1932–1936: Debut and early roles (
right),
Lili Damita (
center), and
Charlie Ruggles (
far left) in his debut film
This is the Night (1932) Grant's role in
Nikki was praised by
Ed Sullivan of
The New York Daily News, who noted that the "young lad from England" had "a big future in the movies". The review led to another screen test by Paramount Publix, resulting in an appearance as a sailor in
Singapore Sue (1931), a ten-minute short film by
Casey Robinson. Grant delivered his lines "without any conviction" according to McCann. Through Robinson, Grant met with
Jesse L. Lasky and
B. P. Schulberg, the co-founder and general manager of
Paramount Pictures, respectively. After a successful screen-test directed by
Marion Gering, Schulberg signed a contract with the 27-year-old Grant on 7 December 1931, for five years, at a starting salary of $450 a week. Schulberg demanded that he change his name to "something that sounded more all-American like
Gary Cooper", and they eventually agreed on Cary Grant. Grant set out to establish himself as what McCann calls the "epitome of masculine glamour", and made Douglas Fairbanks his first role model. McCann notes that Grant's career in Hollywood immediately took off because he exhibited a "genuine charm", which made him stand out among the other good looking actors at the time, making it "remarkably easy to find people who were willing to support his embryonic career". He made his feature film debut with the
Frank Tuttle-directed comedy
This is the Night (1932), playing an Olympic javelin thrower opposite
Thelma Todd and
Lili Damita. Grant disliked his role and threatened to leave Hollywood, but to his surprise a critic from
Variety praised his performance, and thought that he looked like a "potential femme rave". In 1932, Grant played a wealthy
playboy opposite
Marlene Dietrich in
Blonde Venus, directed by
Josef von Sternberg. Grant's role is described by
William Rothman as projecting the "distinctive kind of nonmacho masculinity that was to enable him to incarnate a man capable of being a romantic hero". Grant found that he conflicted with the director during the filming and the two often argued in German. He played a suave playboy type in a number of films:
Merrily We Go to Hell opposite
Fredric March and
Sylvia Sidney,
Devil and the Deep with
Tallulah Bankhead,
Gary Cooper and
Charles Laughton (Cooper and Grant had no scenes together),
Hot Saturday opposite
Nancy Carroll and
Randolph Scott, and
Madame Butterfly with Sidney. According to biographer Marc Eliot, while these films did not make Grant a star, they did well enough to establish him as one of Hollywood's "new crop of fast-rising actors". in ''
I'm No Angel'' (1933) In 1933, Grant gained attention for appearing in the
pre-Code films She Done Him Wrong and ''
I'm No Angel opposite Mae West. West later claimed that she had discovered Cary Grant. Of course Grant had already made Blonde Venus'' the previous year in which he was Marlene Dietrich's
leading man.
Pauline Kael noted that Grant did not appear confident in his role as a
Salvation Army director in
She Done Him Wrong, which made it all the more charming. The film was a box office hit, earning more than $2 million in the United States, and has since won much acclaim. For ''I'm No Angel'', Grant's salary was increased from $450 to $750 a week. The film was even more successful than
She Done Him Wrong, and saved Paramount from bankruptcy; Vermilye cites it as one of the best comedy films of the 1930s. A string of financially unsuccessful films followed, including roles as a president of a company who is sued for knocking down a boy in an accident in
Born to Be Bad (1934) for 20th Century Fox, a cosmetic surgeon in
Kiss and Make-Up (1934), and a blinded pilot opposite
Myrna Loy in
Wings in the Dark (1935). Amid press reports of problems in his marriage to Cherrill, Paramount concluded that Grant was expendable. '' (1934) with
Frances Drake and Grant Grant's prospects picked up in the latter half of 1935 when he was loaned out to
RKO Pictures. Producer
Pandro Berman agreed to take him on in the face of failure because "I'd seen him do things which were excellent, and Katharine Hepburn|[Katharine] Hepburn wanted him too." His first venture with RKO, playing a raffish Cockney swindler in
George Cukor's
Sylvia Scarlett (1935), was the first of four collaborations with Hepburn. Though a commercial failure, his dominating performance was praised by critics, and Grant always considered the film to have been the breakthrough for his career. When his contract with Paramount ended in 1936 with the release of
Wedding Present, Grant decided not to renew it and wished to work freelance. Grant claimed to be the first freelance actor in Hollywood. His first venture as a freelance actor was
The Amazing Quest of Ernest Bliss (1936), which was shot in England. The film was a
box office bomb and prompted Grant to reconsider his decision. Critical and commercial success with
Suzy later that year in which he played a French airman opposite
Jean Harlow and
Franchot Tone, led to him signing joint contracts with RKO and
Columbia Pictures, enabling him to choose the stories that he felt suited his acting style. His Columbia contract was a four-film deal over two years, guaranteeing him $50,000 each for the first two and $75,000 each for the others.
1937–1945: Hollywood stardom In 1937, Grant began the first film under his contract with Columbia Pictures, ''
When You're in Love, portraying a wealthy American artist who eventually woos a famous opera singer (Grace Moore). His performance received positive feedback from critics, with Mae Tinee of The Chicago Daily Tribune'' describing it as the "best thing he's done in a long time". After a commercial failure in his second RKO venture
The Toast of New York, Grant was loaned to
Hal Roach's studio for
Topper, a
screwball comedy film distributed by
MGM, which became his first major comedy success. Grant played one half of a wealthy, freewheeling married couple with
Constance Bennett, who wreak havoc on the world as ghosts after dying in a car accident.
Topper became one of the most popular movies of the year, with a critic from
Variety noting that both Grant and Bennett "do their assignments with great skill". Vermilye described the film's success as "a logical springboard" for Grant to star in
The Awful Truth that year, his first film made with
Irene Dunne and
Ralph Bellamy. Though director
Leo McCarey reportedly disliked Grant, who had mocked the director by enacting his mannerisms in the film, he recognized Grant's comic talents and encouraged him to improvise his lines and draw upon his skills developed in vaudeville. The film was a critical and commercial success and made Grant a top Hollywood star, establishing a screen persona for him as a sophisticated light comedy leading man in screwball comedies. and Grant in
Bringing Up Baby (1938)
The Awful Truth began what film critic
Benjamin Schwarz of
The Atlantic later called "the most spectacular run ever for an actor in American pictures" for Grant. In 1938, he starred opposite
Katharine Hepburn in the screwball comedy
Bringing Up Baby, featuring a
leopard and frequent bickering and verbal jousting between Grant and Hepburn. He was initially uncertain how to play his character, but was told by director
Howard Hawks to think of
Harold Lloyd. Grant was given more leeway in the comic scenes, the editing of the film and in educating Hepburn in the art of comedy. Despite losing over $350,000 for RKO, the film earned rave reviews from critics. He again appeared with Hepburn in the romantic comedy
Holiday later that year, which did not fare well commercially, to the point that Hepburn was considered to be "box office poison" at the time. Despite a series of commercial failures, Grant was now more popular than ever and in high demand. According to Vermilye, in 1939, Grant played roles that were more dramatic, albeit with comical undertones. He played a British army sergeant opposite
Douglas Fairbanks Jr. in the
George Stevens-directed adventure film
Gunga Din, set at a military station in
India. Roles as a pilot opposite
Jean Arthur and
Rita Hayworth in Hawks'
Only Angels Have Wings, and a wealthy landowner alongside
Carole Lombard in
In Name Only followed. In 1940, Grant played a callous newspaper editor who learns that his ex-wife and former journalist, played by
Rosalind Russell, is to marry insurance officer Ralph Bellamy in Hawks' comedy
His Girl Friday, which was praised for its strong chemistry and "great verbal athleticism" between Grant and Russell. Grant reunited with Irene Dunne in
My Favorite Wife, a "first rate comedy" according to
Life magazine, which became RKO's second biggest picture of the year, with profits of $505,000. After playing a Virginian backwoodsman in
The Howards of Virginia, set during the American Revolution – which McCann considers to have been Grant's worst film and performance – his last film of the year was in the critically lauded romantic comedy
The Philadelphia Story, in which he played the ex-husband of Hepburn's character. Grant felt his performance was so strong that he was bitterly disappointed not to have received an Oscar nomination, especially since both his lead co-stars, Hepburn and
James Stewart, received them, with Stewart winning for Best Actor. Grant joked "I'd have to blacken my teeth first before the Academy will take me seriously". Film historian David Thomson wrote that "the wrong man got the Oscar" for
The Philadelphia Story and that "Grant got better performances out of Hepburn than (her long-time companion)
Spencer Tracy ever managed." Stewart's winning the Oscar "was considered a gold-plated apology for his being robbed of the award" for the previous year's
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. Grant's not being nominated for
His Girl Friday the same year is also a "sin of omission" for the Oscars. Hitchcock later stated that he thought the conventional happy ending of the film (with the wife discovering her husband is innocent rather than his being guilty and she letting him kill her with a glass of poisoned milk) "a complete mistake because of making that story with Cary Grant. Unless you have a cynical ending it makes the story too simple". Geoff Andrew of
Time Out believes
Suspicion served as "a supreme example of Grant's ability to be simultaneously charming and sinister". In 1942, Grant participated in a three-week tour of the United States as part of a group to help the war effort and was photographed visiting wounded marines in hospital. He appeared in several routines of his own during these shows and often played the
straight man opposite
Bert Lahr. In May 1942, when he was 38, the ten-minute propaganda short
Road to Victory was released, in which he appeared alongside
Bing Crosby,
Frank Sinatra and
Charles Ruggles. On film, Grant played Leopold Dilg, a convict on the run in
The Talk of the Town (1942), who escapes after being wrongly convicted of arson and murder. He hides in a house with characters played by Jean Arthur and
Ronald Colman, and gradually plots to secure his freedom. Crowther praised the script, and noted that Grant played Dilg with a "casualness which is slightly disturbing". After a role as a foreign correspondent opposite
Ginger Rogers and
Walter Slezak in the off-beat comedy
Once Upon a Honeymoon, in which he was praised for his scenes with Rogers, he appeared in
Mr. Lucky the following year, playing a gambler in a casino aboard a ship. The commercially successful submarine war film
Destination Tokyo (1943) was shot in just six weeks in September and October, which left him exhausted; the reviewer from
Newsweek thought it was one of the finest performances of his career. In 1944, Grant starred alongside
Priscilla Lane,
Raymond Massey and
Peter Lorre, in
Frank Capra's dark comedy
Arsenic and Old Lace, playing the manic Mortimer Brewster, who belongs to a bizarre family that includes two murderous aunts and an uncle claiming to be President Teddy Roosevelt. Grant took up the role after it was originally offered to
Bob Hope, who turned it down owing to schedule conflicts. Grant found the macabre subject matter of the film difficult to contend with and believed that it was the worst performance of his career. That year he received his second Oscar nomination for a role, opposite
Ethel Barrymore and
Barry Fitzgerald in the
Clifford Odets-directed film
None but the Lonely Heart, set in London during the Depression. Late in the year he featured in the CBS Radio series
Suspense, playing a tormented character who hysterically discovers that his amnesia has affected the masculine order in society in
The Black Curtain.
1946–1953: Post-War success and slump in
Notorious (1946) After making a brief cameo appearance opposite
Claudette Colbert in
Without Reservations (1946), Grant portrayed
Cole Porter in the musical
Night and Day (1946). The production proved to be problematic, with scenes often requiring multiple takes, frustrating the cast and crew. Grant next appeared with
Ingrid Bergman and
Claude Rains in the Hitchcock-directed film
Notorious (1946), playing a government agent who recruits the American daughter of a convicted Nazi spy (Bergman) to infiltrate a Nazi organization in Brazil after World War II. During the course of the film Grant and Bergman's characters fall in love and share one of the longest kisses in film history at around two and a half minutes. Wansell notes how Grant's performance "underlined how far his unique qualities as a screen actor had matured in the years since
The Awful Truth". In 1947, Grant played an artist who becomes involved in a court case when charged with assault in the comedy
The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (released in the U.K. as "Bachelor Knight"), opposite
Myrna Loy and
Shirley Temple. The film was praised by the critics, who admired the picture's
slapstick qualities and chemistry between Grant and Loy; it became one of the biggest-selling films at the box office that year. Later that year he starred opposite
David Niven and
Loretta Young in the comedy ''
The Bishop's Wife'', playing an angel who is sent down from heaven to straighten out the relationship between the bishop (Niven) and his wife (Loretta Young). publicity photo for
Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (1948) The following year, Grant played neurotic Jim Blandings, the title-sake in the comedy
Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House, again with Loy. Though the film lost money for RKO,
Philip T. Hartung of
Commonweal thought that Grant's role as the "frustrated advertising man" was one of his best screen portrayals. In
Every Girl Should Be Married, an "airy comedy", he appeared with Betsy Drake and
Franchot Tone, playing a bachelor who is trapped into marriage by Drake's conniving character. He finished the year as the fourth most popular film star at the box office. In 1949, Grant starred alongside
Ann Sheridan in the comedy
I Was a Male War Bride in which he appeared in scenes dressed as a woman, wearing a skirt and a wig. During the filming he was taken ill with infectious
hepatitis and lost weight, affecting the way he looked in the picture. The film, based on the autobiography of Belgian
resistance fighter Roger Charlier, proved to be successful, becoming the highest-grossing film for 20th Century Fox that year with over $4.5 million in takings and being likened to Hawks's screwball comedies of the late 1930s. By this point he was one of the highest paid Hollywood stars, commanding $300,000 per picture. The early 1950s marked the beginning of a slump in Grant's career. Grant had become tired of being Cary Grant after twenty years, being successful, wealthy and popular, and remarked: "To play yourself, your
true self, is the hardest thing in the world". In 1952, Grant starred in the comedy
Room for One More, playing an engineer husband who, with his wife (
Betsy Drake), adopt two children from an orphanage. He reunited with Howard Hawks to film the off-beat comedy
Monkey Business, co-starring Ginger Rogers and
Marilyn Monroe. Though the critic from
Motion Picture Herald wrote gushingly that Grant had given a career's best with an "extraordinary and agile performance", which was matched by Rogers, it received a mixed reception overall. Grant had hoped that starring opposite
Deborah Kerr in the romantic comedy
Dream Wife would salvage his career, but it was a critical and financial failure upon release in July 1953, when Grant was 49. Though he was offered the leading part in
A Star is Born, Grant decided against playing that character. He believed that his film career was over, and briefly left the industry.
1955–1966: Film resurgence and final roles In 1955, Grant agreed to star opposite
Grace Kelly in
To Catch a Thief, playing a retired jewel thief named John Robie, nicknamed "The Cat", living in the
French Riviera. Grant and Kelly worked well together during the production, which was one of the most enjoyable experiences of Grant's career. He found Hitchcock and Kelly to be very professional, and later stated that Kelly was "possibly the finest actress I've ever worked with". Grant was one of the first actors to go independent by not renewing his studio contract, effectively leaving the
studio system, which almost completely controlled all aspects of an actor's life. He decided which films he was going to appear in, often had personal choice of directors and co-stars, and at times negotiated a share of the gross revenue, something uncommon at the time. Grant received more than $700,000 for his 10% of the gross of the successful
To Catch a Thief, while Hitchcock received less than $50,000 for directing and producing it. Though critical reception to the overall film was mixed, Grant received high praise for his performance, with critics commenting on his suave, handsome appearance in the film. In 1957, Grant starred opposite
Deborah Kerr in the romance
An Affair to Remember, playing an international playboy who becomes the object of her affections. Schickel sees the film as one of the definitive romantic pictures of the period, but remarks that Grant was not entirely successful in trying to supersede the film's "gushing sentimentality". That year, Grant also appeared opposite
Sophia Loren in
The Pride and the Passion. He had expressed an interest in playing
William Holden's character in
The Bridge on the River Kwai at the time, but found that it was not possible because of his commitment to
The Pride and the Passion. The film was shot on location in Spain and was problematic, with co-star
Frank Sinatra irritating his colleagues and leaving the production after just a few weeks. Although Grant had an affair with Loren during filming, Grant's attempts to woo Loren to marry him during the production proved fruitless, which led to him expressing anger when Paramount cast her opposite him in
Houseboat (1958) as part of her contract. The sexual tension between the two was so great during the making of
Houseboat that the producers found it almost impossible to make. it was warmly received by the critics and was a major commercial success, and is now often listed as one of the greatest films of all time.
Weiler, writing in
The New York Times, praised Grant's performance, remarking that the actor "was never more at home than in this role of the advertising-man-on-the-lam" and handled the role "with professional aplomb and grace". Grant wore one of his most well-known suits in the film, which became very popular, a fourteen-gauge, mid-gray, subtly plaid, worsted wool that was custom-made on
Savile Row. Grant finished the year playing a U.S. Navy submarine skipper opposite
Tony Curtis in the comedy
Operation Petticoat. The reviewer from
Daily Variety saw Grant's comic portrayal as a classic example of how to attract the laughter of the audience without lines, remarking that "In this film, most of the gags play off him. It is his reaction, blank, startled, etc., always underplayed, that creates or releases the humor". The film was major box office success, and in 1973, Deschner ranked the film as the highest earning film of Grant's career at the US box office, with takings of $9.5 million. In 1960, Grant appeared opposite
Deborah Kerr,
Robert Mitchum, and
Jean Simmons in
The Grass Is Greener, which was shot in England at
Osterley Park and
Shepperton Studios. McCann notes that Grant took great relish in "mocking his aristocratic character's over-refined tastes and mannerisms", though the film was panned and was seen as his worst since
Dream Wife. In 1962, Grant starred in the romantic comedy
That Touch of Mink, playing suave, wealthy businessman Philip Shayne romantically involved with an office worker, played by
Doris Day. He invites her to his apartment in
Bermuda, but her guilty conscience begins to take hold. The picture was praised by critics, and it received three Academy Award nominations and won the
Golden Globe Award for Best Comedy Picture, in addition to landing Grant another Golden Globe Award nomination for Best Actor. Deschner ranked the film as the second highest grossing of Grant's career. in
Charade (1963) Producers
Albert R. Broccoli and
Harry Saltzman originally sought Grant for the role of
James Bond in
Dr. No (1962) but discarded the idea as Grant would be committed to only one feature film; therefore, the producers decided to go after someone who could be part of a franchise after
James Mason would only agree to commit to three films. In 1963, Grant appeared in his last typically suave, romantic role opposite
Audrey Hepburn in
Charade. Grant found the experience of working with Hepburn "wonderful" and believed that their close relationship was clear on camera, though according to Hepburn, he was particularly worried during the filming that he would be criticized for being far too old for her and seen as a "cradle snatcher". Author Chris Barsanti writes: "It's the film's canny flirtatiousness that makes it such ingenious entertainment. Grant and Hepburn play off each other like the pros that they are". The film, well received by the critics, is often called "the best Hitchcock film Hitchcock never made". In 1964, Grant changed from his typically suave, distinguished screen persona to play a grizzled beachcomber who is coerced into serving as a
coastwatcher on an uninhabited island in the World War II romantic comedy
Father Goose. The film was a major commercial success, and upon its release at Radio City at Christmas 1964 it took over $210,000 at the box-office in the first week, breaking the record set by
Charade the previous year. Grant's final film, ''
Walk, Don't Run (1966), a comedy co-starring Jim Hutton and Samantha Eggar, was shot on location in Tokyo, and is set amid the backdrop of the housing shortage of the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. Newsweek'' concluded: "Though Grant's personal presence is indispensable, the character he plays is almost wholly superfluous. Perhaps the inference to be taken is that a man in his 50s or 60s has no place in romantic comedy except as a catalyst. If so, the chemistry is wrong for everyone". Hitchcock had asked Grant to star in
Torn Curtain that year, only to learn that he had decided to retire. == Later years ==