film
Becky Sharp (1935) In 1933 he entered a talent contest organised by
Paramount Pictures and was selected as one of thirty winners and one of only two from New Zealand. The talent quest was organised for English speaking countries and winners were given small parts in a film. The film was called
Search for Beauty (1934). He was rewarded with a contract with
Paramount as a
bit part actor and appeared uncredited in several films. In 1935 he played Captain Dobbin in a film version of
Vanity Fair,
Becky Sharp and had his only lead role in
Booloo (1938). Tapley had the debonair good looks, voice and talent of a star, but he found his niche in playing character roles, and appeared in American and British films for more than 30 years without any real desire for movie stardom. Tapley's desire for character parts came early in his
Hollywood career. He wrote home enthusiastically to one of his brothers about his small part in
The Scarlet Empress (1934), describing the long black beard and wonderful uniform that transformed him into the captain of the queen's bodyguard. Although his performance went uncredited, Tapley is seen directing the firing of the guns from the palace battlements, and yelling, "It's a boy!" to the excited crowd after the future empress played by
Marlene Dietrich gives birth to a son". He continued to work in some of the biggest movies of the 1930s, starring the likes of
Cary Grant,
Loretta Young,
Ronald Colman and
Gary Cooper. "The most wonderful experience of my life," is how he later recalled those years "I adored every bit of it." During this time he shared a flat with
Donald Gray and they would remain close friends until Gray's death in 1978. His best friend in Hollywood was
Fred MacMurray, who with his first wife, Lillian Lamont visited Tapley in New Zealand and England with his second wife, when Tapley had moved back to be with his own wife and children. MacMurray and Tapley remained great friends up until MacMurray's death in 1991. Tapley was a keen horseman and an avid polo player; playing at the Riveria Polo Club, and on his ranch in the San Fernando Valley where his friends and neighbours would spend time, one of whom being
Ginger Rogers. He recalled later, 'popping over to her place for tennis and what not', before the war broke out whereupon he left Hollywood and returned to England. == Second World War and RAF career ==