Curwen, son of John Spencer Curwen of the music publishing company, and grandson of
John Curwen, founder of the
Tonic sol-fa system, was educated at
Abbotsholme School in Derbyshire, then
New College, Oxford. He studied acting under Rosina Filippi and started his career at the
Haymarket Theatre in London in 1907, appearing in productions of
The Lyons Mail,
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and
The Bells, among others. During
World War I he joined the
Artists Rifles, then received a commission in the
Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. He served with the armoured car unit in France, but was moved to
Naval Intelligence Division for health reasons, where he continued until 1920. He spent four years in India learning tea and coffee planting, then returned to work in England with the
Birmingham Repertory Theatre. From 1926 to 1928 he undertook an overseas tour, including visits to Australia and New Zealand, and on his return to England he continued to work as an actor in London in the years leading up to moving into film in 1931 and the start of his broadcasting career in 1934. He became well known as compère of the BBC programmes
Scrapbook and
Those Were The Days. He died in 1949 at
Rondebosch,
Cape Town at the age of 64. ==Selected filmography==