You know him, even if you think you don’t.........
If you’ve ever watched a
 British comedy film or a Hammer horror, chances are you’ll have come 
across this cherubic king of the two-minute cameo. He is never the star,
 though he appeared in nearly a hundred films. He leaves all the hard 
work to Peter Cushing or Peter Sellers and then, usually about half an 
hour in, he comes on, steals the show, and goes again.
Yet he was much more 
than a mere eccentric old man who wanders on in the middle of horror 
films. After abandoning his original plan to become a schoolteacher he 
achieved a considerable reputation as actor, playwright, screenwriter 
and translator. He worked for Hitchcock, Michael Powell, Michael Winner 
and Paul Rotha.
Neither was he the cosy 
pillar of the establishment that his image – and the generally 
imperialistic nature of his major screenwriting assignments – would 
suggest. Despite celebrating British history and values in such scripts 
as Nell Gwyn (1934), Rhodes of Africa (1936), Victoria the Great (1937) and The First of the Few
 (1942) he was a prominent member of the anti-conscription movement in 
the First World War, an outspoken pacifist and part of that band of 
woolly liberal intellectuals that surrounded Bertrand Russell. He sat on
 the advisory council of the Masses Stage and Film Guild, established by
 the Labour party in 1929 to bring great cultural works to the working 
classes.
He even sent his 
children to Russell’s appalling experimental school, where discipline 
was outlawed and children not obliged to attend lessons if they didn’t 
want to: barbarism and savagery soon held sway as the great sage watched
 placidly from his tower. Russell also, as was invariably his custom 
with close male friends, struck up a long-standing affair with 
Malleson’s first wife, actress Colette O’Neil. (The two had only married
 under pressure: they were both advocates of co-habitation and sexual 
freedom.
Yes, this is Miles Malleson I’m talking about.
My favourite Malleson anecdote is the one about him coming out of an early performance of Look Back In Anger,
 the worst play ever written, ruefully shaking his head and mumbling 
"But bad manners isn't social criticism..." Quite a few chickens came 
home that night. All of which surely points to a biography 
screaming to be written, yet for all of his achievements and the variety
 of his gifts, this is ultimately his greatest talent: when you’re 
watching a Hammer film and Miles Malleson comes on, you smile.
Malleson was Hammer’s jolly old man: a beaming, sweet natured, white-haired elf. His inimitable style and perfect timing made him an unlikely but definitive component of the studio's formula, and a bit of their magic died when he made his last appearance in 1962. (He retired from acting, due to failing eyesight, in 1965 and died, aged 80, in 1969.)
Luckily for us, Malleson
 was around when it was still felt that audiences needed occasional 
comic relief from the intense terror generated by the sight of 
Christopher Lee in a long cloak. His job in Hammer films, then, is to 
come on at half time like the gatekeeper in Macbeth, and 
lighten the mood. The early Hammer films are forever stopping off at 
inns to eavesdrop on the rustic chorus, and the studio kept a rotating 
pool of actors on its books solely to play this assortment of drunks, 
innkeepers, layabouts and poachers, men like Harold Goodwin, George 
Woodbridge, Michael Ripper and such occasional guest yokels as John 
Laurie and Lionel Jeffries. They were all superb but Malleson was king, 
and his little cameos of good cheer retain their charm even now when, 
like the songs in a Marx Brothers film, they no longer serve a necessary
 dramatic function.
VIDEO CLIP ADDITION MARCH 2016: Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing: The Last Meeting. Cushing and Lee 
talk about Hammer Films regular, character actor Miles Malleson and 
their time working with him during the making of Hammer films, 'Dracula'
 (1958) and 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' (1959) 
Malleson was never to be found in disreputable taverns at Hammer, he is usually cast as a professional man, albeit one of considerable eccentricity. (His last Hammer appearance, as the cabbie in The Phantom of the Opera [1962], is as downmarket as he got.) In Dracula (1958) he is a top-hatted undertaker who does drum-rolls on the coffins and laughs as he tells the story of a mourner who slipped on his steps and died. (“He came to pay his last respects and he remained to share them – oh yes, very amusing it was.”) His face, a gift to any cartoonist, never relaxes its vast, contorted smile. When Malleson laughs his eyes disappear and his mouth outgrows his face.
Malleson was never to be found in disreputable taverns at Hammer, he is usually cast as a professional man, albeit one of considerable eccentricity. (His last Hammer appearance, as the cabbie in The Phantom of the Opera [1962], is as downmarket as he got.) In Dracula (1958) he is a top-hatted undertaker who does drum-rolls on the coffins and laughs as he tells the story of a mourner who slipped on his steps and died. (“He came to pay his last respects and he remained to share them – oh yes, very amusing it was.”) His face, a gift to any cartoonist, never relaxes its vast, contorted smile. When Malleson laughs his eyes disappear and his mouth outgrows his face.
If you’ve seen Dracula
 with a live audience you’ll have noticed that while much of the horror 
receives the de rigeur ignorant laughter now expected of sophisticated 
audiences, and later comic relief involving a blustering toll-gate 
keeper is met with impatience, when Malleson comes on the change in 
reaction is unmistakable. The sophistication of his playing leaps the 
years, and the laughter is warm and genuine.
His best role for Hammer (and his largest) was the befuddled Bishop Frankland in The Hound of the Baskervilles
 (1959). In his first scene (of two) he keeps mentioning sherry until 
the hint is taken and a glass proffered: he ends up having two. (“Now 
that you mention sherry, do you know I think I might like a glass.”) The
 plot would have us believe he is a world authority on spiders and 
insects, but it is hard to credit the man we see crawling about on a 
flight of stone steps trying to scoop a spider into his hat with the 
capacity for scholarly study. Dressed elegantly in a black tail coat and
 top hat, he audibly creaks when in motion. His second scene is a 
beautiful duet; he is matched perfectly with Peter Cushing’s Holmes, the
 one all business and laser focus, the other dancing pirouettes around 
him, offering sherry and drifting off on vague tangents.
First mistaking Holmes 
for the workman come to mend his immobile telescope, he is delighted 
when Holmes does the job himself and couldn’t be happier when the 
telescope’s sudden fluidity of movement causes him to swing it too 
forcefully, smashing a window. Unaware that Holmes has left the room 
while his attention is fixed on the comings and goings of his 
neighbours, director Terence Fisher cuts to a beautiful long shot as 
Malleson does a full 360 degree turn, extends both his arms at right 
angles from his body, pauses, looks at the camera and says “Well! He’s 
gone!”
One suspects Fisher had a particular fondness for Malleson, just as James Whale did for Una O’Connor. In Brides of Dracula
 (1960) he comes close to letting him shuffle off with the film’s proper
 atmosphere. Again paired delightfully with Cushing (here as arch 
vampire hunter Van Helsing) he is a hypochondriac doctor in a startling 
blonde toupee who dismisses vampirism as superstitious nonsense but is 
happy to immerse his head in a bowl of noxiously steaming quack 
remedies. Straight man Cushing does the seriousness and grim portent 
while Malleson makes inane suggestions and attributes the vampire’s bite
 marks to an over-fond pet dog.
His interplay with 
Cushing is especially amusing for the manner in which his character 
treats Van Helsing as his intellectual peer, while the latter is merely 
indulging an ally he clearly finds buffoonish and tiresome. Only 
Malleson is blind to the implications of Van Helsing’s attitude toward 
him, and continues to discuss matters of which he knows nothing in 
hushed professional tones. (“I might even put your specialist’s fee on 
my own little account!” he chirps delightedly.) While Cushing talks 
gravely of vampires to the headmaster of the girls’ school through which
 one is prowling, Malleson is clearly visible in the background, 
fumbling about at the headmaster’s desk, stealing our attention simply 
by picking things up and putting them down again, gazing distractedly at
 books and looking around the room. It is probably the humblest, most 
inadvertent bit of scene stealing in film history, but I challenge 
anyone to recall what Cushing is actually saying.
He pops up in one or two other interesting places, too, such as Michael Powell’s Peeping Tom
 (1960). Here he is the elderly porn enthusiast who enters his local 
tobacconist’s and asks to see some “views”. The proprietor produces an 
album of soft core photos from under the counter, Malleson makes 
approving noises as he leafs through briefly before asking “How much 
would the lot be?” And he brings just the right blend of eccentricity 
and eeriness to the role of the ominous hearse driver/bus conductor in Dead of Night (1945). 
“Room for one inside, sir…”
Malleson is always 
exactly the right man for the job; his scenes are funny not because he 
is given funny lines but because he is a superb interpretive actor who 
has been given lines that are exactly what his character would say. 
That’s why it is easy to believe that these parts were written with him 
in mind, or even were largely improvised. That we no longer actually need
 him to lighten the mood in horror in films that now seem uniformly 
charming and innocent only adds to his appeal. Stripped of his actual 
function, his performances are pure indulgence. And still, when he 
appears, forty years after he made his last film, we smile.
Feature: Matthew Coniam
Images: Marcus Brooks 
 






 
 






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