
Reginald Denny (birth name Reginald Leigh Dugmore) (20 November 1891 – 16 June 1967) was an English stage, film, and television actor.
Born in Richmond, Surrey, England (as had fellow actor Ronald Colman), he began his film career in 1915 and made films both in the United States and England until the 1960s. He came from a theatrical family which came to the U.S. in 1912 to appear in the stage production Quaker Girl. His father was the actor and singer W. H. Denny. Reginald became friends with actor John Barrymore and appeared in Barrymore's acclaimed 1920 Broadway production of Richard III.
Denny was a well-known actor in silent films and with the advent of talkies, he became a character actor. He played the lead role in a number of his earlier films, generally as a comedic Englishman in such works as Private Lives, and later had reasonably steady work as a supporting actor in dozens of movies, including Anna Karenina with Greta Garbo, The Little Minister with Katharine Hepburn, and the Frank Sinatra crime caper film Assault on a Queen.[1]
Later, Denny made frequent appearances in television during the 1950s and 1960s. His last role was in Batman (1966) as Commodore Schmidlapp.
He served as a pilot in World War I in the Royal Flying Corps,[2] and in the 1920s he performed as a stunt pilot. In the early 1930s, Denny became interested in radio controlled model planes. He and his business partners formed Reginald Denny Industries and opened a model plane shop in 1934 known as Reginald Denny Hobby Shops. Denny bought a plane design from Walter Righter in 1938 and began marketing it as the "Dennyplane", and a model engine called the "Dennymite".[3] In 1940, Denny and his partners won an Army contract for their radio-controlled target drone, the OQ-2 Radioplane. They manufactured nearly fifteen thousand drones for the army during World War II.
It was at the Van Nuys Radioplane factory that, in 1944, army photographer David Conover saw a young lady named, "Norma Jeane Baker," and thought she had potential as a model. This discovery led to fame for Norma Jeane, who soon changed her name to Marilyn Monroe.
The company was bought by Northrop in 1952.[4] The hobby shop business closed in the 1960s.
Reginald Denny died on 16 June 1967, aged 75, after suffering a stroke while battling cancer. He is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills) in Los Angeles, California.[5]
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