IGN.com|AskMen.com|Rotten Tomatoes|GameSpy|FilePlanet|TeamXbox|CheatsCodesGuides|GameStats|Direct2Drive|Green Pixels
RottenTomatoes.com
Log In | Register | What is RT?
  • Home
  • Movies
  • DVD
  • Celebrities
  • News
  • Critics
  • Trailers & Pictures
  • The Vine
  • Forums
RT Search Powered by Google
help icon Enhanced RT
searches on Google
Click here to turn on enhanced search results from RT on your Google searches by subscribing to our Google Subscribed Links profile.
 
Celebrities / Actors / Robert Benchley / Biography
Robert Benchley

Robert Benchley

<< BACK TO PROFILE

Related Media

FILMOGRAPHY
FAN SITES
NEWS
FORUMS

Biography

This page uses content from the Robert Benchley biography page on the English version of Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list of authors can be seen in the page history. Rotten Tomatoes disclaims any and all warranties as to the accuracy or reliability of the content.

Robert Charles Benchley (September 15, 1889 – November 21, 1945) was an American humorist, newspaper columnist, film actor, and drama literary editor.

Early life

Born in Worcester, Massachusetts, Benchley wrote essays that were published in collections including Of All Things, Benchley Beside Himself, Inside Benchley, Benchley or Else, and Chips Off the Old Benchley. His books were illustrated by Gluyas Williams, whose spare, knowing line drawings added to Benchley's success.

Humour Style

Benchley's humor was based on everyday life, news oddities, and absurd, almost surreal essays such as his "Uncle Edith" series. At Harvard, he was a leading contributor to the Harvard Lampoon. With Dorothy Parker and Robert E. Sherwood, his colleagues at Vanity Fair magazine, Benchley formed the Algonquin Round Table. He was an early and regular contributor to the New Yorker Magazine, Life magazine and a humor columnist for the Hearst Corporation Newspapers. His style influenced other humorists such as S. J. Perelman and James Thurber. Benchley is cited as an inspiration by humorists like Bob Newhart, Erma Bombeck, Woody Allen and Shelly Berman and others. The Robert Benchley Society gives an annual humor award in Benchley's honor. Judges of the event include: Pulitzer Prize-winning humorist Dave Barry who said Benchley influenced him more than anyone other than Barry's own mother; and 2005 Benchley Society Award Winner Horace J. Digby.

Film work

In 1928, Benchley starred in The Treasurer's Report, a short comedy film that was possibly the first all-talkie film shown in theaters (as opposed to ''The Jazz Singer (1927), which was primarily silent, and The Lights of New York (later in 1928), the first full-length talkie feature film). This led to a series of more than three dozen comedic instructional short films whose titles frequently began with "How to…". Each featured Benchley as a lecturer or as his family man alter ego, Joe Doakes. How to Sleep (1935) won an Academy Award in 1936.

At the same time, he found frequent work at several studios as a character actor in feature films, often playing a variation on the befuddled burgher of his shorts or else a dipsomaniacal sophisticate. He appears in Alfred Hitchcock's Foreign Correspondent (1940), in Rene Clair's I Married a Witch (1942) and with Fred Astaire in You'll Never Get Rich (1941) and The Sky's the Limit (1943).

One of Benchley's specialties in film was the "embarrassing speech" -- nervous, stammering, clearing his throat, making no sense whatsoever. It's the nightmare of every friend of the groom or business analyst who must give a talk and finds his mind has gone completely blank... painfully funny to watch.

Benchley also appeared in the 1941 feature film The Reluctant Dragon, giving a loose tour of the then-new Walt Disney Studios facility in Burbank, California.

Benchley was awarded a star on the Walk of Fame in Hollywood. He is the father of author Nathaniel Benchley, author of The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming, and grandfather of Jaws writer Peter Benchley and actor/writer Nat Benchley.

On his passing in 1945, Robert Benchley was cremated and his ashes were interred in the family plot at Prospect Hill Cemetery in Nantucket, Massachusetts.

External links

  • The Robert Benchley Society
  • The Algonquin Round Table
  • Nat Benchley
  • Robert Benchley: A Profile in Humor
  • Robert Benchley Society Award for Humor
  • Robert Benchley at Find A Grave
  • Robert Benchley, An Annotated Bibliography - by Gordon E. Ernst

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify the biographical information on this page under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.



 
 
About| Site Map| Help| RT To Go| Contact Us| Critics Submission| Linking to RT| Licensing| Movie List| Celebs List| Newsletter
IGN Logo

IGN.com | GameSpy | Comrade | Arena | FilePlanet | ModCenter | GameSpy Technology
TeamXbox | Planets | Vaults | VE3D | CheatsCodesGuides | GameStats | GamerMetrics
AskMen.com | Rotten Tomatoes | Direct2Drive | Green Pixels


By continuing past this page, and by the continued use of this site, you agree to be bound by and abide by the User Agreement.
Copyright 1998-2008, IGN Entertainment, Inc. About IGN | Support | Advertise | Privacy Policy | User Agreement | Subscribe to RT's XML feed! IGN RSS Feeds
IGN's enterprise databases running Oracle, SQL and MySQL are professionally monitored and managed by Pythian Remote DBA
Certain product data ©1995-present Muze, Inc. For personal use only. All rights reserved.