Raymond Hart Massey (August 30, 1896 – July 29, 1983) was a Canadian actor known for his commanding stage-trained voice. For his lead role in Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1940), Massey was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor. He reprised his role as Lincoln on television and in How the West Was Won (1962). Among his other well-known roles were Dr. Gillespie in the NBC television series Dr. Kildare (1961–1966), John Brown in Santa Fe Trail (1940) and Seven Angry Men (1955), Abraham Farlan in A Matter of Life and Death (1946), and Jonathan Brewster in Arsenic and Old Lace (1944; filmed in 1941 and 1942).
Early life
Massey was born in Toronto, Ontario, the son of Anna Vincent, who was American-born, and her husband Chester Daniel Massey, the wealthy co-owner of the Massey-Harris tractor company. He was the grandson of businessman Hart Massey and great-grandson of company founder Daniel Massey. His branch of the Massey family immigrated to Canada from New England a few years before the War of 1812, their ancestors having migrated from England to the Massachusetts colony in the 1630s.
Massey attended secondary school at Upper Canada College in Toronto for two years before transferring to Appleby College in Oakville, Ontario. He also took several courses at the University of Toronto, where he was an active member of the Kappa Alpha Society.
Military service
First World War
Massey joined the Canadian Army at the outbreak of World War I, and served on the Western Front in the Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery. Lieutenant Massey returned to Canada after being wounded at Zillebeke in Belgium during the Battle of Mont Sorrel in 1916 and was engaged as an army instructor for American officers at Yale University. In 1918, he was recalled to active service and joined the Canadian Siberian Expeditionary Force that went to Siberia during the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War. On the orders of his commanding general, he organized a minstrel show troupe with himself as end man in blackface to bolster morale of allied troops on occupation duty in Vladivostok.
After returning home in 1919, he attended Balliol College, Oxford. He later went to work in the family business, selling farm implements, but he was drawn to the theater. He persuaded his reluctant family to allow him to pursue this career.
Acting career
He first appeared on the London stage in 1922 in Eugene O'Neill's In the Zone. His preparation for the role was so detailed and obsessive that one person commented that Massey would not be satisfied with his Lincoln impersonation until someone assassinated him. On stage in a dramatic reading of Stephen Vincent Benét's John Brown's Body (1953), Massey, in addition to narrating along with Tyrone Power and Judith Anderson, took on the roles of both John Brown and Lincoln.
Massey played a Canadian on-screen only once, in 49th Parallel (1941).
During World War II, he teamed up with Katharine Cornell and other leading actors in a revival of Shaw's Candida to benefit the Army Emergency Fund and the Navy Relief Society.
right|thumb|[[Beverly Garland, Richard Chamberlain and Raymond Massey in the first episode of Dr. Kildare (1961)]]
Massey portrayed Jonathan Brewster in the film version of Arsenic and Old Lace. The character had been created by Boris Karloff for the stage version, and a running gag in the play and the film was the character's resemblance to Karloff. Even though the film was released in 1944, it was shot in 1941, at which time Karloff still was contracted to the Broadway play and could not be released for the filming (unlike his costars Josephine Hull, Jean Adair and John Alexander). Massey and Karloff had appeared together earlier in James Whale's suspense film The Old Dark House (1932).
After Massey became an American citizen, he continued to work in Hollywood. Memorable film roles included the husband of Joan Crawford during her Oscar-nominated role in Possessed (1947) and the doomed publishing tycoon Gail Wynand in The Fountainhead (1949) with Patricia Neal and Gary Cooper. In 1952 his stage play Hanging Judge appeared in the West End, directed by Michael Powell. In 1955 he starred in East of Eden as Adam Trask, father of Cal, played by James Dean, and Aron, played by Richard Davalos.
Massey became well known on television in the 1950s and 1960s. He was cast in 1960 as Sir Oliver Garnett in the episode "Trunk Full of Dreams" of the NBC series Riverboat.
Massey is remembered as Dr. Gillespie in the popular 1961–1966 NBC series Dr. Kildare, with Richard Chamberlain in the title role. Massey and his son Daniel were cast as father and son in The Queen's Guards (1961).
Personal life
right|thumb|Richard Chamberlain, [[Daniela Bianchi and Massey in Dr. Kildare (1964)]]
Massey was married three times.
- Margery Fremantle from 1921 to 1929 (divorce); they had one child, architect Geoffrey Massey.
- Adrianne Allen from 1929 to 1939 (divorce); Allen was a stage actress in London and on Broadway. They had two children who followed them into acting: Anna Massey and Daniel Massey.
- Dorothy Whitney from 1939 until her death in 1982.
His high-profile estrangement and divorce from Adrianne Allen was the inspiration for Ruth Gordon and Garson Kanin's script for the film Adam's Rib (1949), starring Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, and indeed Massey married the lawyer who represented him in court, Dorothy Whitney, while his then former wife, Allen, married the opposing lawyer, William Dwight Whitney.
Massey's older brother, Vincent Massey, was the first Canadian-born governor general of Canada. Massey also dabbled in politics, appearing in a 1964 television advertisement in support of the conservative Republican presidential nominee Barry Goldwater. Massey denounced U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson for a "no-win" strategy in the Vietnam War, suggesting that Goldwater would pursue an aggressive strategy and win the war quickly.
Death
Massey died of pneumonia in Los Angeles, California on July 29, 1983, a month before he would have turned 87. His achievements have also been recognized in a signature cocktail, the Raymond Massey.
Filmography
{| class="wikitable sortable" width=92%
! width=2%|Year
! width=30%|Title
! width=30%|Role
! width=30% class="unsortable" | Notes
|-
|1928
|High Treason
|Member of Federated States Council
|Uncredited
|-
|1929
|data-sort-value="Crooked Billet, The" | The Crooked Billet
|Undetermined role
|Uncredited; 'lost' film; one copy known to exist in a private collection
|-
|1931
|data-sort-value="Speckled Band, The" | The Speckled Band
|Sherlock Holmes
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1932
|data-sort-value="Face at the Window, The" | The Face at the Window
|Paul le Gros
|
|-
|data-sort-value="Old Dark House, The" | The Old Dark House
|Philip Waverton
|
|-
|1934
|data-sort-value="Scarlet Pimpernel, The" | The Scarlet Pimpernel
|Citizen Chauvelin
|
|-
|1936
|Things to Come
|John Cabal / Oswald Cabal
|
|-
|rowspan=5|1937
|Fire Over England
|Philip II of Spain
|
|-
|Dreaming Lips
|Miguel del Vayo
|
|-
|Under the Red Robe
|Cardinal Richelieu
|
|-
|data-sort-value="Prisoner of Zenda, The" | The Prisoner of Zenda
|Black Michael
|
|-
|data-sort-value="Hurricane, The" | The Hurricane
|Governor Eugene De Laage
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1938
|data-sort-value="Drum, The" | The Drum
|Prince Ghul
|
|-
|Black Limelight
|Peter Charrington
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1940
|Abe Lincoln in Illinois
|Abraham Lincoln
|Nominated — Academy Award for Best Actor
|-
|Santa Fe Trail
|John Brown
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1941
|49th Parallel
|Andy Brock
|
|-
|Dangerously They Live
|Dr. Ingersoll
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1942
|Reap the Wild Wind
|King Cutler
|
|-
|Desperate Journey
|Major Otto Baumeister
|
|-
|1943
|Action in the North Atlantic
|Captain Steve Jarvis
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1944
|Arsenic and Old Lace
|Jonathan Brewster
|
|-
|data-sort-value="Woman in the Window, The" | The Woman in the Window
|District Attorney Frank Lalor
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1945
|Hotel Berlin
|Arnim von Dahnwitz
|
|-
|God Is My Co-Pilot
|Major General Claire L. Chennault
|
|-
|1946
|data-sort-value="Matter of Life and Death, A" | A Matter of Life and Death
|Abraham Farlan
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1947
|Possessed
|Dean Graham
|
|-
|Mourning Becomes Electra
|Brigadier General Ezra Mannon
|
|-
|rowspan=2|1949
|data-sort-value="Fountainhead, The" | The Fountainhead
|Gail Wynand
|
|-
|Roseanna McCoy
|Old Randall McCoy
|
|-
|rowspan=3|1950
|Chain Lightning
|Leland Willis
|
|-
|Barricade
|Boss Kruger
|
|-
|Dallas
|Will Marlow
|
|-
|rowspan=3|1951
|Sugarfoot
|Jacob Stint
|
|-
|David and Bathsheba
|Nathan
|
|-
|Come Fill the Cup
|John Ives
|
|-
|1952
|Carson City
|A. J. "Big" Jack Davis
|
|-
|1953
|data-sort-value="Desert Song, The" | The Desert Song
|Sheik Yousseff
|
|-
|rowspan=4|1955
|Prince of Players
|Junius Brutus Booth
|
|-
|Battle Cry
|Major General Snipes
|
|-
|East of Eden
|Adam Trask
|
|-
|Seven Angry Men
|John Brown
|
|-
|1957
|Omar Khayyam
|The Shah
|
|-
|1958
|data-sort-value="Naked and the Dead, The" | The Naked and the Dead
|General Cummings
|
|-
|1959
|Alfred Hitchcock Presents
|Sam Pine
|Season 5 Episode 11: "Road Hog"
|-
|1960
|Wagon Train
|Montezuma IX
|Season 4, episode 6, "Princess of a Lost Tribe"
|-
|rowspan=3|1961
|data-sort-value="Great Impostor, The" | The Great Impostor
|Abbott Donner
|
|-
|data-sort-value="Fiercest Heart, The" | The Fiercest Heart
|Willem Prinsloo
|
|-
|data-sort-value="Queen's Guards, The" | The Queen's Guards
|Captain Fellowes
|
|-
|1961–1966
|Dr. Kildare
|Dr. Leonard Gillespie
|
|-
|1962
|How the West Was Won
|Abraham Lincoln
|
|-
|1969
|Mackenna's Gold
|The Preacher
|
|-
|1971–1972
|Night Gallery
|Colonel Archie Dittman<br>Doctor Glendon
|Season 1, episode 4, second segment: "Clean Kills and Other Trophies"<br>Season 3, episode 4: "Rare Objects"
|-
|1972
|All My Darling Daughters
|Matthew Cunningham
|TV movie
|-
|rowspan=2|1973
|data-sort-value="President's Plane Is Missing, The" | The President's Plane Is Missing
|Secretary of State Freeman Sharkey
|TV movie
|-
|My Darling Daughters' Anniversary
|Matthew Cunningham
|TV movie
|}
Radio appearances
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Year !! Program !! Episode/source
|-
| 1941|| Philip Morris Playhouse || Wuthering Heights
|-
| 1942|| Philip Morris Playhouse || The Man Who Played God
|-
|1944
|The Doctor Fights
|Narrator
|-
| 1945 || Inner Sanctum Mystery || Death Across the Board
|-
| 1952|| Cavalcade of America || With Malice Towards None
|-
| 1952|| The Endless Frontier || Only One to a Customer
|}
See also
- Canadian pioneers in early Hollywood
- Massey family
References
External links
- Raymond Massey Collection at the Victoria University Library
- Raymond Massey Photographs at the Digital Collections, Victoria University Library
- Raymond Massey Photographic Records at the Photograph Database, Victoria University Library
- Photographs and literature
