'', Rains was nominated for his first Best Supporting Actor [[Academy Award|Oscar]]. Three years later he would earn a second nomination for the part of raffish ''[[Les Collaborateurs|collaborateur]]'' Louis Renault in Curtiz’s ''[[Casablanca]]''; his delivery of the Epstein brothers’ sparkling dialogue immortalized such lines as “Round up the usual suspects.” He also gets a shocking -- shocking! -- scene of [[Hypocritical Humour]], and the film famously ends with his and [[Humphrey Bogart]]'s [[Heterosexual Life Partners|beautiful friendship]]. 1944 brought him his third [[Academy Award|Oscar]] nomination, as the [[Henpecked Husband|long-suffering husband]] of [[Bette Davis]]’s [[Rich Bitch|shrewish society matron]] in ''Mr. Skeffington.''
Later the same year Rains would play the musician Adam Lemp, father of the eponymous ''[[Chick Flick|Four Daughters]]'' ― ironically, this now largely forgotten film was one of his most popular, and spawned two sequels and an almost exact copy-cat variant. As Senator Paine, the corrupt “[[Ironic Nickname|Silver Knight]]” in [[Frank Capra]]’s ''[[Mr. Smith Goes to Washington]]'', Rains was nominated for his first Best Supporting Actor [[Academy Award|Oscar]]. Three years later he would earn a second nomination for the part of raffish ''[[Les Collaborateurs|collaborateur]]'' Louis Renault in Curtiz’s ''[[Casablanca]]''; his delivery of the Epstein brothers’ sparkling dialogue immortalized such lines as “Round up the usual suspects.” He also gets a shocking -- shocking! -- scene of [[Hypocritical Humour]], and the film famously ends with his and [[Humphrey Bogart]]'s [[Heterosexual Life Partners|beautiful friendship]]. 1944 brought him his third [[Academy Award|Oscar]] nomination, as the [[Henpecked Husband|long-suffering husband]] of [[Bette Davis]]’s [[Rich Bitch|shrewish society matron]] in ''Mr. Skeffington.''
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In 1945, Rains was featured in the most expensive British film that had been made up to that time, playing opposite Vivien Leigh in [[George Bernard Shaw]]’s ''Caesar and Cleopatra'' under the supervision of Shaw himself; the film was, alas! a notorious bomb. The next year, a better form of ''[[Notorious]]'' under the direction of [[Alfred Hitchcock]] brought Rains his fourth and last [[Academy Award|Oscar]] nomination for the difficult part of a [[Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain|sympathetic]] post-war [[Those Wacky Nazis|Nazi]] conspirator.
In 1945, Rains was featured in the most expensive British film that had been made up to that time, playing opposite Vivien Leigh in [[George Bernard Shaw]]’s ''Caesar and Cleopatra'' under the supervision of Shaw himself; the film was, alas! a notorious bomb. The next year, a better form of ''[[Notorious]]'' under the direction of [[Alfred Hitchcock]] brought Rains his fourth and last [[Academy Award|Oscar]] nomination for the difficult part of a [[Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain|sympathetic]] post-war [[Those Wacky Nazis|Nazi]] conspirator.


In 1957 Rains [[WTH Casting Agency|sang and danced]] to the [[Public Domain Soundtrack|music of Edvard Grieg (!)]] in a [[So Bad Its Good|So Bad, It's Good]] TV musical adaptation of Robert Browning’s poem, ''The Pied Piper of Hamelin''. He made several appearances on television anthology series in that and the following decade, notably on ''[[Alfred Hitchcock Presents]]''. Rains’s last film appearance was as King Herod in George Stevens’ 1965 [[The Bible (Literature)|Biblical]] epic, ''[[The Greatest Story Ever Told]]''.
In 1957 Rains [[What the Hell, Casting Agency?|sang and danced]] to the [[Public Domain Soundtrack|music of Edvard Grieg (!)]] in a [[So Bad It's Good|So Bad, It's Good]] TV musical adaptation of Robert Browning’s poem, ''The Pied Piper of Hamelin''. He made several appearances on television anthology series in that and the following decade, notably on ''[[Alfred Hitchcock Presents]]''. Rains’s last film appearance was as King Herod in George Stevens’ 1965 [[The Bible|Biblical]] epic, ''[[The Greatest Story Ever Told]]''.

=== Some notable films Claude Rains appeared in include: ===


{{actorroles}}
* ''[[The Invisible Man (Film)|The Invisible Man]]'', as Griffin, the title character (1933)
* ''[[The Invisible Man (film)|The Invisible Man]]'', as Griffin, the title character (1933)
* ''Charles Dickens’ Mystery of Edwin Drood'', as John Jasper (1935)
* ''Charles Dickens’ Mystery of Edwin Drood'', as John Jasper (1935)
* ''The Prince and the Pauper'', as Edward Seymour, Earl of Hertford (1937)
* ''The Prince and the Pauper'', as Edward Seymour, Earl of Hertford (1937)
* ''[[The Adventures of Robin Hood (Film)|The Adventures of Robin Hood]]'', as Prince John (1938)
* ''[[The Adventures of Robin Hood (film)|The Adventures of Robin Hood]]'', as Prince John (1938)
* ''Four Daughters'', as Adam Lemp (a role he would play three more times) (1938)
* ''Four Daughters'', as Adam Lemp (a role he would play three more times) (1938)
* ''Juarez'', as Emperor Napoleon III (1939)
* ''Juarez'', as Emperor Napoleon III (1939)
* ''[[Mr. Smith Goes to Washington]]'', as Senator Joseph Harrison Paine (1939)
* ''[[Mr. Smith Goes to Washington]]'', as Senator Joseph Harrison Paine (1939)
* ''[[The Sea Hawk (Film)|The Sea Hawk]]'', as Don José Alvarez de Cordoba, the Spanish ambassador (1940)
* ''[[The Sea Hawk]]'', as Don José Alvarez de Cordoba, the Spanish ambassador (1940)
* ''Here Comes Mr. Jordan'', as the eponymous [[Our Angels Are Different|Angel]] (1941)
* ''Here Comes Mr. Jordan'', as the eponymous [[Our Angels Are Different|Angel]] (1941)
* ''[[The Wolfman]]'', as Sir John Talbot, the [[Wolf Man]]’s father (1941)
* ''[[The Wolf Man]]'', as Sir John Talbot, the [[Wolf Man]]’s father (1941)
* ''[[Casablanca]]'', as Captain Louis Renault, the Prefect of Police (1942)
* ''[[Casablanca]]'', as Captain Louis Renault, the Prefect of Police (1942)
* ''[[Now Voyager]]'', as [[The Shrink|psychiatrist]] Dr. Jaquith (1942)
* ''[[Now, Voyager]]'', as [[The Shrink|psychiatrist]] Dr. Jaquith (1942)
* ''[[Phantom of the Opera|The Phantom of the Opera]]'', as Erique Claudin, the Phantom (1943)
* ''[[Phantom of the Opera|The Phantom of the Opera]]'', as Erique Claudin, the Phantom (1943)
* ''[[Mr. Skeffington]]'', as [[Meaningful Name|Job]] Skeffington (1944)
* ''[[Mr. Skeffington]]'', as [[Meaningful Name|Job]] Skeffington (1944)
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* ''[[The Passionate Friends]]'', as Howard Justin, a long-suffering husband. (1949)
* ''[[The Passionate Friends]]'', as Howard Justin, a long-suffering husband. (1949)
* ''The Pied Piper of Hamelin'', as the Mayor (1957) (TV)
* ''The Pied Piper of Hamelin'', as the Mayor (1957) (TV)
* ''The Lost World'', as Sir [[Arthur Conan Doyle (Creator)|Arthur Conan Doyle]]'s Professor Challenger (1960)
* ''The Lost World'', as Sir [[Arthur Conan Doyle]]'s Professor Challenger (1960)
* ''[[Lawrence of Arabia]]'', as Mr. Dryden (1962)
* ''[[Lawrence of Arabia]]'', as Mr. Dryden (1962)
* ''[[The Greatest Story Ever Told]]'', as Herod the Great (1965)
* ''[[The Greatest Story Ever Told]]'', as Herod the Great (1965)
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{{reflist}}
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[[Category:Actors]]
[[Category:Actors]]
[[Category:Claude Rains]]
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[[Category:Trope]]
[[Category:Pages with working Wikipedia tabs]]

Latest revision as of 12:10, 5 October 2021

/wiki/Claude Rainscreator

I am shocked -- shocked -- to find that gambling is going on in here!

Louis Renault (Claude Rains), Casablanca [1]

William Claude Rains was a British character actor (1889-1967) and one of the most significant actors working in films in the middle of the twentieth century. Born in the Camberwell section of London, he overcame the handicaps of a Cockney accent and a lisp to become a notable stage actor under the tutelage of the famous actor-manager, Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree, who helped him to pay for elocution lessons. Ironically, his beautiful voice and the flawless diction he had acquired landed him his breakout role as the title character of the 1933 film of The Invisible Man -- a film in which his face does not appear until the closing scene. This part is referenced in a line from the opening number of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, and in Heroes, where another invisible man is named for him.

A series of more or less macabre parts followed, such as the murderer John Jasper in the first sound film adaptation of Charles Dickens' The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Rains's cool, sardonic delivery made him a natural for costume villainy, and he appeared as the treacherous Earl of Hereford in the Warner Brothers’ adaptation of Mark Twain’s The Prince and the Pauper, in which rising Warners star Errol Flynn also appeared as Sir Miles Hendon. Rains and Flynn would appear together again to even better effect in The Adventures of Robin Hood; Rains would credit Hood director Michael Curtiz with teaching him to moderate his theatrical acting style for films.

Later the same year Rains would play the musician Adam Lemp, father of the eponymous Four Daughters ― ironically, this now largely forgotten film was one of his most popular, and spawned two sequels and an almost exact copy-cat variant. As Senator Paine, the corrupt “Silver Knight” in Frank Capra’s Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Rains was nominated for his first Best Supporting Actor Oscar. Three years later he would earn a second nomination for the part of raffish collaborateur Louis Renault in Curtiz’s Casablanca; his delivery of the Epstein brothers’ sparkling dialogue immortalized such lines as “Round up the usual suspects.” He also gets a shocking -- shocking! -- scene of Hypocritical Humour, and the film famously ends with his and Humphrey Bogart's beautiful friendship. 1944 brought him his third Oscar nomination, as the long-suffering husband of Bette Davis’s shrewish society matron in Mr. Skeffington.

In 1945, Rains was featured in the most expensive British film that had been made up to that time, playing opposite Vivien Leigh in George Bernard Shaw’s Caesar and Cleopatra under the supervision of Shaw himself; the film was, alas! a notorious bomb. The next year, a better form of Notorious under the direction of Alfred Hitchcock brought Rains his fourth and last Oscar nomination for the difficult part of a sympathetic post-war Nazi conspirator.

In 1957 Rains sang and danced to the music of Edvard Grieg (!) in a So Bad, It's Good TV musical adaptation of Robert Browning’s poem, The Pied Piper of Hamelin. He made several appearances on television anthology series in that and the following decade, notably on Alfred Hitchcock Presents. Rains’s last film appearance was as King Herod in George Stevens’ 1965 Biblical epic, The Greatest Story Ever Told.

Claude Rains has performed in the following roles: