Biography
A much-loved character actor, British native Denholm Elliott performed in over 100 films during the course of his long career. Elliott, who was educated at Malvern College, went on stage just after World War II, and made his first film, Dear Mr. Prohack, in 1949. Often coming across as a sort of British
Ralph Bellamy, Elliot specialized in playing pleasant but ineffectual types during the 1950s, switching to dignified and slightly stuffy characters as he grew grayer. In 1964, he made a major impression on international audiences by playing the tattered gentleman who teaches
Alan Bates the tricks of social and financial climbing in
Nothing but the Best -- only to be strangled by Bates with his old school tie. With tight lips and taciturn glances, Elliott was the official who closed down
Elliott Gould's burlesque house in
The Night They Raided Minsky's (1968).
A gentler but no less authoritative role came in 1981 as
Harrison Ford's immediate superior Brody in
Raiders of the Lost Ark (reprising the part in 1989's
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade), while in 1984 Elliott was unforgettably waspish as the dying social lion who dictates his own death notice in
The Razor's Edge (the role played by
Clifton Webb in the 1946 version). In 1986, he played one of his most endearing roles, that of the free-thinking Mr. Emerson in
A Room with a View. In between these engagements, Elliott portrayed
Dan Aykroyd's -- and then
Eddie Murphy's -- refined butler in
Trading Places (1983). His portrayal won him his first British Academy Award; he also earned BAFTAs for his work in
A Private Function (1984) and Defence of the Realm (1985). Sadly, Elliott's still-thriving career was cut off in 1992 -- shortly after he completed the comedy
Noises Off -- when he died from complications brought about by AIDS. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide