Luis van Rooten | |
Birth Name: | Luis d'Antin van Rooten |
Birth Date: | 29 November 1906 |
Birth Place: | Mexico City, Mexico |
Death Place: | Chatham, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Alma Mater: | University of Pennsylvania |
Occupation: | Actor, author, architect, painter, translator |
Years Active: | 1938–1968 |
Spouse: | Catherine Gaylord Kelly |
Children: | 2[1] |
Luis d'Antin van Rooten (November 29, 1906 – June 17, 1973) was a Mexican-born American actor. He was sometimes credited as Louis Van Rooten.[2]
Van Rooten was born in 1906 in Mexico City, Mexico. His father worked as a translator and clerk at the American Embassy.[3] Some sources say his father was killed during the Mexican Revolution.[4]
In 1914, when he was 8, Van Rooten emigrated to the United States with his Belgian grandmother. Because he had no papers, his grandmother claimed van Rooten was her son, which resulted in the elongation of his name to Luis Ricardo Carlos Fernand d’Antin y Zuloaga van Rooten.[5]
Van Rooten attended a boarding school in Pennsylvania and earned his BA in architecture at the University of Pennsylvania in 1927. He enjoyed a successful career as an architect in Cleveland, Ohio before his love for acting led to a career as one of radio and television's most prolific character actors and narrators.[6]
Van Rooten's obituary in The New York Times noted that he worked on as many as 50 shows a month because of his ability to do dialects and criminals. Once, he was bumped off in 10 crime shows in a week.[7] [8]
His facility with languages made van Rooten an in-demand military radio announcer during World War II. He conducted a variety of broadcasts in Italian, Spanish, and French. This led to film work, often in roles requiring an accent or skill with dialects.
Known for his villainous roles, he played Nazi ringleader Heinrich Himmler in The Hitler Gang (1944) and Operation Eichmann (1961). He played supporting roles with a number of film stars, including Alan Ladd in Two Years Before the Mast (1946) and Beyond Glory (1948), Charles Laughton in The Big Clock (1948), Veronica Lake in Saigon (1948), Edward G. Robinson in Night Has a Thousand Eyes (1948), and Kirk Douglas in Detective Story (1951). He provided the voices for both the King and the Grand Duke in Walt Disney's animated film Cinderella (1950).
Van Rooten found steady work doing the narration in addition to acting in films, live television and radio dramas.One of his first film narration jobs was Industrial Ohio, a 1938 film in the SOHIO Let's Explore Ohio series.[9]
He acted in The Mysterious Traveler and I Love a Mystery, and played "The Maestro" in the 1949 story "Bury Your Dead, Arizona" and as ranch foreman "Jasper" in the 1950 story "The Battle of the Century." He portrayed the evil Roxor in the late 1940s revival of the radio serial Chandu the Magician and portrayed the title character's sidekick, Denny, in Bulldog Drummond.[10] Van Rooten played Emilio in the radio soap opera Valiant Lady.[11] He also performed on Broadway in Eugene O'Neill's A Touch of the Poet (1958) and John Osborne's Luther (1963). In 1958 he guest-starred as murderer Samuel D. Carlin in the Perry Mason episode, "The Case of the One-Eyed Witness". Van Rooten also appeared in an uncredited role on The Honeymooners as Mr. Johnson, the landlord. In 1952, he played the fictional French detective Maigret in an episode of the anthology series Suspense.
In "Joey Was Different," the August 22, 1949 edition of Radio City Playhouse, he played sixteen different characters in addition to writing the script.[12]
He is best known for his character work in films, but van Rooten was also a skilled artist and designer and the author of several sophisticated books of humor. These include Van Rooten's Book of Improbable Saints[13] and The Floriculturist's Vade Mecum of Exotic and Recondite Plants, Shrubs and Grasses, and One Malignant Parasite [14]
See main article: Mots D'Heures.
In particular, Van Rooten is well known for his book Mots D'Heures: Gousses, Rames (1967), ostensibly a collection of poems by an obscure and unsung Frenchman (with translations and commentary). Van Rooten used French words and phrases which, when spoken aloud with a French accent, produce English Mother Goose rhymes, a work of homophonic translation. The following example, when spoken aloud, sounds like the opening lines to "Humpty Dumpty":[15]
A free translation might read:
Van Rooten died June 17, 1973, in Chatham, Massachusetts in the retirement home he had designed himself.[16]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1938 | Industrial Ohio #1 | Narrator | A copy of the film is online in the Hagley Library Cinécraft Productions collection [17] | |
1944 | The Hitler Gang | Heinrich Himmler | ||
1946 | Two Years Before the Mast | 2nd Mate Foster | ||
1948 | To the Ends of the Earth | Commissioner Alberto Berado | ||
The Big Clock | Edwin Orlin | |||
Saigon | Simon | |||
To the Victor | Geran | |||
Beyond Glory | Dr. White | |||
Night Has a Thousand Eyes | Mr. Myers | |||
The Gentleman from Nowhere | F.B. Barton | |||
1949 | Boston Blackie's Chinese Venture | Bill Craddock | ||
City Across the River | Joe Cusack | |||
Champion | Harris | |||
The Secret of St. Ives | Clausel | |||
1950 | Cinderella | voice of the King and the Grand Duke | ||
1951 | Detective Story | Joe Feinson | ||
My Favorite Spy | Rudolf Hoenig | |||
1952 | Lydia Bailey | General Charles LeClerc | ||
1953 | The Great Adventure | Narrator (Anders as an adult) | (U.S. version), Voice | |
1955 | The Sea Chase | Matz | ||
1957 | The Unholy Wife | Ezra Benton | ||
1958 | Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Leon | Season 3 Episode 22: "The Return of the Hero" | |
Fräulein | Fritz Graubach | |||
Curse of the Faceless Man | Dr. Carlo Fiorillo | |||
1961 | Operation Eichmann | Heinrich Himmler | ||
1968 | What's So Bad About Feeling Good? | Dr. Fowler | Uncredited, (final film role) |