

George Sanders
Acting
July 3, 1906
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire [now Russia]
April 25, 1972
George Henry Sanders (3 July 1906 – 25 April 1972) was a British film and television actor, singer-songwriter, music composer, and author. His career as an actor spanned over forty years. His heavy upper-class English accent and smooth bass voice often led him to be cast as sophisticated but villainous characters. He is perhaps best known as Jack Favell in Rebecca (1940), Scott ffolliott in Foreign Correspondent (1940, a rare heroic part), The Saran of Gaza in Samson and Delilah (1949), the most popular film of the year, Addison DeWitt in All About Eve (1950, for which he won an Oscar), Sir Brian De Bois-Guilbert in Ivanhoe (1952), King Richard the Lionheart in King Richard and the Crusaders (1954), Mr. Freeze in a two-parter episode of Batman (1966), the voice of the malevolent man-hating tiger Shere Khan in Disney's The Jungle Book (1967), the suave crimefighter The Falcon during the 1940s (a role eventually bequeathed to his elder brother, Tom Conway), and Simon Templar, The Saint, in five films made in the 1930s and 1940s.
The Filmography


Five Golden Hours

Village of the Damned

Cone of Silence

The Last Voyage

Solomon and Sheba

From the Earth to the Moon

The Whole Truth

Death of a Scoundrel

That Certain Feeling

Never Say Goodbye

Laura

The King's Thief

The Scarlet Coat

Moonfleet

Jupiter's Darling

The Stranger Came Home

King Richard and the Crusaders

Witness to Murder
